Supervisors of Houghton County v. Rees

34 Mich. 481, 1876 Mich. LEXIS 203
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 10, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 34 Mich. 481 (Supervisors of Houghton County v. Rees) 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
Supervisors of Houghton County v. Rees, 34 Mich. 481, 1876 Mich. LEXIS 203 (Mich. 1876).

Opinion

Graves, J:

Eees 'was elected treasurer of Houghton county for the [482]*482regular term of two years commencing January 1, 1871, and gave to plaintiffs the usual official bond with the other defendants as sureties in the penal sum of thirty thousand dollars. He entered upon the duties of the office at the beginning of the term and continued until the 25th of October, 1872, when the board of supervisors removed him. James B. Sturges was elected to fill the vacancy, and he entered about the 25th of November. Some time after-wards this suit was brought on the official bond so given by Bees, and the plaintiffs claimed, first, that he refused to account for and pay over money he had received for the county; and, second, that he had neglected to return lists to the auditor general of lands delinquent for taxes for 1870 and 1871.

The general issue was pleaded, and in November, 1875, the cause was tried before a jury.

The plaintiffs were allowed to adduce such evidence as they had in support of each of their claims, and the jury were permitted by the judge to pass upon the facts bearing on the first charge, and they found a verdict for the plaintiffs thereon. So far no question is raised. But he refused to submit the facts c.oncerning the other charges and founded his refusal upon the indefiniteness and insufficiency of the declaration. The plaintiffs being dissatisfied, have sought a revision here. The portion of the declaration which the judge condemned is open to criticism, but as the defendants make the point that there was a fatal gap in the plaintiffs’ evidence, it is best to consider that first, because if well taken it follows as matter of law that they were not entitled to a favorable finding on this part of their case, whether the declaration was good or bad, and hence were not wronged by the judge’s ruling, and have no cause to complain. His exclusion of recovery by declining to submit the facts was no more injurious than a direction to find for the defendants would have been, and if the defendants are correct in their position, such a direction would have been proper. The inaccuracy of the ground of the ruling, if it was so, is [483]*483in this aspect of the case of no importance. The theory of the plaintiffs is, that it was Rees’ official duty on receiving in due form and season lists of delinquent tax lands from the township treasurers to forward transcripts thereof in due form and lawful season to the auditor general; that the township treasurers did in fact seasonably and in proper form report to him such lists, but that he neglected to forward transcripts thereof to the auditor general and thereby became liable to the county for an amount equal to the taxes charged on such lands, less, however, the amount appearing to have been paid. The declaration stated no specific time or times at which the township treasurers made returns to Rees as county treasurer. It simply stated argumentatively that the returns were “properly and seasonably” made, and the charge of neglect to forward transcripts to the auditor general contained no reference to any specific time. It barely stated that Rees did not forward the transcript in the “spring” of the particular year, “nor at any other timé.”

In this, attitude of the case, and considering the question, it is best to refer somewhat liberally to the statutes.

Taxes on real estate are declared to be a lien from the first Monday of December in the year of the assessment.— § 1006, G. L. And in case no extension is given'for collecting, the local collector is required to make returns to the county treasurer on . or before the succeeding first day of February. — § 1003. And if there is any unpaid tax on land the officer has not been able to collect of the owner or occupant, he is required to make a verified statement of the tax so unpaid and due, with a full and perfect description from the roll of the premises charged, and submit the same to the county treasurer, and thereupon the latter is required to compare such statement with the roll; and if found correct, to certify to it and file it with his certificate in his office. At the same time, the county treasurer is commanded to reject and charge back any lands twice assessed, or so erroneously or defectively described that they [484]*484cannot be ascertained. He is also to give the collector a receipt stating the amount of taxes returned unpaid, and also give him a statement of all taxes rejected. — §§ 1019, 1020, 1021, 1022.

On receipt of this verified statement from the collector, the county treasurer is required to enter the same in his official books, and make a correct transcript thereof, of all the descriptions of laud returned as delinquent for unpaid taxes, except such as he shall have rejected, and which transcript, is then required to be compared by the county clerk with the collector’s statement as certified by the county treasurer, and if found true by the clerk, he is to append his certificate that he has so examined and compared it, and found it correct. Such transcript so made, compared and certified, the county treasurer is directed to forward to the auditor general by the first day of March next after the return of the statement, but it is declared to be receivable at any time during said month of March, and when received, the amount is to be credited to the county on the books of the auditor general’s office. — §§ 1033, 1034. The section prescribing the time for sending forward this transcript, and which stands as section 1034 in the compilation, is numbered in the act itself as section sixty-eight. The preceding section, numbered as sixty-seven in the act, regulates the preparation and nature of the transcript.

This return being made to the auditor general, he is given extensive authority to make rejections. , If before sale he discovers that for any reason returned lands should not be sold, it is made his duty to withhold them. — § 1065. If he finds out that the tax has been paid to the township or county treasurer, or that the land was doubly assessed, or so erroneously or defectively described that it cannot be ■ old, or was not subject to taxation at the time of assessment, he is required to reject the claim that the kinds are delinquent. — § 1074. Particular provision is made for those cases where he rejects for the reason that the particular tax exceeded lawful limits. — §§ 1079, 1080, 1081. [485]*485"We may next notice regulations for extending the time for returning lands as delinquent to the county treasurer. In the first place, the board of supervisors is empowered to allow extension to the first of April, or a month beyond the time proscribed in section sixty-eight (being § 1034 of the compilation) for forwarding transcripts to the auditor general, and including the whole time there authorized for his reception of them. In the second place, if the board of supervisors neglect to extend the time, then the township board, or common council of a city, may grant extension until the first day of March, or up to the very time for forwarding transcripts to the auditor general as before mentioned. — § 1004. In case of extension by the township board or city council, the fact is to be certified to the county clerk; and in case of extension in that way, and also in case of extension by the board of supervisors, the county clerk is to certify to the action taken, and attach his “certificate to the transcript of the county treasurer, to be forwarded to the auditor general as required by section sixty-seven.’5 — §§ 1004, 1005.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 Mich. 481, 1876 Mich. LEXIS 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/supervisors-of-houghton-county-v-rees-mich-1876.