95 So. 746 | Miss. | 1923
delivered the opinion of the court.
W. H. Fitzgerald, Jr., formerly sheriff of Coahoma county, instituted suit against the Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad Company to recover the statutory ten per cent, commission for the collection of delinquent taxes upon the assessment for the year 1913. From a judgment awarding the plaintiff one thousand eighty-six dollars and twenty-eight cents on account of delinquent taxes paid by the defendant in October, 1914, and denying the plaintiff the right to recover four thousand seven hundred eight dollars and seventeen cents and interest on account of delinquent taxes paid in May, 1914, the defendant railroad company prosecuted an appeal, and the plaintiff prosecuted a cross-appeal.
The plaintiff, W. H. Fitzgerald, Jr., was the sheriff and tax collector of Coahoma county, Miss., in 1913 .and 1914. On September 2, 1913, the railroad company filed its bill in the United States District Court at Jackson against the State Railroad Commission and the auditor of public accounts to enjoin them from certifying to the various tax
In September, 1914, a final decree was entered in the tax injunction case in the United States district court, based on a compromise between the parties, under the terms of which the railroad company agreed to pay the privilege taxes for 1913, which that court had declared to be invalid, and further agreed to pay the ad valorem taxes for 1913 on the basis of the assessment which the original bill had attacked. In consideration of this compromise and settlement, both appeals to the United States supreme court were dismissed. Under the terms of this settlement no damages on the injunction bond were asked or awarded, and the decree expressly provided as follows:
“The decree shall not prejudice the rights of the tax collectors (if they have any) to collect (under section 2197 of Mississippi Code) fees- or damages on account of the*911 delay in payment of 1913 ad valorem taxes, nor is this decree to be taken as a recognition that the tax collectors have any such rights, but said matter of damages is intended only to be left and is left unadjudicated and undetermined by this decree, the complainant denying that any right to damage exists.”
The plaintiff’s declaration, which was in two counts, set out in detail the history of this injunction suit in the United States court, and averred that the taxes due by the railroad company became delinquent on the loth day of December, 1913, and that plaintiff was thereupon vested with authority to collect the same by distress or otherwise, and that his right to recover the ten per cent, commissions prescribed by section 2197, Code of 1906 (section 1882, Hemingway’s Code), thereupon accrued; that he had been prevented from proceeding to collect said taxes by levy and distress by reason of said injunction, and in the second count of the declaration he sought to recover these commissions as damages on the injunction bond.
The material facts qre undisputed. The plaintiff testified that he advised with counsel in regard to the. collection of the taxes due by the railroad company, and that he was advised that on account of the injunction he could take no steps to enforce collection; that prior to the payment of forty-seven thousand, eighty-one dollars and seventy-eight cents in May, 1914, he took no steps whatever to enforce collection of the taxes; that on the day he received this payment and issued the receipt therefore he ■addressed a letter to the railroad company saying:
“I am issuing this tax receipt only because I do not desire to be in contempt of the United States court, and in doing so do not intend to waive any claim for damages, as stated. I will have my attorneys examine the decision as to my rights in this matter and wall make levy, if possible, for the damages.”
The consent decree was entered in the United States district court on September 1, 1914, and on the 3d day of September the railroad company’s tax commissioner wrote
The plaintiff testified that, when he received this assessment on the night of the 6th or the morning of the 7th of October, he immediately entered it on a delinquent list in a small book which was used by his deputies for the purpose of collecting delinquent taxes; that he instructed a deputy to proceed at once to levy on property of the defendant company; that this deputy proceeded to the office of his attorney for advice and instructions as to procedure; that while this deputy was at the office of this attorney, Mr. Yerger, attorney for the railroad company, appeared at the sheriff’s office and tendered the amount of the taxes due; that his deputy was then recalled to the sheriff’s office by telephone; that he then accepted the money for the taxes dué, but expressly reserved his right to claim an additional amount as statutory damages or commissions.
We think the questions presented by this appeal have been settled contrary to the contentions of appellee and cross-appellant by former decisions of this court. - Section 2197, Code of 1906 (section 1882, Hemingway’s Code), provides that the tax collector shall be allowed “ten per centum on all taxes collected after the fifteenth of December, by distress or otherwise,” and it has been held in a number of cases that this ten pen cent, is in no sense a penalty, but is purely compensation to the tax collector for servieés rendered, and is never due unless the tax has been collected “by distress or otherwise.” Railroad Co. v. Love, 69 Miss. 109, 12 So. 266; Anderson v. Hawks, 70 Miss. 639, 12 So. 697; Miller v. Land Co., 74 Miss. 110, 20 So. 875. In Anderson v. Hawks, supra, it was held that the words “or otherwise,” as used in this statute, must be construed as applying to matters ejusdem generis as the preceding particular words “by distress,” and consequently, where no action has been taken by the collector to coerce payment of the taxes, he is not entitled to recover the per cent, although the taxes were not paid or tendered until after December 15th.
As to the payment of seven thousand, four hundred sixteen dollars and thirty-eight cents which was made on October 7,1914, the appellee contends that the entry of the amount of taxes due on a delinquent list was the beginning of coercive proceedings to enforce collection thereof. We do not think there is any merit in this contention. This entry was made immediately upon receipt from the Railroad Commission of the proper certification of the assessment. Prior to that time the railroad company had attempted to pay these taxes, but was unable to do so on account of the fact that the assessment had not been received from the Railroad Commission. It is true and it was so held in Miller v. Land Co., supra, that there is no point in a proceeding by distress, or other proceeding provided by law for the collection of taxes, once begun, at which it
It follows from the views herein expressed that the judgment of the court below will be affirmed on the cross-appeal, and, on direct appeal, it will be reversed, and the cause dismissed.
Affirmed on cross-appeal, and reversed and dismissed on direct appeal.