152 Mich. 621 | Mich. | 1908
Plaintiff brought this suit to recover certain drain taxes paid to the first-named defendant by himself and others whose claims were assigned to him. The proceedings for the laying out of the drain were conceded to be regular. The drain was, however, to be an open drain. Contracts covering two sections of the drain were illegally and improperly made for tile drains instead of an open drain. Improperly included in the amount for which the assessment was levied was a large amount for tile and for a bridge. It is conceded these items were illegal. The taxes in question were paid under protest. They were paid at various times between December 39, . 1906, and January 8, 1907. They were payable at this time with one per cent, cost of collection. Their payment could not be enforced until January 10, 1907, at which time there would have been an additional cost of four per cent.
The case was tried before the circuit judge without a jury and judgment entered in the plaintiff’s favor for the full amount of the tax paid, without interest. Defendants ask a reversal upon several grounds.
First. They contend that payment under protest could not be made until January 10, 1907, and that as the payment in question was made before that time, it is a voluntary payment and cannot be recovered. It is settled by our decisions ( see Peninsular Iron Co. v. Township of Crystal Falls, 60 Mich. 79; Louden v. City of East Saginaw, 41 Mich. 18) that this contention must prevail unless the payment in question was authorized by a statute. It is also settled that our general statute authorizing payment of tax under protest does not apply to drain taxes. Thompson v. City of Detroit, 114 Mich. 502.
Section 4359, 3 Comp. Laws, contains the following provision:
Does this language authorize payment to be made under protest before a levy of seizure of the taxpayers’ property by the tax collector ? Did it authorize payment to be made under protest at any' time that the taxpayer had a right to pay his taxes ? The answer to this question determines the proposition under discussion. While the proper construction of this language is not free from doubt, we are of the opinion that the legislature by its enactment intended to give to persons assessed for drain taxes the same right of paying under protest as is given to taxpayers by the general tax law. As the latter taxpayers have by that general law the right asserted in this case to pay under protest (see Mills v. Township of Richland, 72 Mich. 100) so persons assessed for drain tax have the same right. We therefore overrule the contention of defendants under consideration.
Second. It is insisted that plaintiff should have been limited in his recovery to the portion of the tax which was illegal, and that therefore the court erred in giving judgment for the entire amount paid. This is not a case where the tax complained of consists of several items, some of which are legal and some illegal. Nor is it a case where the illegal part of the tax — which consists of a single item — can be definitely pointed'out by the testimony in the record or by any testimony which might have been produced. The contracts covering 'two sections of the drain requiring the use of tile were illegal. Only a small portion of those contracts have been performed. Those contracts should have been for the construction of an open drain and they should have been1 so let at public auction. Under these circumstances it may be said in
Third. Complaint is made because the circuit judge did not make certain findings of fact insisted upon by defendant. We deem it sufficient to say that those findings were not proved by the undisputed testimony, and we cannot therefore review the action of the circuit judge. No other complaint demands consideration.
The judgment is affirmed.