GULLY, STATE TAX COLLECTOR, v. ADAMS COUNTY.
No. 30662.
Supreme Court of Mississippi
Feb. 26, 1934
Suggestion of Error Overruled April 2, 1934.
153 So. 165
In Banc.
In the case at bar, the appellees neither alleged nor proved any sort of fraud practiced by any one in the rendition of this judgment, unless it be their mere conclusion that the judgment agreed to by plaintiff and defendant and not assented to by the sureties in open court or otherwise could be denominated a charge of fraud. At the time the motion was filed, the six months for appeal had not expired. No fraud was charged in the petition, but simply that appellees procured from the court below a reversal of a judgment of that court after its power over the judgment had expired. There is no sounder doctrine of law established in our courts than that he who alleges fraud must state the facts upon which the fraud is based, and prove them. The court below erred in setting aside the judgment against the sureties and reinstating it.
The case will therefore be reversed and the original judgment against the principal and the sureties will be reinstated here.
Reversed, and judgment here for appellant.
Per Curiam:—The judges of this court are equally divided on the question of error vel non in the decree of the court below. Judges GRIFFITH, ETHRIDGE, and SMITH, are of the opinion that these is no error therein; and Judges McGOWEN, ANDERSON, and COOK are of the contrary opinion. As we cannot reverse the judgment of the court below, it must be, and is, affirmed.
McGowen, J., delivered an opinion.
On account of the importance of this case, I deem it proper to set forth my view of the facts and law of the case as disclosed by this record.
On January 11, 1932, J. B. Gully, state tax collector, for the use and benefit of the city of Natchez, Mississippi, exhibited his bill in the chancery court of Adams county against said county. A demurrer to the original bill was sustained and an amended bill was filed, to which the court below again sustained a demurrer, and the complainant in the court below, the appellant here, declining to amend further, the original bill as amended was dismissed, and the state tax collector prosecutes an appeal here.
After alleging the power of the state tax collector to bring suit for past due obligations, especially with reference to municipalities, the appellant alleged that he caused an examination of the records of the city of Natchez and the county of Adams, and ascertained therefrom that during the years 1927, 1928, 1929, and 1930, there had been collected by the county of Adams ad valоrem taxes for road purposes, on property within the city of Natchez, amounting to various sums of money of which the city of Natchez was entitled to one-half but which it had never received; and that he, as state tax collector, was authorized by the law to demand on behalf of the city of Natchez one-half of said ad valorem taxes. An account addressed to the board of supervisors of Adams county demanding one-half of the ad valorem road taxes collected on the property for the several named years, with the amount collected and the city‘s share thereof, was attached to the bill of complaint as an exhibit, and it was alleged that said account had been presented to the board of supervisors of said county and had been rejected, and that the state tax collector demanded payment thereof on behalf of the city of Natchez. There was further attached tо the bill as an exhibit a resolution of the mayor and board of aldermen of the city of Natchez, passed May 5, 1920, in which it was recited that the said city desired to preserve for itself the benefit of an act of the Legislature, approved April 3, 1920, being chapter 232 of the Laws thereof, claiming thereunder its share of all levies and collections made by the county of Adams for road purposes, and the clerk of the municipal board was directed to forthwith make and file a copy of the resolution with the board of supervisors.
I shall take up and consider the several points argued as ground for upholding the action of the court below in sustaining the demurrer to the bill.
1. The right of the state tax collector to prosecute this suit is upheld in Gully, State Tax Collector, v. Copiah County (Miss.), 147 So. 300.
2. It is contended by Adams county that its system of levying the taxes as a part of the general fund of the county, and afterwards allocating a portion thereof to the county highway fund, was not an administrative device or subterfuge, and that the taxes so levied were not subject to the clаim of the city of Natchez on account of chapter 232 of the Laws of 1920 and amendments thereto.
