148 Va. 675 | Va. | 1927
delivered the opinion of the court.
W. B. Dunn having been elected treasurer of the town of Bluefield, Virginia, held the office for two years, his term beginning September 1, 1922, and ending August 31, 1924. This motion for judgment charges that he failed to pay over or account for all the funds collected by him, and there was a verdict and judgment against him in favor of the town for $700.00, of which the town is here complaining, upon the ground that the amount is inadequate and substantially less than the sum shown to be actually due.
There are eight assignments of error based upon twenty-three bills of exception. We shall not discuss these in detail.
It appears from the evidence that the town council had, on September 2, 1918, fixed the salary of its treasurer at $600.00 per year, and again, on September 10, 1920, an ordinance was adopted which provided for the salaries of the officials of the town, including the treasurer, whose salary was fixed at $50.00 per month. The recorder of the town testified (and there was no contradiction) that the treasurer, in addition to this salary, was entitled by ordinance to five per cent on collections of water rents, which aggregated over $400 per year, and to retain the five per cent penalty added to delinquent taxes. There is no controversy
The defendant treasurer, in his bill of particulars, for the first time claimed as an offset to the funds shown to be in his hands unaccounted for ($1,828.23), that as the ordinance providing for the treasurer’s salary was passed before his term began, and as no later ordinance had been passed fixing the salary of the treasurer, therefore he was not bound thereby. He claimed that in lieu of the salary of $50.00 per month he was entitled to “the commissions provided by the general law” for his services in collecting the current town taxes for 1922 and 1923, which commissions aggregated $2,378.55; and that he was also entitled to a commission of $93.75, one-fourth of one per cent of a bond issue $37,500.00, and that he had only received his $1,200.00 which had been paid to him as salary on account or in partial payment of these commissions.
The trial court adopted his view and instructed the jury thus: “The court instructs the jury that since it appears that the town council of plaintiff did not for the years commencing September 1, 1922, and ending August 31, 1924, during which the defendant was the elected treasurer of the said town, fix his salary by an ordinance or resolution under the provisions of the charter of the said town, then that the defendant was entitled to receive as compensation for his services as such treasurer the commissions provided by the general laws of the State applicable to towns, and that the defendant is not entitled to offset against the claim of the plaintiff any other items shown in the defendant’s •statement of grounds of defense, except the items therein relative to taxes and commissions on bond issue funds.”
“2-b. On the real estate, personal property, public service corporations, or other taxes heretofore received by the State but hereafter to be collected for local purposes, the treasurers of cities, counties and towns shall be paid by the cities, counties and towns the same commissions as now allowed by law for the collection of State revenue.”
This is construed in City of Richmond v. Pace, 127 Va. 274, 103 S. E. 647. The compensation of city and county treasurers, who had before the partial segregation act of 1915 (Acts 1915, page 119) received a large part of their remuneration from the State in commissions on State taxes theretofore collected by them was greatly diminished by the reduction in the State rate of taxation. Being thus deprived of a substantial part of their compensation theretofore received by them from the State, the purpose of the statute was to maintain the rate of compensation of those treasurers whose rerduneration had been so reduced. The act had no reference whatever to treasurers whose total compensation had not been so reduced as a consequence of the segregation act.
By the act of 1920 (Acts 1920, page 351), the same .purpose was indicated and effectuated. The pertinent clause reads: “Nothing in this section shall prevent councils of cities from fixing the amount of compensation of treasurers of said cities in eases in which said
“On the real estate, personal property, public service corporations, and other taxes received by the State, prior to the segregation of taxes under an act approved February sixteenth, nineteen hundred and fifteen, entitled an act to segregate for the purposes of taxation, pursuant to section one hundred and sixty-nine of the Constitution of Virginia, the several kinds and classes of property so as to specify and determine upon what subjects State taxes and upon what subjects local taxes may be levied, and to provide for the continuance for the year nineteen hundred and fifteen of the present State school tax of ten cents on every one hundred dollars of the assessed value of real estate and tangible personal property, as further amended by an act approved March fifteenth, nineteen hundred and fifteen, and as further amended by an act approved March twenty-second, nineteen hundred- and sixteen, but thereafter collectible for local purposes, the treasurers of cities, counties and towns shall be paid for the tax year of nineteen hundred and twenty, and for each year thereafter, the same commissions as allowed by law for collection of the State revenue at the time of the approval of the act of February sixteenth, nineteen hundred and fifteen; provided, where there is a collector of taxes in any city of over fifty thousand inhabitants the said commissions shall not be paid by the treasurer of such city on taxes collected by the city collector.”
