Storie v. Norman

130 S.W.2d 101, 174 Tenn. 647, 10 Beeler 647, 1938 Tenn. LEXIS 134
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 130 S.W.2d 101 (Storie v. Norman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Storie v. Norman, 130 S.W.2d 101, 174 Tenn. 647, 10 Beeler 647, 1938 Tenn. LEXIS 134 (Tenn. 1939).

Opinion

Mb,. Justice DeIIaven

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an action by plaintiff in error to recover taxes paid by him to Fentress County. It is contended that the following items of levy made by the county court at its July, 1937, session were illegal and void: Court costs, ten cents; Officers’ salaries, twenty cents; Jail, ten cents; Paupér, ten cents; Sinking Fund for Time Warrants, twenty cents; York Elementary School Building, ten cents; Time Warrants W. P. A. Projects, ten cents; Wilder and Helena Schools, thirty-five cents; Old Age Pension Fund, fifteen cents.

. The levy for Old Age Pension Fund is attacked upon the ground that Chapter 49, Public Acts 1937, authorizing the same, is unconstitutional and void because in contravention of Article 2, Section 17, of the Constitution of Tennessee. The other items of the levy are attacked upon various grounds, as will be hereinafter noticed.

*651 The ease was tried upon the pleadings and a written stipulation of facts. The trial judge sustained the validity of the tax levy as to each of the items challenged by plaintiff and dismissed the suit.

Plaintiff has appealed to this court and assigned errors.

The position taken by counsel for plaintiff is that because section 1045(1) of the Code authorizes the various counties of the State to levy, for general county purposes, upon all taxable property within the county which is subject to ad valorem taxation, a tax not to exceed forty cents upon the one hundred dollars of taxable property, which shall be in addition to special taxes for other purposes permitted by law, the items of the levy here complained of being in excess of the forty-cent levy fixed by the statute are invalid, not being* permitted by general law, or by any private act applicable to Fentress County, the county having made a levy of forty cents for general county purposes.

We will consider the items complained of in the order they are challenged by the assignments of error.

(1) Court costs, ten cents. The stipulation shows that this levy was used to pay off warrants issued to jurors, witnesses, etc. Code, section 10242, provides for the appropriation by the county court for jurors and costs of criminal prosecutions, but no special tax is authorized to cover such items. Defendants seem to concede that the above-mentioned claims should be paid out of the general county fund. Counsel for defendants seek to relate this item to the duty of the county court to erect a courthouse and keep it in a state of repair. Code, section 752. And to levy a special tax for that purpose. Code, section 755. We see no connection whatever be *652 tween the levy for conrt costs and the authority to erect a courthouse and keep it in repair. Appropriations for court costs must be paid out of the general county funds, derived from the forty-cent levy for general county purposes. The third assignment of error must be sustained.

(2) The ten-cent levy for jail purposes in addition to the forty-cent levy for county purposes is next challenged. It is the duty of the county court to erect a jail and keep it in repair at the expense of the county, and it may levy a special tax for that purpose. Code, sections 752 and 755. The item is assessed as “Jail tax.” It is shown by the stipulation that the proceeds of this levy were used to pay off warrants issued to the Sheriff of Fentress County for jail turnkeys and for boarding prisoners. The special levy of “Jail tax” was valid. How the proceeds of the levy were disbursed is a question not affecting the validity of the levy, even though the fund may have been paid out irregularly. The fourth assignment of error must be overruled.

(3) The ten-cent levy for paupers in addition to the forty-cent levy for county purposes is next challenged. Section 4792 of the Code provides that the county court shall provide an asylum for the poor’, and by section 4797 “are given full power to levy taxes and appropriate county funds” for such purpose. And by Code, section 4806', may apply any county money in the treasury that may be deemed proper to that purpose. It is stipulated that the funds derived from the “Pauper tax” were used for furnishing paupers and to pay the keeper of the poorhouse for boarding paupers. Code, section 10242, provides that the county court may appropriate money “for the support of the poor, lunatics, and idiots.” No special tax is authorized by statute for this purpose. In *653 Railroad Co. v. Hamblen County, 117 Tenn., 327, 97 S. W., 455, it was held that the quarterly county court’s levy of a special tax denominated “pauper tax” is not authorized by law, and is void; because there is no statute authorizing the levy of a special tax for the support of the poor, which is a general county purpose, and for which appropriations may be made out of the general county funds. The fifth assignment of error must be sustained.

(4) It is next complained that the county court had no authority to mate a levy of twenty cents for officers ’ salaries, in addition to the forty-cent levy for county purposes. Section 10242 authorizes appropriations by the county court (6) to pay solicitors, sheriffs, and clerks for ex officio services; (7) to pay clerks for making out tax lists; (8) to pay county judge or chairman for his services as financial agent of the county; (9) to pay county judge for other services; and (10) to pay commissioners for settling with the officers intrusted with the collection of the public or county revenue. Such appropriations would be payable out of funds derived from the levy made for general county purposes. We have been cited to no statute expressly authorizing a special levy for “Officers’ salaries.”

It appears that the 1937 Legislature passed the following acts applicable to Fentress County: (1) Chapter 213, Private Acts 1937, created the office of county attorney and fixed his salary at $600' per year; (2) Chapter 212, Private Acts 1937, provided for three road commissioners at a salary of $30 a month, each; (3) Chapter 706, Private Acts 1937, put the circuit court clerk on a salary of $100 per month; (4) Chapter 10, Private Acts 1937, Second Extra Session, put the county court clerk on a salary of $100 a month.

*654 These private acts do not in each instance provide out of what fund these salaries are to he paid, hut are each made fixed charges on the county which must he met by some levy, the general levy, as asserted hy counsel for defendants, not being sufficient to meet these fixed salary charges. It is contended for defendants that these acts hy implication authorize the county court to make a levy for salary purposes; that this contention is strengthened by the provision contained in Chapter 706 that the salary of the circuit court clerk shall he paid “by warrant drawn on the County Funds or a special salary fund from the Treasury of said county.” Section 2.

Article 2, Section 29, of the Constitution of the State provides, in part: “The General Assembly shall have power to authorize the several counties and incorporated towns in this State, to impose taxes for county and corporation purposes respectively, in such manner as shall he prescribed hy law.”

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191 S.W.2d 153 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1945)

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Bluebook (online)
130 S.W.2d 101, 174 Tenn. 647, 10 Beeler 647, 1938 Tenn. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/storie-v-norman-tenn-1939.