93 Mo. 126 | Mo. | 1887
This is a suit to collect back taxes for the school-fund tax in favor of district number 3, township number 43, range number 2, for the year 1879. The action is based upon section 6837 of the Revised Statutes of 1879, which provides: “All lands owned by the same person, or persons, may be included in one petition, and in one count thereof, for the taxes for all such years, as taxes may be due thereon, and said petition shall show the different years for which taxes are due, as well as the several kinds of taxes or funds to which they are due, with the respective amounts due to each fund; all of which shall be set forth in a tax bill of said back taxes, duly authenticated by the certificate of the collector, and filed with the petition; and said tax bill or bills, so certified, shall be prima-facie evidence that the amount claimed in said suit is just and correct.”
The petition, under the statute before quoted, need
Now, in this' case, all of the facts stated in the answer could have been put in evidence under the general denial. They are but a detailed statement of the evidence, which show, and only show, that the matters stated in the petition, or, in contemplation of law, are included in these averments, are not true. Had the defendant alleged that the tax was extended without any assessment therefor, the plaintiff would not have been required to reply, for, in effect, the petition alleges that a legal assessment was made, and the answer would be no more than a denial of that allegation. It is true the statute makes the tax bill prima-faeie evidence that the taxes claimed are just and correct, but that only relates to the evidence, and has nothing to do with the question of pleading.
As the defendant offered no evidence, he did not •overcome the prima-faeie case of the plaintiff. The judgment is affirmed.