The applicable statutes under which the state tax collector claims that Adams county is in default of money due the municipality are chapter 232, Laws of 1920, chapter 129, Laws of 1928, and sections 6417 and 6418 of the Code of 1930. By chapter 232 of the Laws of 1920, it is provided that “one-half of all ad valorem taxes collected by or for a county . . . on prop-
It will be noted that prior to the enactment of chapter 232 of the Laws of 1920 the county had been collecting taxes for road purposes as such, and after the enactment of this law it no longer levied taxes for road purposes, but published in its budget that it would expend moneys for road purposes, and thereafter levied taxes for that purpose as a part of the general county fund and allocated and devoted same to that purpose.
In the case of Town of Purvis v. Lamar County, 161 Miss. 454, 137 So. 323, we held that statutes, evidencing fixed and long-continued, consistent legislative policy and intent, must not be so construed as to permit inferior administrative boards to resort to administrative devices operating to set aside such intent; and further that this court did not arm the board of supervisors with an administrative device by which it could evade or set aside the entire purpose and policy of the law in respect to the share of the towns in the current ad valorem road taxes. The court further held that the question of whether the county was acting within or without the authority of law in borrowing money and issuing its note therefor for road maintenance purposes, which the tax therein was levied to pay, did not avail the county in that suit. The Town of Purvis case was followed and approved by the case of Gully, State Tax
The board of supervisors of Adams county had the power to levy an ad valorem tax for road purposes, and it could not by administrative devices of shifting its funds from one account to another escape its liability for that portion thereof which belonged, under chapter 232 of the Laws of 1920 and all the subsequent amendments thereto, to the city of Natchez. The board of supervisors had the power to levy the tax, and the fact that it did not pursue the proper method in making its levy cannot now be used as a defense to defeat the claim of thе municipality thereto. In the case at bar the county resorted to an administrative device condemned in the Town of Purvis case.
It is said that the Town of Purvis case does not apply here, because the money was illegally collected and transferred from the general fund to the county highway fund. The board of supervisors gave notice herein, by its county budget, that it would expend these large sums for the maintenance of the county highways, and then resorted to the device of putting the sums required by it for general county purposes and highway purposes into one levy, making one tax of so many mills. Thus, for instance, as an illustration, if the figures show that, if needed, a three-mill tax was required by it for general purposes of the county and a two-mill tax for road purposes, the board of supervisors resorted to the device, when it made its levy each year, of combining the two taxes and levying a total of five mills for general county purposes. I do not for a moment contend that this was a legal device, but I do say that the county budget, together with the immense amount of money amassed by the board in the treasury, shows that it was an administrative device, and that it is of no consequence whether the device was legal or illegal. In the case of the Town of Purvis, supra, the board of supervisors resorted to
So far as the bill in this case shows, Adams county has this money on hand in excess of one hundred thousand dollars, and the only defense interposed for it in one of the other opinions is that the money was illegally obtained by it from the taxpayers of the city of Natchez. It is clear that it levied and collected sums herein set forth in excess of the amount needed for other than road purposes. It is clear that it notified all taxpayers by the county budget, which it published in advance of the levy, that it would collect money for road purposes. This it did not do directly, but undertook to do by an administrative device; and to plead its own fraud as its only defense should not be allowеd. It is but a kindness to the board of supervisors of Adams county now to hold the county liable to the city of Natchez for the money collected from its taxpayers for road purposes. The allegation is clear that it was for no other purpose.
By
3. The contention is made that the resolution adopted in 1920 by the governing authorities of the city of Natchez does not extend to or include the years for which this suit is brought. It will be noted that chapter 232 of the Laws of 1920 requires action by resolution of the mayor and board of aldermen and stipulates that thereafter the municipality shall be entitled to its share of the road money collected within its borders. The resolution passed is very full and complete and leaves no room for doubt that it did not, in terms, undertake to limit the time within which the municipality could make claim to the money. The municipality had the right to pass the broad general resolution, and, so long as it remained unrepealed, it was effective to comply with the statute just so long as the Legislature authorized the municipality to receive one-half of the funds collected for road purposes by the county. It was not necessary for the city of Natchez to pass the resolution periodically or annually. There cannot be applied to it any statute of limitations or laches, as held by this court in the case of Town of Crenshaw v. Panola County, 115 Miss. 891, 76 So. 741, wherein it was expressly held that
4. It is insisted that the statute was repealed by chapter 227, Laws of 1926, as announced in the case of Board of Sup‘rs of Lauderdale County v. City of Meridian, 149 Miss. 139, 114 So. 803. In that case we expressly held that chapter 227, Laws of 1926, only repealed chapter 232 of the Laws of 1920 to the extent that levies for
5. It is next urged that under the authority of
“Where any municipality may be entitled to a portion of any road tax under the laws in effect prior to the adoption of this code which has not yet been paid to it, such municipality shall be entitled to receive payment thereof on application to the board of supervisors of the county in which it is located; and the board of supervisors is hereby authorized to pay to such municipality its portion of such tax.”
