40 So. 962 | Ala. | 1906
This case, briefly stated, is as follows: In the year 1901 the tax commissioner of Dallas county, by the authority conferred on him by the act approved February 21, 1899, entitled “An act to amend an act to provide for the more efficient assessment and collection of taxes in the state of Alabama, approved February 8, 1899” (Acts 1898-99, p. 195), made additional assessments of the property of divers-persons in said county on the ground that such property had been given in to the assessor at an undervaluation. The commissioner returned his assessment to the board of revenue of the county, and the parties against whom the assessments were made filed contests against the assessments before the board. The plaintiff was employed as an attorney at law by the state tax commissioner, by and with the consent and approval of the governor, to represent the state and county on the trial of the contests before the board of revenue. He appeared before the board and performed the services required of him by the terms of his contract of employment. The assessments were sustained by the board, judgments were rendered against the parties, the judgments were collected by the county tax collector, who, after paying to the county tax commissioner 10 per cent, of the total amount of the judgments, paid into the county treasury the net sum of $1,050. The plaintiff presented to the board of revenue his claim for $105, which was properly itemized and sworn to, for services rendered, as he claimed, for the county on the trial of the said contests. The board of revenue disallowed the claim, whereupon the plaintiff instituted this suit against the county to recover the amount claimed.
The act referred to may he found in the General Acts of the General Assembly (Sessions 1898-99), at page 195. The seventeenth section (page 202) of the act authorizes the state 'tax commissioner, by and with the consent of the governor or attorney general, to employ
Affirmed.