Money paid out by way of taxes or fines is voluntary, and may not be recovered back unless payment is made involuntarily and under duress, under an urgent and immediate necessity therefor, or to release or prevent immediate seizure of person or property. Code § 20-1007. Where, however, one is convicted in a recorder’s court, which has power to convict only under valid city ordinances, and no valid ordinance authorizes such conviction, payment of a fine to prevent immediate seizure of the person is not a voluntary payment, and may be recovered back.
Clay
v.
Drake,
66
Ga. App.
544 (
This case turns upon whether the petition sufficiently alleges the payment of the fine to prevent immediate imprisonment *601 under a sentence in the Mayor’s Court of Thunderbolt for a conviction not under any valid ordinance of such town. The petition alleges affirmatively that the defendant was convicted of a violation of a State law, i.e., the legislative act establishing the town charter, and that the threatened imprisonment was illegal, the judgment void, and the conviction a nullity, for the reason that the statute under which the defendant was convicted was not an ordinance or criminal law, and that it provided no authority upon anyone to impose such conviction or sentence. We consider these allegations sufficient to set forth affirmatively that the defendant was convicted, as alleged directly, under the charter statute, and not under some unpleaded ordinance other than the statute in question. It is therefore necessary only to decide whether such a conviction would be absolutely void, for, if not, it cannot be the subject of a collateral attack such as this; but, if so, the payment under such void judgment for the sole purpose of preventing imprisonment of the person was made under duress, and might therefore be recovered.
As stated in
Hall
v.
City of Macon,
There is nothing in the decision in
Rose
v.
Mayor &c. of Thunderbolt,
86
Ga. App.
867 (
If in fact the plaintiff in error actually was tried for the violation of an ordinance enacted pursuant to the charter provisions, this defense, of course, may be set forth in the answer; but, as pointed out, if the conviction was based on the charter itself, in accordance with the allegations of this petition, the petition sets forth a cause of action, and the trial court erred in sustaining the demurrer thereto and dismissing the petition.
Judgment reversed.