By this section all the rights of the municipality, as existed under prior acts, to one-half of the road funds here involved, as construed by this court in prior decisions, were preserved to the municipality. In the case at bar the state tax collector, who was entitled and empowered to sue, made demand, and the board of supervisors rejected the claim and is now litigating the case. We are of the opinion that the state tax collector on behalf of the city of Natchez fully made application for the payment of this claim, and that the application on
Having reached the conclusion that on May 5, 1920, the municipal authorities complied by resolution with the demand feature of chapter 232, Laws of 1920, it would seem, and we so hold, that the formal demand of the state tax collector fully complied with the requirement of
6. It is insisted that by virtue of chapter 129, Laws of 1928, it was necessary for the appellant to have alleged that the road funds had not been otherwise appropriated. This court expressly held in Gully v. Board of Sup‘rs of Copiah County, supra, that as to taxes collected after the passage of that statute no such allegation is necessary, for the words therein “have not been paid” refer to the past and not to the future. We are of opinion that in the case of Ackerman v. Choctaw County, 157 Miss. 594, 128 So. 757, this court did not then have before it the question here presented, and later properly presented in the Copiah County case, which should now be approved by us in the case at bar. As to the taxes collected subsequent to the enactment of the Laws of 1928, it is not necessary to allege that the funds have not been otherwise appropriated.
7. It is next contended that by
As to the taxes collected for the year 1927, the bill does not allege that there funds remained in the treasury and were not otherwise appropriated, and in the Copiah County case we held this allegation necessary as to 1927 taxes. I think the Laws of 1928 do not purport to be an amendment of the Laws of 1920, but only an amendment of chapter 227, Laws of 1926, and, consequently, apply only to the class of roads therein specifically named. However, unless the Copiah County case is overruled thereunder as to 1927 taxes, this allegation is necessary. As to all the other taxes collected for road purposes, as herein determined, the bill alleges a good cause of action. The demurrer was a general one, and it must be sustained or overruled in its entirety. The allegations were not sufficient as to the year 1927, but were adequate as to the subsequent years; so it follows that the court below should have overruled the demurrer. See N. O. & N. E. R. R. Co. v. N. O. G. N. R. R. Co., 107 Miss. 453, 65 So. 508.
Cook and Anderson, JJ., concur in this opinion.
Ethridge, J., delivered an opinion.
The state tax collector filed this suit against Adams county for thirty-six thousand three hundred eighty-nine dollars and eighty cents, claiming that the city of Natchez was entitled to this sum from the county, being
It was alleged that on the 5th day of May, 1920, the municipal authorities gave notice to the board of supervisors that they would claim the benefit of chapter 232, Laws of 1920, by which the city was entitled to one-half of the ad valorem taxes collеcted for road purposes within the city of Natchez. That prior to 1920 the board of supervisors had levied a special road fund for the working of the public roads of the county; and that after the publication of the notice from the municipal authorities, the board of supervisors ceased to levy taxes for road purposes for Adams county by a specific levy for that purpose, but adopted the subterfuge and administrative device of including the road maintenance levy in the general fund levy for the collection of taxes for the maintenance of the highways of the county; and that this practice was pursued from time to time, and especially during the said years as an administrative
It is alleged that this practice is contrary to the legislative policy and intent, and that the said levies were not made for purposes of paying bonds issued for road construction and maintenance, or the interest thereon, or to create a sinking fund to retire the same. It is further alleged that during the years 1927-30, the board of supervisors provided in the county budget that a specified sum should be allocated to the maintenance of roads in Adams county, but made no specific levy of taxes for the raising of the money; and each year paid from the diverted general county fund amounts largely in excess of the budget of each year, by the systematic use of the device and subterfuge mentioned. It was not alleged what road laws were in force during said period in Adams county, and this should have been done because
The bill was demurred to on a number of grounds, the demurrer was sustained, and the state tax collector declined to plead further. Thereupon, final judgment was rendered.
