Stevens v. Board of Supervisors

29 N.W. 492, 62 Mich. 579
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 7, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 29 N.W. 492 (Stevens v. Board of Supervisors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stevens v. Board of Supervisors, 29 N.W. 492, 62 Mich. 579 (Mich. 1886).

Opinions

Sherwood, J.

In this case the Auditor General asks for a writ of mandamus to compel the respondent ta apportion $96,046.01 among the several townships of Saginaw county, direct the collection thereof, and cause the same to be paid over to the State.

This sum is claimed by the relator to be due to the State ' of Michigan from the county of Saginaw, it being the aggregate of balances found due to the State upon annual statements made and rendered to the county for payment-and settlement from the year 1875 to the year 1885, both inclusive.

The following are substantially the statements of relator’s petition:

It appears by the records and statements in the office of the Auditor General, upon the annual settlement with Saginaw county in 1875, there was a balance, due the county of $12,478.15; that there was an annual settlement with the county of Saginaw in 1875, and for several years preceding, and the balance fully adjusted.

Starting with the balance as found and shown by the books on the thirtieth day of June, 1875, a statement is given .of the account as made up at the Auditor General’s office on the thirtieth of June in each succeeding year to and including 1885. In each of these statements the balance appearing in the settlement of the preceding year is taken as its basis. A continuous, account is thus made, and appears in the petition, culminating in the final balance of $96,046.01, in 1885, and which this Court is asked to compel to be levied and collected.

It further appears by the petition that these yearly statements have been sent by the Auditor General to the clerk of 'the board of supervisors of the county of Saginaw, and that the board has made no specific or general objection to any one item.

That the only reason given by the board why such balance should not be paid was a claim that in the statements and settlements with Saginaw county from 1869 to 1874 certain [584]*584amounts we're, under section 124 of the Tax Law of 1869, charged back to Saginaw county, which should be credited l>ack to the, county, but that no complaints were made of such it(ems of charge prior to 1876.

.That there was SQine general statement made, or claim, as to the amount or computation of interest in the amounts charged and credited in the statements made under Laws of 1858, Act 31, § 5; and that during the various years in which balances have been found due from the county to the State, official notice and statements .have been sent to the clerk of, the board, of supervisors of .the amount of the indebtedness of the. county to the State,,.and frequent requests have been made to the counjty treasurer for payment of the balances due to the State.

■. The respondent, through the chairman of its board, makes answer to the relator’s petition, and. denies that any settlements were made either in 1875 or in any other year since the law of 1869 went into effect, and denies that the county owes the State the amount .of the balance claimed, in the statements of account rendered from year to year, or the amount of the final balance as stated in the account in the year 1,885. . ■ .

The county, by its board of supervisors, then states the objections which it makes to the account as made, and presented by the relator. They are as follows : '

• (‘l. That in order to make the balance against the county as claimed by relator in his petition, the county is charged, for principal and interest, the sum of $61,831.61 for losses suffered ..by the State upon lands bid off to the State for taxes, and which losses are charged against the county under section 124 of the Tax Law. of 1869.
‘‘'2: That the account claimed in the petition is unlawfully swelled against the county by the practice of the Auditor General, by which the amounts for which lands were bid off to the State at the October sales were charged to the county from the time the bids were reported, and interest upon this sum was also charged to the county for the succeeding year, when the amount for which the lands were bid off to the State would be credited back to the county, but the interest charged would be retained by the State and not credited back.
[585]*585“That during the year redemptions would be made from these sales thus made to the State, both at the Auditor General’s office and at the county treasurer’s office. '
- “ That as to the redemptions made in the Auditor General’s office, the State would have the money paid to it on such redemption, and would not give to the county any credit for the interest on sums so paid to it from the time of redemption. In this manner, as to these sums, the State would have both the money in its hands, and. at the same time, until the expiration of the year, charge interest against the county for the same moneys.
“ That as to the redemptions which were made in the county treasurer’s office, the State would charge to the county, at. the end of each month, the amount which the county treasurer had- received on such redemptions, and from that tipie to the end .of the year also charged the county interest on, the same sums, and in this manner the State obtained the benefit of the double charge of interest against the county.
“ 3. That there have been charged against the county, in each of the years from 1876 down to and-including 1885, íarge sums of money under the head of taxes charged back, and which were charged back after the expiration of the year, from the time when the land had been sold, and when the sale had become ábsolute.”

■ To,the. answer-of the respondent the relator made reply, and averred that there were settlements made between the-State and board of supervisors prior to the account rendered at the close of June 30, 1875, and that, during the years from 1S69 to 1882, statements of account were rendered in November each year, and delivered to the treasurer of the county, which statement brought the balance for each year down to the day of the November statement in said yeaiy wliieh statement, the relator claims, taken in connection with the account rendered on the thirtieth • of June each year, operated as a settlement between the State and county. These November statements were not referred to in the petition.

The replication further alleges that the payments were made both before and after the year 1875, by the State to the county, and by the county to the State; that a payment of $3,618.61 was made by the county in 1872, anda payment of $15,000 was made in 1882.

[586]*586That no objections were made by the county to the statements of account rendered from the year 1869 to the year 1875, which statements included the charges to the county by reason of loss upon sales of State tax lands under the law of 1869 ; and that no objections of any kind were urged by the county until several years after the rendering of .the statement of 1875, and whatever objections were thereafter made were generally informal and not in writing.

This is the only reply made by the relator to the respondent’s objections to the charges which have been made against the county by reason of the loss suffered by,the State upon sales of State tax lands under the law of 1869.

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Related

Begole v. Bigelow
213 F. 401 (Sixth Circuit, 1914)
Auditor General v. Board of Supervisors
106 Mich. 662 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1895)
Haines v. Board of Supervisors
49 N.W. 310 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1891)
Aplin v. Board of Supervisors
73 Mich. 182 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1889)

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.W. 492, 62 Mich. 579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevens-v-board-of-supervisors-mich-1886.