State Ex Rel. County of Buchanan v. Fulks

247 S.W. 129, 296 Mo. 614, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 181
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 30, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 247 S.W. 129 (State Ex Rel. County of Buchanan v. Fulks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. County of Buchanan v. Fulks, 247 S.W. 129, 296 Mo. 614, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 181 (Mo. 1922).

Opinion

HIGBEE, J.

This is an action on the official bond of the Collector of Buchanan County to recover $10,622.76 of the taxes and funds belonging to said county, collected and retained by the defendant Fulks during the fiscal year ending February 28, 1915. Fulks retained out of the revenue collected for the year 1914, $6032.96, which he claimed was due him for the four per cent commissions on back taxes for the years 1911, 1912, and 1913, and $4001.30 for the commissions on delinquent taxes for 1914. This does not include $588.50 commissions on delinquent taxes due the State for the first three years.

The jury returned a directed verdict for plaintiff for $11,967.06, including interest, on June 17,1919, and judgment was entered accordingly, from which defendants appealed.

The evidence for the defendants, as summarized in the divisional opinion, is as follows:

“The evidence of defendants showed that the defendant Fulks during the first three years of his term (1911-12-13) did not retain the four per cent on back *622 taxes collected by him, authorized by the Back Tax Act, but turned such commissions over to the County Treasurer; that in December, 1914, the State Auditor, John P. Gordon, through his official accountants, made an audit of Ihe accounts for the years 1911-12-13. of the County Collector and of other officers of said county, and reported to the county court, about January 19, 1915, that there was due Fulks as Collector for these years from the State, $588.50, and from the'funds within the county, $6032.96, stating in said report ‘this payment was caused by the Collector not being properly advised as to the commission he was allowed to retain.’ Following is the Attorney-General’s opinion as relates to this case: ‘County collectors in office prior to the taking effect of the Laws of 1911, page 390, in counties like Buchanan,’ were entitled to receive fees to a sum not in excess of $9000, and in addition thereto were entitled to receive fees from the collection of the collateral inheritance tax and also a commission of four per cent for-collecting delinquent taxes under Section 11511, Revised Stautues 1909 (Sec. 12959, R. S. 1919).’ Defendant Fulks testified that in December, 1914, the accountants of the State Auditor, John P. Gordon, commenced to audit his accounts as Collector, and he learned from them that he was entitled to four per cent on delinquent real estate taxes, in addition to his $9000 salary. He got this information in December, 1914. The Auditor’s report is dated January 9, 1915, and was delivered to the county court about that time. That about a week after-wards he told the county court that he was entitled to this four per cent and was going to take it. The court was in session. Judges Hill, Bub and Kirkman were on the bench. He saw the county court again before February 28, 1915. He told the county court he was going to take this money. ‘Judge Hill himself says: “Well, the Attorney-General has gave it to you, the State Auditor has gave it to you, the prosecuting attorney has, what else is there for us to do?” I said, All right. I *623 drawed a check for $6000 the next day. I showed him the check and he laughed about it. Court was in session. I am sure Kirkman and Hill were present on the bench, not so positive about Judge Bub.’ Cross-éxamination: ‘I retained $6000, February 15, 1915. During the whole year 1914 I retained $19,622.76. I believed I was entitled to these fees for delinquent taxes from the report of these auditors'and from what they said to me, in addition to my $9000 after John P. Cordon showed me an opinion from the Attorney-General. For that reason I retained the sum sued for in payment of those fees in addition to my $9000 salary.”

I. It is admitted that the proviso of Paragraph XV of Section 12927, Revised Statutes 1919, that no collector shall be-allowed to retain over $9000 of commissions and fees in any one year except as provided in subdivision fourteen, is applicable to Buchanan County, but it is contended that this does not include his commissions on delinquent and back taxes; that Section 12959, Révised Statutes 1919, allows the collector an additional four per cent commission for collecting delinquent and back taxes.

Section 12927 provides that “the collector shall receive as full compensation for his services in collecting the revenue, except tack taxes, the' following commissions and no more.” Then follow fifteen subdivisions fixing the rates of commissions according to, the amount of revenue collected in the several counties. There is, however, this express limitation in Subsection XV of this section:

“Provided, that no collector shall be allowed to retain over nine thousand dollars of commissions and fees in any one year except as provided in subdivision fourteen herein; and all fees and commissions coming into the hands of any collector from any source whatever in excess of nine thousand dollars, except as provided in subdivision fourteen, shall be paid into the city, county *624 and state treasuries in proportion to tlie amount received on taxes collected for each, and it shall he the duty of each collector, once in each year, to file in the county court in each county and in the office of the comptroller of each city not in county, a statement, under oath, of the amount of fees and commissions received by him and from what source, and shall immediately pay over the excess according to the order of the county court or comptroller: Provided, however, that this section shall not apply to any county adopting township organization; Provided, that the compensation of the county collector for the collection of the levee taxes and ditch taxes, collected for drainage purposes, shall be one per cent of the amount collected.”

It will be seen that the only instance in which the collector may retain more than $9000 for his fees and commissions is the one per cent allowed for the collection of the levee taxes and ditch taxes.

Mistake of Law. II. Fulks understood that $9000 was the maximum of commissions and fees he was entitled to retain in any one year. Acting on that construction he had paid to the county treasurer $4001.80, the four per cent commissions on the delinquent and back taxes for the three years, 1911-12-13. This was a voluntary payment and if he misconstrued the statute it was a mistake of law and not of fact, and he is not entitled to recover the payment from the county. The tax levy of each year is made to meet the expenditures of that particular year. Under our scheme of taxation each year’s levy is made to meet “the conditions of the county treasury and current demands of the county’s business and plaintiff may not disturb the county treasury of Crawford County unless he is warranted in so doing by the strict law.” [Hethcock v. Crawford County, 200 Mo. 170, 177; Dameron v. Hamilton, 264 Mo. 103, 121.] The commissions having been voluntarily paid in for the three years mentioned and the money presumably *625

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Bluebook (online)
247 S.W. 129, 296 Mo. 614, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-county-of-buchanan-v-fulks-mo-1922.