York Beach Village Corp. v. Inhabitants of York

103 A.2d 786, 150 Me. 1, 1954 Me. LEXIS 15
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedFebruary 3, 1954
StatusPublished

This text of 103 A.2d 786 (York Beach Village Corp. v. Inhabitants of York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
York Beach Village Corp. v. Inhabitants of York, 103 A.2d 786, 150 Me. 1, 1954 Me. LEXIS 15 (Me. 1954).

Opinion

Williamson, J.

On report upon an agreed statement of facts. This is an action upon an account annexed by the York Beach Village Corporation (the Village) against the Inhabitants of the Town of York (the Town) to recover the balance allegedly due from the Town on or before July 1, 1952 under the provisions of the charter of the Village (P. & S. L., 1923, Chap. 3, Sec. 4) and the statute relating to apportionment of the motor vehicle excise tax (R. S., Chap. 19, Sec. 45).

The Village contends there is due from the town the sum of $47,127.51, less a payment of $23,492.92, or a balance, apart from interest, of $23,634.59. The Town pleads the general issue and in a brief statement of special matter of defense sets forth accord and satisfaction and payment of the full amount due.

The facts are not in dispute. The controversy centers primarily around the construction of section 4 of the Village charter. Before proceeding to this issue we will dis[3]*3pose of the Town’s contention that the claim has been settled by the payment from the Town to the Village.

On March 3, 1952 the Town at its annual meeting voted to pay the Village the sum of $23,492.92 pursuant to an article in the warrant “to see if the Town will vote to appropriate the sum of $44,430.06” in compliance with the Village charter.

The sum of $44,430.06 was the amount claimed by the Village. The amount appropriated was recommended by the selectmen “and was an amount larger than the amount claimed by said selectmen to be due to said Village Corporation under said section; said figure of $23,492.92 being arrived at by the selectmen resolving all doubts in favor of the Village Corporation, as they understood its charter, so far as individual items, in the town appropriation were concerned, in order to grant the Village Corporation as much funds as possible for carrying out its duties under its charter, and said amount being intended by said selectmen and Town to be the full obligation of the Town to said Village Corporation for said year.” On March 18, 1952 at the annual meeting of the Village it was voted to authorize the board of assessors to institute legal proceedings to secure an interpretation and clarification of the charter, and enforcement of the rights of the Village.

The Town paid the treasurer of the Village $23,492.92 by check dated June 14, 1952, with the notation on its face “for Beach-Village Corp. appropriation 1952 in full for year 1952.” The check was cashed and “used and expended unconditionally by said Village Corporation assessors, knowing that said payment was sent by the Town as payment in full for its appropriation for the year 1952, for the benefit of said plaintiff corporation and the conduct of its affairs for the year 1952.”

[4]*4In our view the Village accepted the sum appropriated by the Town without losing any claim to further payment by reason either of the notation on the check or of the knowledge of the assessors of the intent of the Town in making the payment. The money paid to the Village represented the tax revenue of the Village as determined by the Town meeting. Without this revenue, the treasury of the Village would have no current income with which to meet its municipal expenses. We hold the Town could not place a condition of “payment in full” upon the payment of the sum appropriate*! and paid pursuant to the statute. There must of necessity be authority at some point for at least reasonable adjustments under the statutes before us. Whatever, however, may be the authority of assessors of the Village, or of the Village Corporation itself to compromise and settle the liability under the statutes of the Town to the Village, we find here no action by such authority. See Frankfort v. Waldo Lumber Co., 128 Me. 1, 145 A. 241.

We come then to the decisive issue of how and in what manner is the amount payable by the Town to the Village to be determined under the charter and the motor vehicle excise tax statute.

The pertinent parts of the statutes are:

The Village charter
“Sec. 4. Amount to be paid to corporation by town of York increased to 75%. On or before the first day of July annually, beginning in nineteen hundred seventeen, the town of York shall appropriate and pay over to the York Beach Village Corporation a sum of money computed as follows: From the annual appropriation raised by the town taxation on the estates and polls within said York Beach Village Corporation for the preceding year shall be deducted said corporation’s proportional part, based on valuation and poll tax assessment of the whole annual town levy for said preceding [5]*5year for state, county and school taxes, salary of the town officers, reduction of town debt, interest on town charges, appropriations for roads, poor, in-. cidentals, and any and all other town charges, and seventy-five per centum of the sum thus determined, after deducting the corporation’s proportion of town obligations for hydrants and street lights, shall be said sum to be annually paid over to said corporation as herein provided. Said sum shall be expended by said corporation for its corporate purposes and duties, and payment thereof to the corporation shall relieve said town of all town charges within said corporation except for street lighting, hydrant service, public schools, public health, maintenance of poor, and such new construction of drains and sewers as the town may vote to build, and repair of town sewers. All the authority and duties of the selectmen or road commissioner within said corporation shall be exercised by said assessors; or they may appoint an agent to perform the duties of road commissioner.”
P. & S. L., 1923, Chap. 3.
Motor vehicle excise tax (including aircraft)
“All moneys collected in accordance with the provisions of Sections 38 to 47, inclusive, (motor vehicle excise tax) shall be apportioned between such town, city, and any village corporation, sewer district, fire district, or other public municipal corporation, in the same manner as the moneys now collected for taxes assessed on property located within such town or city. In case tíre manner of apportionment between any public municipal corporations has not been otherwise determined, it shall be made by the assessors of such city or town for any year and the assessors of the other public municipal corporation concerned in such apportionment for that year.”
R. S., Chap. 19, Sec. 45.

It is not necessary to discuss in detail the Village Corporation. It is a corporation of a type not unfamiliar in: our State, designed to perform certain specified functions with[6]*6in a municipality and deriving its support from an apportionment or division of the tax collections. It was originally chartered in 1901. In 1917 its duties and functions were greatly increased. The present formula in Section 4 was first introduced in 1917, and has since remained unchanged, except for an alteration in percentage from 55% to 75%. P. & S. L., 1901, Chap. 455; 1905, Chap. 305; 1917, Chap. 129; 1923, Chap. 3; 1939, Chap. 16 and 17.

We are concerned, it will be noted, not with the apportionment of tax dollars collected in 1952. Our problem is to ascertain by application of a formula to tax dollars and levy or expenses for the year 1951, the sum which in 1952 was payable by the Town to the Village for the latter’s particular municipal purposes.

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Related

Inhabitants of Frankfort v. Waldo Lumber Co.
145 A. 241 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 A.2d 786, 150 Me. 1, 1954 Me. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/york-beach-village-corp-v-inhabitants-of-york-me-1954.