56 S.W. 555 | Tex. App. | 1900
The trustees of school district No. 25 of Harris County brought suit in Justice Court of precinct No. 1 of said county against John Farmer, the county treasurer, to recover an excess of money paid to George H. Hermann as assessor of taxes for assessing the school taxes of said district. It was claimed that the assessor was only entitled to a commission of 1 per cent on the amount of the taxes assessed. He was allowed 10 per cent thereof by the Commissioners Court, and the money was paid to him on a county warrant which included that and other amounts allowed the assessor by the Commissioners Court. The treasurer, Farmer, impleaded Hermann, and the appellants amended their pleading and asked for a recovery against both Farmer and Hermann. Appellees obtained judgment in both of the lower courts.
The amount of commissions the assessor was entitled to receive must depend upon the proper construction of article 3945 of the Revised Statutes. That article provides for the levy by the commissioners court *40 of school district taxes, and the assessment and collection thereof. So much of the article as is pertinent to the question here involved reads as follows: "The tax assessor shall assess, and the tax collector shall collect, said district taxes as other taxes. The tax assessor shall receive a commission of 1 per centum for assessing such tax, and the tax collector a commission of 1 per centum for collecting the same. The tax collector shall pay all such taxes to the county treasurer, and said treasurer shall credit each school district with the amount belonging to it, and pay out the same as other school moneys."
For the assessment of the property in his county under the law for the assessment of State and county taxes, the compensation of the assessor is fixed upon each $100 valuation thereof. Rev. Stats., art. 5133. The commissioners, in fixing the commission of the assessor for the assessing of the school district taxes, took the rate of 1 per centum allowed the assessor by article 3945 and applied it as 1 cent to the $100 valuation adopted in fixing the compensation in article 5133, which makes a very material difference, as the figures will show. The entire value of all property assessed for taxation in school district No. 25 for the year 1895 was $2,148,884. The tax levied and assessed upon the property in the district was 10 cents upon the $100 valuation, which amounted to $2148.88. If the compensation of the assessor should be fixed at 1 cent on each $100 valuation of property, it would be $214.88, but 1 per centum of the taxes assessed would be only $21.48. There can be no doubt about the construction that should be given to the language of article 3945 fixing the commission of the assessor. It is clear that 1 per cent of the taxes assessed is the amount allowed, and the assessor received the difference between $214.88 and $21.48 in excess of the amount that he was entitled to receive. The language of the statute is unambiguous, and evidences a clear intention on the part of the Legislature to fix the compensation of the assessor at 1 per cent of the taxes assessed. There is no occasion to invoke official construction, nor can the fact that it has cost the assessor more to prepare the rolls for the first year affect the evident meaning of the statute.
But it is contended that the order of the Commissioners Court fixing the amount at $214.88 is an adjudication of the question, — is a judgment that can not be collaterally attacked, and can only be set aside or revised by proper appellate proceeding. The district court has appellate jurisdiction over the commissioners court. Const., art. 5, sec. 8. But there has been no legislation making provision for the exercise of such jurisdiction except in the case of damages assessed for land taken for public roads. Rev. Stats., art. 4677. Its jurisdiction might, however, be invoked by certiorari. There is some conflict of authority as to the conclusiveness generally of the orders and judgments of the commissioners court. In matters involving discretion, of which the court has jurisdiction, they are held to be conclusive. City of Fort Worth v. Davis,
Since the law allowed the assessor a commission of only 1 per cent of the taxes assessed by him upon the property in school district No. 25, the Commissioners Court exceeded its authority in allowing him more, and in doing so it acted without jurisdiction of the matter, and its order making the allowance was void and subject to collateral attack. It is no defense in a suit against the assessor by the trustees of the district for the amount paid him in excess of the commission fixed by the statute. See also authorities cited in 1 Dill. Mun. Corp., 3 ed., sec. 502, note 1; sec. 503, note 3; sec. 504, note 1.
As to the treasurer, he paid the amount ordered by the Commissioners Court upon a warrant drawn by proper authority. County warrants are prima facie evidence of an existing and a matured debt. Leach v. Wilson County,
It does not appear from the record that the warrant in this case was not so approved, and for that reason, as well as for the further reason that the objection is made for the first time in this court, the third assignment of error can not be considered as a ground for reversal of the judgment below; but in view of another trial it is deemed proper to call the attention of the trial court to the fact that in order to protect the treasurer in the payment of the warrant it should have the approval of the county superintendent written thereon. McCormick v. Bay City,
The judgment of the court below is reversed and the cause remanded for another trial in accordance with the views herein expressed.
Reversed and remanded. *43