In 1922 (Acts 1922, chapter 436) this statute was reenacted and is part of Code, section 2431, prescribing the compensation of county and city treasurers, but the period appearing at the end of the first paragraph in the portion of the 1920 act which is quoted was omitted
Now, the treasurer of Bluefield suffered no diminution of compensation in consequence of the segregation acts. Neither before nor since their enactment did he ever collect any State taxes or receive any commission therefor, and hence the statutes relied on do not relate to his compensation. This is fixed solely by ordinance of the town. The instruction, therefore, directing the jury otherwise, is palpably erroneous, and necessitates a reversal of the judgment.
The defendant treasurer, admitting that he held a balance of $1,828.23, sought to absorb it not only by claiming commissions under Code, section 2431, as compensation, and five per cent additional on delinquent taxes collected, but also claimed for office rent, etc., for services as accountant, for assessing water rents, for commissions on bond issue, and many other services, aggregating over $6,000.00, afterwards reduced $1200.00, which he sought to set off against the claim of the town, and to recover the resulting balance asserted to be in his favor.
Many of the services for which such compensation was so claimed were incidental to his office, all were
What effect the frequently repeated erroneous rulings and the admission of all this erroneous testimony from so many witnesses had upon the jury it is impossible to-say.
That a public official must rely for his compensation upon the statutes and ordinances, duly enacted, which specify such compensation, and that he cannot recover on a quantum meruit for official duties performed is too well settled to require discussion. Delaplane v. Crenshaw, 15 Gratt. (56 Va.) 468; Norfolk v. Pollard, 94 Va. 279, 26 S. E. 832; Johnson v. Black, 103 Va. 477, 49 S. E. 633, 68 L. R. A. 264, 106 Am. St. Rep. 890; 1 Dillon Mun. Corp., section 233; 19 R. C. L. sections 219, 220, page 920.
It follows from what we have said that we think, under no proper view of the facts so clearly shown could.
The town claimed a very much larger sum, but after the expert accountant had testified and the facts had been fully developed, reduced its claim to $2,-581.42. The difference arises out of conflicting contentions as to the amount of delinquent taxes accruing prior to 1922, when the term of this treasurer began. As to this, the burden was on the plaintiff town, and so the trial court properly instructed the jury. This burden the town has failed to carry. The expert accountant witness was unable to determine accurately either the amount of such delinquent tax tickets received from the former treasurer for collection or the precise amount of such uncollected tax tickets returned by the defendant treasurer to his successor in office. This may have been caused by the refusal of the defendant to surrender certain books which he claimed were private memoranda, the substance of which he also claimed he had already supplied. This, however, does not supply for the town the proof which by the admission of the expert was so clearly lacking.
On the other hand, the defendant testifies positively that all of these past due taxes which were collected by him, which accrued in the years previous to his term of office, were accounted for and paid over. He specifies the amounts paid, less five per cent commission retained, $173.96 for 1920 and $1,416.48 for 1921 taxes, and that he returned $1,031.00 uncollected tickets for those years.
Perhaps the obscurity, lack of proof, or difference of view, grows out of the fact that the defendant had assumed the duties of the previous treasurer November 1, 1921, while his own term did not begin until Septe'm
The plaintiff, then, has failed to show any additional liability of the defendant on account of delinquent taxes collected for years prior to 1922.
We think it unnecessary to pursue the discussion further.
There is another matter which we think calls for notice. There is some general complaint of excessive costs in this court. These costs grow chiefly out of the expense of printing the records, which so often are needlessly voluminous only because of the multiplicity of captious objections interposed and exceptions taken by counsel. Frequently these are made and exceptions saved only to be forgotten until they appear in the completed record, to be reflected in the amount of the printer’s bill. This record, which discloses only a few pertinent facts, well illustrates this bad, this inexcusable, expensive and time-consuming habit. For example, when the expert witness for the town was reciting the instructions which he received from the mayor when he was employed, to the effect that “a fair statement of the financial condition of the town” was desired, and that he was instructed to go ahead and make a complete and fair audit, he was interrupted by a motion to strike out the question as to. these instructions and his answer thereto. Upon an adverse ruling, exception thereto was duly saved. The groun of this exception were not stated, and we suppose there are none. Certainly we can think of no more proper question or more responsive answer. This is but an instance of the superfluous, irrelevant and redundant matter of which we find so much in this and other records. It illustrates the bad, and to clients expen
Our conclusions are to set aside the verdict and judgment for $700.00; and the facts before us being sufficient, in our opinion, to enable us to “attain the ends of justice,” we will enter final judgment here in favor of the town for the balance shown to be due by the defendant, $1,828.23, with interest thereon from September 1, 1924, and costs.
Reversed and final judgment for plaintiff.