90 P. 1092 | Kan. | 1907
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Hannah Lane was a resident of Douglas county from 1898 to 1902. During that time she was the owner of certain mortgages which she did not include in her statements of taxable property made to the assessor, and upon which she paid no taxes. On . October 27, 1903, the county clerk, upon notice to her, undertook to charge her with a tax, on account of her ownership of such mortgages, for each of the years 1898, 1899, 1900, 1901, and 1902, the amounts being fixed by estimating the value by the usual methods and applying the rate for the appropriate year. A tax warrant was issued, and to avoid the seizure and sale of her property Mrs. Lane paid the amount charged against her, and then brought an action against the county to recover it. The case was submitted upon an
Only two questions are presented: (1) Had'the clerk statutory authority to impose the tax? (2) If not, was the plaintiff precluded from recovering by the fact that the amount wrongfully taken from her was only what would have been rightfully charged against her if she had in former years made correct returns of her property to the assessor? The authority of the county clerk must be found, if at all, in section 1669 or section 7599 of the General Statutes of 1901, reading respectively as follow:
“It shall be the duty of the county clerk to assess, at a fair value, the property of any person liable to pay taxes which the county assessor has failed to assess, and to place the same on the tax-roll, and the county treasurer shall collect the taxes on the same as in other cases; and it shall further be the duty of the county treasurer to notify the county clerk of any such property which may come to his knowledge, and the county clerk, for the purpose of assessing the same, is authorized to administer oaths to the owner of such property, or to any other person, touching the value of the same; but the county clerk is not required to see such property in person.”
“The county clerk, or board of county commissioners, if he or they shall have reason to believe that any person, company or corporation has given to the assessor a false statement or has made no statement whatever of his personal property, money, credits, investments in bonds, stocks, joint-stock companies, corporations or otherwise, and that the assessor has not returned the full amount required to be listed in his city or township, or has omitted any personal property, moneys, credits, investments in bonds, stocks, joint-stock companies, corporations or otherwise, or has undervalued the same, which are by law subject to taxation, shall proceed at any time before the final settlement with the county treasurer to correct the returns of the assessor, and to charge such person, company or corporation on the tax-roll with the proper amount of taxes; to enable him to do which, he is hereby authorized and empowered to issue compulsory*15 process, and require the attendance of any person or persons whom he may suppose to have a knowledge of the value of .such articles of personal property, moneys, credits, investments in bonds, stocks, joint-stock companies, corporations or otherwise, and examine such person or persons on oath or affirmation in relation to the statement or returns. And it shall be the duty of the said clerk in all such cases to give at least five days’ notice to such person, company or corporation by the sheriff leaving a copy of the notice with the person, if he resides in the county; and if the person does not reside in the county, then by putting a copy of said notice in the post-office, properly directed to said person, and, if a company or corporation, by leaving a copy of the notice at the nearest and usual place of business of said company or corporation, before entering the said increased valuation on the tax-roll, that the said person, company or corporation may have an opportunity of showing that the statement or return to the assessor was correct. And if any person who may be summoned to appear before the clerk for examination as provided in this section shall wilfully fail to appear, or, appearing, shall refuse to answer any question or questions propounded to him concerning the subject of such examination, such person shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof before a court of competent jurisdiction shall be fined in a sum not exceeding fifty dollars, and by imprisonment in the county jail not exceeding ninety days, or by both such fine and imprisonment. And the county clerk shall in all such cases file in his office a statement of the facts or evidence on which he made the correction, but he shall in no case reduce the amount returned by the assessor.”
The plaintiff claims that section 1669 is obsolete, and that by reason of the words here italicized no action can be taken under section 7599 after the final settlement with the treasurer, which takes place at the October meeting of the board of county commissioners. (Gen. Stat. 1901, § 1684.) The defendant contends that the time limitation is not mandatory and does not prevent subsequent additions to the personal-property tax-roll; also, that section 1669 is still in force and by its very terms authorizes such additions to be made at
But, as already indicated, the further contention is made on behalf of the county that even under section
It remains to decide whether other considerations prevent the plaintiff’s recovery. , An action for the recovery of the amount of an illegal tax involuntarily paid is governed by the same rule as a suit to enjoin its collection where the remedy by injunction is open. The usual statement is that the action may be maintained if the tax is void, but not if it is merely irregular. (2 Cooley, Taxation, 1487-1489; 27 A. & E. Encycl. of L. 757-759.) In a line of Wisconsin cases, of which Day and another v. Town of Pelican, 94 Wis. 503, 69 N. W. 368, is typical, a further requirement is insisted upon. It was there said:
“It is not enough to show that the tax proceedings are irregular or void, but it must also appear that they are inequitable. Proof of illegal and void additions to the assessment, which increased the taxes of the party bringing the action, may show a prima facie case, but the defendant is entitled, at least, to rebut it, and to show, by way of vindicating the tax in equity and justifying the retention of the money sued for, that, had the party made a fair and truthful return of his property, he would have been properly taxed for the entire .amount or a 'material part of the alleged illegal tax.* The plaintiff in such action cannot be allowed to take advantage of his own neglect or breach of duty under the law, so as to recover out of the treasury money he has paid into it under protest, and which it was in fact his duty, in equity and good conscience, to have thus paid in the first instance.” (Page 509.)
This decision was rendered under a statute which in
In Kansas injunctions have frequently been allowed where additions have been made to the assessor’s returns without notice to the persons affected, apparently without inquiry into the justice of the additions. (Water Supply Co. v. Roberts, 45 Kan. 363, 25 Pac. 855, and cases cited; Coal Co. v. Emlen, 44 Kan. 117, 24 Pac. 340.) The rule of the Wisconsin court certainly has much to commend it, but even if adopted here it would fail to reach the facts of the present case. Where a property owner fails to make a full disclosure to the assessor, and the public officials without notice to him add the omitted items to the assessment roll of that year, although the resulting tax is void it may with reason be said that he ought not to be permitted On that account to enjoin its collection or to recover it after an involuntary payment, because notwithstanding the jurisdictional defect the thing actually accomplished is what the law intended —all the property placed upon the roll belongs there, but it gets there by a wrong method. A very different situation is presented where charges are made on account of the failure to make a correct return in some previous year. The law, as here interpreted, does not contemplate that such charges shall get upon the tax-roll of the current year by any method. To place them there, and by this means to enforce their payment, is in a sense inequitable; it results in an unequal imposition of taxes for that year. That the person aggrieved thereby has at some time in the past been guilty of a wrong toward the public does not change the aspect of the case in this regard, since the wrong
No estoppel to maintain the present action arises out of the circumstance that the plaintiff has heretofore made untrue statements by means of which §he in former years avoided bearing her fair share of the public expense. Her action is not founded on that conduct. She is not now seeking to derive an advantage from that wrong. That she is enabled to retain the advantage she has already derived from it results from the statute. Her prior delinquency does not impose upon her a disability to invoke the protection of the law against illegal exactions made of her at this time.
The judgment is affirmed.