I am of the opinion that the judgment should be affirmed, because the bill shows that the board of supervisors did not make a levy for road purposes under
In my opinion, this controversy is controlled by the principles laid down in Town of Waveland v. Hancock County, 110 Miss. 471, 70 So. 561, where it was held that while the
If the city had appealed from the order levying the taxes, or from the order allocating the taxes, or had taken timely proceedings by mandamus to compel the levying
It is clear to my mind that the city was not entitled to maintain the suit here sought to be maintained, and the judgment of the court, for that reason, was correct. But if mistaken in this view, still the suit must fail, because the rights of the city would be measured, under this suit, by the Laws of 1928, chapter 129, which, so far as this suit is concerned, governs the rights of the city, if its contention was sound as to the proposition that it could now challenge what the board did, and collect what it should сollect, had a proper levy been made for road purposes. The right of action sought in the bill in this case is for the years 1927-1930. By
“The repeal of any statutory provisions by this code shall not affect any act done, or any cause of action, or any right accruing or accrued or established, or any suit or proceeding had or commenced in any civil case, or any plea or defense or bar thereto, previous to the time when such repeal shall take place; but the proceedings in every such case shall be conformed, as far as practicable, to the provisions of this code.”
It will be seen from this section that the provisions of
I also think that the demand of the state tax collector is not sufficient to comply with section 3 of chapter 129, Laws of 1928, or with
The state tax collector‘s demand might satisfy this statute, but I think it would take a demand by the board of mayor and aldermen, or municipal authorities, as such, to come within section 3 of chapter 129, Laws of 1928. The demand contemplated in this statute is separate from, and in addition to, the demand mentioned in
“That where any municipality may be entitled to a portion of any road tax under the provisions of chapter 232, Laws of 1920, which has not yet been paid to it, such municipality shall be entitled to receive payment thereof on application to the board of supervisors of the county in which it is located, and the board of supervisors is hereby authorized to pay to such municipality its portion of such tax or such part thereof as may not
have been otherwise appropriated or expended, notwithstanding the provisions of chapter 227, Laws of 1926.”
It will be perceived from a careful reading of the statute that the municipality is not entitled to receive the funds until demand has been made, and then it is not entitled to receive them if such funds have already been expended, because the latter part of the sеction authorizes the supervisors to pay such municipality its portion of such tax, or such part thereof as may not have been appropriated or expended.
The declaration does not allege that the funds had not been expended or appropriated prior to the making of the demand. This was expressly held to be a requisite to the recovery in the case of the Town of Ackerman v. Choctaw Co., 157 Miss. 594, 128 So. 757. I think the question was expressly presented and decided in this case. The opinion states (page 599 of 157 Miss., 128 So. 757, 758):
“On May 7, 1929, the town council passed another resolution to the same effect which was duly entered on the minutes and of which notice was served on the county; and appellant contends that it is entitled to recover upon that resolution, under section 3, chapter 129, Laws 1928. This section reads as follows: ‘That where any municipality may be entitled to a portion of any road tax under the provisions of chapter 232, Laws of 1920, which hаs not yet been paid to it, such municipality shall be entitled to receive payment thereof on application to the board of supervisors of the county in which it is located, and the board of supervisors is hereby authorized to pay to such municipality its portion of such tax or such part thereof as may not have been otherwise appropriated or expended, notwithstanding the provisions of chapter 227, Laws of 1926.’
