State ex rel. Wakefield v. Richardson

77 Mo. 589 | Mo. | 1883

Norton, J.

This suit was instituted in the circuit court of Jasper county, at the relation of Thomas Wake-field, collector for said county, for the recovery of back taxes for the years 1874, 1875 and 1876, assessed upon lot 494 in the city of Carthage, aggregating the sum of $31. The petition is in usual form, and avers that said Wake-field is the collector of said county, and that the taxes for said years remain due and unpaid, and asks judgment for the amount with ten per cent interest, to be enforced as a lien upon said lot. It is also averred that said Wakefield had agreed in writing with the attorneys bringing said suit, which had been approved by the county court, that they were to receive ten per cent as their fee on amount of taxes collected, to be taxed as costs. It is also averred that defendant Alyen is the owner of said real estate, and that defendant Richardson claimed some interest therein, *590the extent of which was unknown to plaintiff. The answer was a general denial.

The cause was tried and the issues submitted to a jury and a verdict returned for plaintiff, upon which judgment was rendered according to the prayer of the petition, from which defendants have prosecuted a writ • of error to this court, and the first point relied upon for a reversal of the judgment is, that there was no evidence that Wakefield was the ' collector of Jasper county. This point must be ruled against the defendants for the reason that plaintiff introduced in evidence, without objection from defendants, a back-tax bill issued and certified to on the 28th day of May, 1878, by said Wakefield, as collector of Jasper county, showing the amount of taxes sued for. If defendants intended to controvert the authority of said Wakefield, as collector, when this paper was offered in evidence, showing that Wakefield was in fact acting as collector, an objection should then have been interposed, and their failure to do so is fatal to the objection made by counsel. If, on the trial, evidence had been offered and received without objection of verbal declarations made by Wakefield that he was collector of Jasper county and was so acting, such declarations would at the least be some evidence of the fact. The certified copy of the tax-bill received in evidence without objection, was but the written declaration of Wake-field of the fact of his being collector, and that he was acting in that capacity.

The second point relied upon is the refusal of the court to allow defendant to read in evidence certain tax-books and assessors’ books to show that the lot in question had been wrongfully assessed in the name of one Brintling, as owner. This point must be ruled against defendants because this action of the court is not set forth as a ground for new trial in the motion for a new trial.

It is also objected that the court erred in refusing an instruction to the effect that the jury should find for defendants as to the attorney’s fee of ten per cent on the *591•amount of taxes collected, as claimed in Repetition. This objection cannot be considered because no complaint as to the action of the court in giving or refusing instructions, is made in the motion for new trial. "We perceive no error in the record authorizing an interference with the judgment, and it is hereby affirmed

with the concurrence of all the judges, except Judge Sherwood. Sherwood, J.

I do not concur on the point in regard to the collector. The answer was a general denial, controverting every allegation of the petition. In such circumstances it devolved on the party holding the affirmative to establish the authority of the collector, either that ho was de jtire, or else de facto collector. The mere tax-hill, in my opinion, did not have the effect of showing that "Wake-field. was acting as collector.

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