146 N.E. 870 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1925
Appellant filed its complaint in the Clark Circuit Court to recover taxes paid to the treasurer of said county. It is alleged that the assessment of such taxes was void; that appellee had levied upon certain personal property owned by appellant; that in order to avoid and prevent a threatened sale of the property by the appellee, it paid the amount of such taxes so assessed and that all of the money so paid by appellant was in the possession of appellee when the *42 complaint was filed. A demurrer to the complaint was sustained and judgment rendered against appellant.
Appellant contends that the property on which the assessment was made was not taxable and that the assessment was void. In view of the conclusion we have reached, it is not necessary for us to decide this question.
Section 14376 Burns 1926, § 10139u12 Burns' Supp. 1921, Acts 1919 p. 198, § 332, provides that: "In all cases where any person or persons or body politic or corporate shall appear before the board of commissioners of any county in this state, and establish by proper proof, that such person or body politic or corporate has at any time paid for any year or part thereof any amount of taxes which were wrongfully assessed against such person or body politic or corporate in such county, it shall be the duty of said board to order the amount, so proved to have been wrongfully paid, to be refunded to said payer from the county treasury, so far as the same was assessed and paid for county taxes, and the county auditor shall draw his warrant therefor and the county treasurer shall pay the same out of any money not otherwise appropriated: * * *."
Section 14378 Burns 1926, § 10139w12 Burns' Supp. 1921, being § 334, Acts 1919 p. 198, provides for an appeal from the board of commissioners and that, on appeal, the court shall decide the merits of the case and order the tax refunded or not as the case may be.
Appellant did not file any claim before the board of commissioners for a refund of the taxes so claimed to have been wrongfully assessed and collected.
Appellee insists that the remedy provided by the statute is exclusive; that the legislative intent was to furnish a simple and direct method for the recovery of taxes wrongfully assessed and collected and that a court proceeding was not contemplated, except by appeal. *43
Appellant contends that the statute makes no provision for the recovery of city, town or township taxes, and, for that reason, does not furnish him an adequate remedy. We cannot 1, 2. concur in this contention. When appellant filed its complaint, the money was all in the possession and custody of appellee. No part of it had been paid out or distributed. It was being held by appellee as a trustee, either for the use of appellant or for the respective funds to which it belonged. If appellant had filed his claim with the board of commissioners under the statute asking for a refund before the money had been distributed, it would have been the duty of the board, or the court on appeal, in case the assessment was void for any reason, to have refunded all of the money so paid. And if, after the filing of such claim, the treasurer had made distribution of the money, the right of the person so paying, would not be changed. DuBois v. Board, etc. (1894),
This court, in Board, etc., v. Adler (1922),
Appellant has cited no authority holding that an action at law may be maintained against the county treasurer to recover the amount of taxes wrongfully paid, and we find no decision in Indiana authorizing such an action under the facts as alleged in appellant's complaint. Board, etc., v. Adler, supra, is directly in point and, on the authority thereof, we hold the court did not err in sustaining the demurrer to appellant's complaint.
Judgment affirmed. *45