“Where this section had reference to municipal resolutions passed subsequently to the enactment of said section we need not decide, because the recovery under
it is authorized only upon the condition that the funds had not previous to the demand ‘been otherwise appropriated or expended’ by the county; and there is no allegation in the bill of complaint that the county had at the time of the demand any part of said 1928 road funds on hand not already expended or otherwise appropriated, nor is there any definite proof on that issue. Appellant says that this is defensive, but we think this view is erroneous, under the general rule that where a cause of action is dependent upon conditions, the burden is upon complainant to allege and prove that the facts exist which fulfill or satisfy those conditions; and we are pointed to no sufficient reason for an exception to the rule in this case. The general rule above stated is applied with strictness to actions founded on statutes.” (Citing authorities).
This is manifestly a correct conclusion. The Legislature, in revising the rights of the municipality, recognized that the funds may have been expended prior to the demand; and, if so it did not intend to give the right. We must give effect to every part of the statute; and under the terms of the statute, the only part to which the municipality has the right, on making the demand, is such part as may not have otherwise been appropriated or expended.
This present case is not controlled by Gully, State Tax Collector, v. Board of Sup‘rs of Copiah County (Miss.), 147 So. 300, 301. In that opinion the court said:
“This recital is said by counsel for the appellee not to sufficiently set forth a compliance with the requirements of section 2 of chapter 232, Laws 1920, that municipalities shall notify the counties of their intention to claim one-half of the road taxes collected within the municipalities. The question thereby presented is one of some difficulty, but it will be eliminated by a proper amendment of the declaration when the case is
remanded to the lower court, as it must be, for reasons hereinafter to be set forth, consequently, we will pretermit any discussion of it. Section 3 of chapter 129, Laws 1928, obligates counties to pay to municipalities one-half of the ad valorem taxes of the character here in question which have not been paid to it, and which may not have been otherwise appropriated or expended. The declaration contains no allegation that such is here the case, consequently, in so far as the taxes here collected prior to the enactment of chapter 129, Laws of 1928, are concerned, the declaration is fatally defective. Town of Ackerman v. Choctaw County, 157 Miss. 594, 128 So. 757.”
The taxes sought to be collected in the Copiah County case quoted from were said to have accrued after the enactment of the Code. In the Copiah County case, supra, and in Town of Purvis v. Lamar County, 161 Miss. 454, 137 So. 323, the taxes in question had been specially levied for road purposes. Those cases are different from the one we now have before us. Here there was no levy of special taxes for road purposes. It seems to me that the board of supervisors had the right in the present case, unless a contract or convict system had been adopted by the board for road working in Adams county, to make the levy under the general county levy, and to appropriate it to any public use authorized by law to receive public funds from the county.
“The boards of supervisors shall have within their respective counties full jurisdiction over roads, ferries, and bridges, except as otherwise provided by
section 170 of the Constitution and all other matters of county police. . . . They shall have power to levy such taxes as may be necessary to meet the demands of their respective counties, upon such persons and property as are subject to state taxes for the time being, not exceeding the limits that may be prescribed by law; they shall
cause to be erected and kept in good repair, in their respective counties, and in each judicial district thereof, a good and convenient courthouse and a jail; and they shall have and exercise such further powers as are or shall be conferred upon them by law.”
It will be seen from this section that the board of supervisors has power to levy such taxes as may be necessary to meet the demands of their respective counties, upon such persons and property as are subject to state taxes for the time being, not exceeding the limitations that may be prescribed by law, and that the board of supervisors had full jurisdiction over roads, ferries, and bridges, except as provided by
These two sections, construed together, seem to give the board the power to determine whether they will collect the taxes for general purposes, and then apportion it out to the various public purposes within their jurisdiction.
I do not think the budget law is important in this case, unless the county had adopted a contract or convict system of road work. But if it is, there was designated in the budget the amount of money that would
Smith, C. J., delivered an opinion.
The primary question here presented, and which, if decided adversely to the appellant, will end this controversy, is this: Did any part of the taxes here collected become legally a part of the appellee‘s road fund? If they did not, then the board of supervisors was without the right to apply any part thereof to the maintenance of the county‘s roads, and therefore the city of Natchez is without the right to claim any part thereof.
