15 Minn. 35 | Minn. | 1870
By the Court. The plaintiff brings this action (which is in the nature of assumpsit for money had and received,) to recover the sum of $172.3J, paid by him to the defendant, as treasurer of the county of Stearns, as the amount of certain taxes, with interest and charges thereon, claimed by the plaintiff to have been illegal, and to have been paid involuntarily, and such as the defendant has^ therefore, no right to retain. In the view which we take of this case, it is not necessary to inquire whether the taxes referred to, were legal or illegal, for admitting their entire illegality, as claimed by the plaintiff, we are of opinion that the payment made to the treasurer, under the circumstances set out in the complaint, cannot be regarded as involuntary, in a legal sense, and it is hardly necessary to add, that if it was a voluntary payment, made under no mistake of facts, (and none is pretended,) it cannot be recovered back. The case is here upon an appeal from an order overruling a general demurrer to the complaint. The facts alleged and material to be considered, are in substance as follows: •
Assuming for the purposes of this case that the taxes, interest and charges were altogether unauthorized and illegal, we are of opinion, as before remarked, that the payment made by the plaintiff must be regarded as voluntary.
The auditor was authorized to make upon deeds presented to him, one of the four following endorsements, according to the facts in the case: 1st. “Not entered for taxation.” 2d. “ Taxes not paid.” 3d. “ Taxes paid.” 4th. Taxes paid by sale of lands (or forfeiture) described within.” Gen. St. ch. 11, sections 40 and 41. Either of these endorsements would have entitled the plaintiff’s deeds to record. To procure the endorsement fourthly above mentioned, it was not necessai’y for the plaintiff to pay the taxes in this case, and the auditor had no right to insist upon their payment before making such endorsement. Both the register and auditor were therefore in the wrong. Was the defendant in the wrong? Not unless there was some compulsion on his part, in consequence of which the payment made by the plaintiff was not voluntary. If one man voluntarily, with his eyes open, and without mistake of facts, pays or gives money to another, he cannot maintain an action to recover it. Clarke vs. Dutcher, 9 Cowen, 674. Preston vs. Boston, 12 Pick. 13. Elliot vs. Swartwout, 10 Peters 150. But there was no compulsion on the part of the defendant. He had nothing to do with the filing or recording of the deed, nor with the endorsement of certificates upon the same, to entitle them to record. These were matters exclu
It is said by the plaintiff’s counsel that the register, auditor and treasurer are servants of a common master. This is perhaps true in a general, but not, as we conceive, in an important sense; each has independent duties, and the wrong of one, is not the wrong of another. It cannot, then, be said that the wrongful refusal of the register to file and record, or oí the auditor to certify, before the taxes were paid, were acts of compulsion on the part of the defendant, — the treasurer. In the notice and protest served upon the defendant simultaneously with the payment, the plaintiff has expressly stated the purpose for which the payment is made, to-wit: to enable him to get his deeds recorded; and this is the only purpose for which the payment is stated to have been made. But the defendant, as we have endeavored to show, did not prevent the plaintiff from getting- his deeds recorded,, without any payment, as he had the right to do under the statute; so far then the payment must be regarded as voluntary, and not upon compulsion.'
But still further, it appears from the complaint that the amount paid was demanded by the defendant as a condition precedent of giving a receipt or redemption certificate. Now certainly the defendant, as county treasurer, was under no obligation, indeed had no right to give a receipt or redemption certificate, unless the money therein expressed to have been received was paid. If then the plaintiff insists upon a receipt or redemption certificate, he cannot decline to pay for it. "When he asks for a receipt or redemption certificate under such circumstances, accepts it, pays for it and makes use of it as he did in this case, we think his payment is not compulsory or involuntary. He pays of his own motion, voluntarily, and under no mistake of facts,
What might have been the plaintiff’s rights if he had placed the payment upon that ground in his notice and protest, we have no occasion to decide now, for it is sufficient to say that he not only did not place it upon that ground, but he expressly states the purpose of the payment to be to enable him to get his deeds recorded, and this is the only purpose of which the defendant is notified, and upon which the .protest is based. Under such a state of facts it does not lie in his mouth to claim, as an after thought, that he paid the money to prevent the issuing of a tax deed, the effect of which may possibly be to deprive him of his property. As to the cases referred to by counsel in which a recovery of erroneous or illegal taxes paid has been allowed, it will be found that they are generally cases in which a distress of person or personal property had been made, or was allowed by law to be made, so that the payment might well be treated as made under duress as that term is now understood.
See 1 Parsons on Contraots, 5th ed. 306, and note x;
Order overruling demurrer reversed.