109 Mo. App. 133 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1904
Plaintiff at the date of the transaction which resulted in this litigation was collector of taxes for the city of St. Joseph. Defendant, a lawyer, was a citizen of the city assessed with taxes, both real and personal. The evidence in his behalf tends to show that he conceived that the personal tax was, for some reason, unjust and illegal and he determinedmot to pay it. He went to plaintiff’s office with a pencil memoranda of his real estate and handed it to plaintiff and asked him to make out his receipt for the taxes. Plaintiff made a remark to him showing that he (plaintiff)
The evidence in behalf of plaintiff contradicts that " just stated in defendant’s behalf in substantial particulars. It tended to show that defendant asked to pay all his taxes real and personal and that when he called
In our opinion, if the facts are believed to be as the evidence in defendant’s behalf tends to show them, plaintiff should fail in his case; and on the other hand, if they are believed to be as the evidence just referred to in plaintiff’s behalf tends to show them, he should recover.
The difficulty in sustaining the judgment comes from the theory ádopted by plaintiff in instructions. The idea therein set forth seems to be that if defendant gave his check to plaintiff and thereupon plaintiff gave him the tax receipt which he took to the auditor and that officer entered the tax as paid, amounting to a charge against the plaintiff as collector, that then plaintiff became liable for the amount and an action arose in his favor against defendant for the amount of the unpaid check. And this without any suggestion of the hypothesis suggested by the evidence in defendant’s behalf.
It seems to us that the circumstances as shown in evidence in defendant’s behalf should, if believed, relieve him. His payment of personal tax was not intended — was a mere inadvertence. And almost immediately, and before anything could occur to injure plaintiff or prejudice defendant, he notified plaintiff of the mistake and asked that the check be not presented for payment. To say that the mere fact that the auditor a few moments before the mistake was discovered had entered a charge of the amount against plaintiff as collector, absolutely rendered that officer liable beyond recall for the amount of the check, would be going much further than justice and good business methods demand'.
As before stated, if plaintiff shows to the satisfaction of'the triers of the fact that defendant knowingly paid his personal tax by check, then it was a binding
The judgment is reversed and cause remanded.