Thompson v. Willis

1950 OK 43, 215 P.2d 850, 202 Okla. 538, 1950 Okla. LEXIS 397
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 14, 1950
Docket33130
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1950 OK 43 (Thompson v. Willis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Willis, 1950 OK 43, 215 P.2d 850, 202 Okla. 538, 1950 Okla. LEXIS 397 (Okla. 1950).

Opinion

ARNOLD, Y. C. J.

This action was commenced September 20, 1946, in the district court of Marshall county, Oklahoma, by 67 plaintiffs, against Claude Allen, county treasurer of Marshall county, the board of county commissioners of that county, and 20 school districts in that county for the refund of certain money which was allegedly wrongfully collected from the plaintiffs as ad valorem taxes. On October 21, 1946, by leave of court, a petition in intervention in the nature of an answer to plaintiffs’ petition was filed by Frank A. Thompson, Trustee, St. Louis-San-Francisco Railway Company, bankrupt. Trial of said action was commenced November 4, 1946, and during the progress of such trial, 41 of the plaintiffs dismissed their actions without prejudice. The trial court took under advisement intervener’s demurrer to the evidence of plaintiffs until November 18, 1946, at which time the demurrer was overruled and judgment awarded in favor of remaining plaintiffs and against the defendants for the total sum of $1,990.54. From this action and judgment of the trial court, intervener has brought the case here for review.

The gist of this action and defense may be best understood by quoting paragraphs 2 and 3 of plaintiffs’ petition and paragraph 3 of intervener’s answer as follows:

“That heretofore plaintiffs paid to the defendant Claude Allen, County Treasurer of Marshall County, Oklahoma, the sums of money set opposite their names, .... Said money was paid into a trust fund and a trust deposit was issued to these plaintiffs. The lands and property of these plaintiffs was being taken by the United States of America for use in impounding waters for the Denison Dam and reservoir, and by reason of its power of eminent domain some of the lands were taken by federal district court decrees and some by warranty deed conveyances. In issuing checks for the ‘market value’ or ‘purported market value,’ the officials of the United States erroneously made checks payable to these plaintiffs and to the defendant, Claude Allen, County Treasurer of Marshall County, Oklahoma. Plaintiffs were losing their lands and the defendant, Claude Allen, aforesaid treasurer, without authority of law and contrary to law took the above sums of money out of said checks. Said defendant placed the money in a trust account for the purpose and with the understanding it would be used only to pay taxes due from these plaintiffs to be paid to the said defendant, if any. Said lands were conveyed or taken by court decrees as aforesaid between January 1, 1942, and October 1, 1942, and in fact, no tax was due to be paid by these plaintiffs to the defendant, County Treasurer above.
“Notwithstanding the conditions of the trust deposit, the defendant, Claude Allen, contrary to law, took said money out of the trust fund and deposited the same to the credit of the other defendants herein. No notice of said action on the part of said defendant treasurer was *540 given and plaintiffs had no opportunity to file a protest to the distribution of said trust money.”
“Intervener admits that plaintiffs are taxpayers of Marshall County, Oklahoma and that the defendant Claude Allen, is the duly qualified and acting County Treasurer of Marshall County, Oklahoma. Intervener further admits that certain lands and property of the plaintiffs’ were purchased by the United States of America for use in impounding waters for the Denison Dam and reservoir, and that it was necessary in certain instances to take such lands by reason of the power of eminent domain through a judgment in the Federal District Court. Intervener alleges in this connection that where the title was not obtained to such lands and paid for by the Government before the time for assessing the property for 1942 ad va-lorem taxes, the county attorney of Marshall County requested the County Treasurer to make a list of the estimated taxes against such lands for 1942, and such estimates were filed as claims in the condemnation cases in Federal Court, and the Federal Court ordered the Government to make the checks in payment for the respective tracts of lands to the land owners and the County Treasurer jointly, so that said treasurer might withhold the amount of estimated taxes and impound same until the taxes for such year were spread and certified for collection that they might be collected from the sellers of the land; that the amount of such claims for the estimated amount of the 1942 taxes, as well as certain other taxes lawfully due upon such properties, was withheld by said treasurer in the nature of trust deposits for the benefit of such sellers, and trust receipts were issued to the respective property owners or sellers, and the money was held in trust until the tax rolls for 1942 taxes were delivered to the treasurer for collection.”

Intervener has made numerous assignments of error in his petition in error, but all of these are presented in the brief under a single question thus propounded:

_ “Are these plaintiffs in equitable action for the refund of moneys applied to the payment of 1942 ad valorem taxes entitled to recover judgments against the defendants for such refunds after the elapse of more than three years since such moneys were collected as taxes and disbursed and spent in various funds where such plaintiffs failed and neglected to take advantage of their statutory remedy for the refund of such taxes?”

This is in reality a companion case to the case of Allen, County Treasurer, v. Henshaw et al., decided by this court February 19, 1946, 197 Okla. 123, 168 P. 2d 625, which decision is relied upon by plaintiffs as controlling in the instant case. If the facts here disclosed were identical with those presented in that case there would be little difficulty in applying the law here as announced in that decision. However, there are two factual distinctions between that case and the instant case which are important to be considered. First, in that case the taxes involved were those to be levied for 1943 and the valuations there involved had not been equalized and determined nor the levies fixed when a large portion of the lands there involved had been acquired by the Federal Government, but in the instant case the valuations of the properties had been equalized and determined in 1941, that being the first year of the biennial assessment period. Second, in that case, protests were filed by the taxpayers against the collection of taxes on the lands conveyed to the Federal Government before tax liens had attached, while in the instant case no protests were filed at any time by these plaintiffs. Some of the lands here involved were conveyed by the owners to the Government by warranty deeds, while the remaining lands were acquired by the Government through condemnation proceedings. In the Allen case, supra, this court stated:

“The exercise of the right of eminent domain is in effect a compulsory sale of the owner’s interest in the property sought to be appropriated.”

This statement is now adhered to. However, we can discern no element *541 of compulsion or duress in the reasonable requirement of the Government that before final payment of the purchase money for lands conveyed by warranty deed or final payment of the compensation awarded in condemnation proceedings, it should be furnished with evidence that the title to the lands acquired is free of tax liens.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1950 OK 43, 215 P.2d 850, 202 Okla. 538, 1950 Okla. LEXIS 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-willis-okla-1950.