4 Kan. 332 | Kan. | 1868
By the Court,
This cause comes up to this court on petition in- error from the district court of Atchison county, where it was tried at November term, 1867, by the court, without a jury, and judgment rendered in favor of the defendant in error, who was also defendant in that court.
The facts are fully stated in the findings of the court below! And the plaintiffs complain that the court below erred in its conclusions of law from the facts found. The findings of fact of the district court were as follows:
1. That the said defendant was, at the time alleged in this answer, the duly elected, commissioned and acting treasurer of Atchison county.
2. That the sum of $441, to recover which this suit was instituted, was levied as a tax upon the personal property of the plaintiff, in manner and form as alleged in the answer of defendant.
4. The only question at issue in this case is, whether said tax was paid by said plaintiffs to said defendant voluntarily, or whether it was paid by coercion and under protest.
The facts, as shown by the evidence in the case, are as follows: Sometime in the spring of the year 1866, an action was commenced by numerous plaintiffs, of whom the plaintiff in this case, Moses Greenabaum, was one, against this defendant and others, for the purpose of restraining the collection of said tax.
In that action, an order for a temporary injunction was granted by the judge of the district court of this district, at chambers, to restrain the defendants from further proceedings for the collection of said tax. From that order, the defendant appealed to the Supreme Court on error.
The Supreme Court held the affidavit of the plaintiff, for an injunction, to be insufficient, and reversed the order. By consent of parties, however, the Supreme Court held the case for further consideration, and after-wards declared the tax to be unconstitutional. But before that decision was made, the Supreme Court sent its mandate to the clerk of this district court, reversing the aforesaid order for a temporary injunction. The clerk of this district court gave a copy of the mandate to the defendant, who thereupon went to the store of the plaintiffs, and the plaintiffs not being in, informed the clerks of the fact that he had received a mandate, and told them that the tax must now be paid. The clerks inquired what would be the consequences if the tax was not paid ; to wThich the defendant replied that if it was not paid, he would issue his warrant to the
Before defendant called at plaintiff* ’s store, the following notice was published by him in the newspapers at the city of Atchison :
£ ‘ N otioe to Tax-Paters. — Treasurer’ s Office, Atchison, Kansas, Sept. 4, 1866. — Notice is hereby given to all persons who have not paid the four and a half per cent, tax, in . the city of Atchison, on their personal property, that for all sums unpaid on the 14th day of September, 1866, I shall issue warrants to the sheriff of Atchison county, for collecting the same on that day. Samuel C. King-, County Treasurer.”
5. That the plaintiffs demanded from the defendant the said sum of $441, before the- commencement of this action.
6. Before demand was made by the plaintiffs, as aforesaid, the said defendant had paid said sum into-the treasury of -the city of Atchison, as alleged in -his answer.
And upon these facts the court does find its conclusions of law, as follows :
That the said sum of $441 was paid by the plaintiffs to the defendant voluntarily, and with a knowledge of the facts, and cannot, therefore, be recovered.
The defendant could not compel the sheriff to levy
These findings of fact and conclusions of law in the court below, reduce the question to be passed upon by this court to a very narrow compass.
Clearly, an illegal tax paid under duress to prevent' seizure of goods, may be recovered back if the county treasurer receiving it had notice of the facts, and of the involuntary payment while the money was yet in his hands. Was the payment, then, under the circumstances stated by the court below in this case, a voluntary payment, or not ?
The plaintiff, Moses Creenabaum, was absent from home, leaving clerks to manage affairs in his absence. The defendant goes to the store and makes statements and representations well calculated to alarm the clerks; and as it would seem, simply to prevent the seizure and sale of their employers’ goods, at what would probably have been a ruinous sacrifice, by the sheriff as on execution, these clerks pay the taxes which their employers had refused to pay, and had commenced and wei*e then prosecuting legal proceedings to set aside. We think such payment, under all the circumstances, was not a voluntary payment of money by the plaintiffs.
If tax gatherers can be protected in the use of false or colorable pretexts, or of strategy, to frighten the employees of an unwilling tax-payer, in his absence, into the payment of an illegal and void tax, on the ground that such payment, extorted from the fears of the agents, was a voluntary payment on the part of the principal, who was absent and ignorant of the
But the defendant alleges that he had paid the money' over to the city of Atchison before the plaintiffs made -demand upon him for repayment. Under some circumstances this might, perhaps, constitute a sufficient ground of defense, but we think not upon the state of facts disclosed in this case.
An application pending in the Supreme Court for a perpetual injunction to restrain the collection of this very tax, should have been ample notice to the defendant not to pay over money obtained as this was, until the final determination of the questions involved. A formal demand was not necessary.
The judgment of the court below is reversed, and the cause remanded.