73 P. 321 | Or. | 1903
delivered the opinion.
The defendant was sheriff of Lake County from July 5, 1898, to July 2, 1900, and Lane, Beall, and Houston were his deputies. During his term of office he and his deputies collected a large sum of money as taxes on the tax rolls for the years 1893 and 1899, inclusive, a portion of which it is averred he did not pay over to the county as required by law, but unlawfully and feloniously converted to his own use. He was arrested and charged, under Section 1772,
It is insisted that the court erred in admitting in evidence the tax rolls for the years 1893 to 1898, inclusive; proof that the defendant and his deputies collected money thereon as taxes; and the testimony of the experts as to the amount shown by the tax rolls, stubs, and reports of the defendant to the county treasurer, to have been collected by him as taxes.
A public officer charged with the duty of collecting taxes is not permitted to deny his own power or right to make the collection after having exercised it. He will not be allowed to assert that a tax is chargeable against the taxpayer when he demands or receives it, and then say that it was not legally so when the state demands it from him, or when he is prosecuted criminally for its embezzlement. He must pay over the money so received as provided by law, and let the aggrieved party make his application to the proper authorities for reimbursement. He cannot assert that he retains the money as the representative of the taxpayer. There is no relation „of principal or agent, or trustee and cestui que trust, existing between him and the parties from whom he received the money. They paid it in satisfaction of the taxes appearing against them on the tax rolls of the county, and the officer must be held accountable for it as such. There was, therefore, no error
It clearly appears from the hill of exceptions that there was competent evidence tending to show that the defendant collected as taxes from the various taxpayers of the county, during the time he was in office, the sum of $94,-758.19, and that he only paid over to the county treasurer $88,125.67, leaving a balance unaccounted for of $6,632.52 ; that “for taxes he and his deputies received gold, silver, and treasury notes, national bank notes, silver certificates, checks, money orders, and county warrants.” All these several items were received by the defendant in payment of taxes, as the agent or representative of the county, and if the checks, drafts, and money orders, etc., were by him converted into money (and that was a question for the jury), it was the money of the county, which, if he converted to his own use, could properly be described in an indictment or information as lawful money of the United States. We think, therefore, that the bill of exceptions, as a whole, does show that there was evidence from which the jury could properly find that the money converted by the defendant was lawful money of the United States, although there may have been no evidence tending to identify the particular coin or coins so converted. This was evidently the view of the trial judge, otherwise, he would have directed a verdict of acquittal.
Now Section 1807 of B. & O. Comp.
This is B. & C. Comp. I 3115.
This is B. & O. Comp. § 1807.