—An act of the legislature, approved March 28, 1895, entitled “ An act to establish the fees of county, township, and other officers, and of jurors and witnesses in this state” (Stats. 1895, p. 267), directed the county clerk, upon the filing of the inventory and appraisement in the administration of an estate, to charge and collect the sum of one dollar for each thousand dollars of the appraised valuation in excess of three thousand dollars. The executor of the last will and testament of Charles J. Winger ter filed the inventory and appraisement of the estate óf his testator with the county clerk of San Francisco, August 12, 1895, and paid to that officer the sum of 8325 as the fee for filing the same. June 2, 1897, the estate of the said testator was distributed to the plaintiff herein. In May, 1897, this court held that the above provision of the act of March 28, 1895, was unconstitutional.
(Fatjo
v.
Pfister,
Section 1578 of the Civil Code, upon which the plaintiff relies for recovery, is contained in the chapter relating to “ consent,” in the article upon contracts, and is explanatory of section 1567, which declares that an apparent consent is not real or free if obtained through “ mistake.” A contract thus obtained may be rescinded (sec. 1689), or its enforcement may be defended at law or enjoined in equity. The section cannot be invoked to sustain an action for the recovery of taxes or other public debts voluntarily paid under a statute which is after-wards declared to be unconstitutional. In
Cooley
v.
County of Calaveras,
The judgment is reversed.
Garoutte, J., and Van Dyke, J., concurred.