The bill of complaint does not allege that the taxes were collected or appropriated to the maintenance of special roads, or roads of a special road district, but only that the taxes were collected for, and appropriated, to, the maintenance of “the public roads of Adams county.” Neither does the bill allege by what system or under what statute the county roads were worked, so that it does not appear therefrom under what statute the taxes were collected and expended, at least one of
But we will put aside that defect in the bill, and proceed on the theory that the county proceeded under one of the statutes authorizing it to appropriate ad valorem taxes to the maintenance of its public roads.
Except in specified instances that do not here appear (sections 8373, 8374, 8375, 8380, 8389, 8396, 8448 of Hеmingway‘s 1927 Code; chapter 80, Laws of 1928;
All of the statutes fixing the levy of ad valorem taxes for general county purposes exclude therefrom road, bridge, and school taxes. Chapter 117, Laws of 1926; chapter 16, Laws Ex. Session 1928, and chapter 268, Laws 1930. Taxes levied under these statutes cannot be used for road, bridge, or school purposes, unless specially permitted by some other statute of the character hereinbefore pointed out. From this it necessarily follows that the board of supervisors of Adams county were without power to include in the general levy of taxes authorized by chapter 117, Laws of 1926, chapter 16, Laws of Ex. Session of 1928, and chapter 268, Laws of 1930, taxes for the maintenance of the public roads of the county. Consequently, its appropriation of the taxes here in question to that purpose was a clear violation of the law, and therefore conferred on the city of Natchez no right to claim any portion thereof.
It will not do to say that the method here pursued accomplished the purpose contemplated by the statutes, and therefore no harm was done the taxpayer. What we are dealing with is a question of power, not only as to the purpose to be accomplished, but as to the mode
The case of the Town of Purvis v. Lamar County, 161 Miss. 454, 137 So. 323, 325, has no application here, for there the taxes in question were levied and collected for road purposes.
There is another question bearing hereon, and which should not be overlooked.
In 1922 by chapter 225 of the Laws of that year, the county expenses were required to be budgeted. In Du Bose et al., Board of Supervisors, v. Cranford, 131 Miss. 770, 95 So. 676, the general purpose of that act was recognized, namely, that it required estimates to be made of the gross amount of contemplated expenditures under each separate main heading, and mentioned some of those of the principal separate headings which are customarily used in the administration of the county fiscal systems, one of which mentioned was the general county fund and another the road fund, naming several of these road funds, as illustrative of thе general legislative purpose. It seems to have been conceded by all parties and assumed by the court in that case that the expenditures made by the board must be confined to the principal or general headings under which the several gross estimates are made, and the like concession and assumption is shown in Marshall County v. Barkley, 165 Miss. 198, 147 So. 341. In other words, that money budgeted and collected under one principal heading could not be spent for purposes coming under another principal heading or classification as to character; and to meet the practical difficulties in this requirement, we held in the latter
The Budget Law was brought forward as chapter 91, Code 1930. It has been, and remained ever since its enactment, a dominant piece of legislation in the control of county and municipal affairs. Its whole purpose would be defeated, so far as practical results are concerned, if after the preparation and publication of the budget the board could disregard the several principal headings or funds and transfer from one to the other without any limitation, and we hold that this cannot be done. What is to be done when a particular fund has become exhausted, or when at the end of a year a surplus is found in such a fund, is not here before us.
It is alleged in the bill here that the board of supervisors annually provided in the county budget a specified sum to be allocated to the maintenance of the public roads, but omitted to levy any taxes for that purpose and each year diverted from the general county fund the sums spent for road purposes, and this largely in excess of the budget of each year as regards road expenditures. In other words, the taxes were levied, collected, and credited for and to the general county fund, and subsequently from time to time were transferred to the road fund, and thereupon the expenditures for roads were made out of the transferred fund. If this can be legally done, the budget law had as well be repealed.
This manipulation was in violation of the budget law. The money did not belong to the road fund, and its illegal transfer thereto can no more bind the county and make it liable therefor, than can the county be made liable for any other violation of the law not done by it. It is a truism in the law that a county cannot be bound by illegal acts of its board of supervisors—acts beyond the limitations of the legal powers of the board—and this remains true, although the county may have received
The decree of the court below should be affirmed.
I express no opinion on the other questions presented by the record. Judge GRIFFITH requested me to say that he concurs in this opinion.
