Reversing.
Wayland and Wheelwright are incorporated towns of the sixth class in Floyd county. The first was created in the year 1913, and the second in 1917. These towns decided to create independent graded school districts and operate their own schools in order to avail themselves of the high rates of taxation permitted to be levied and collected in such districts. This was indorsed and recommended by both the county and state superintendents and the county board of education, and the Attorney General of Kentucky advised that such graded school districts might be legally created by ordinances enacted by the respective town trustees. Relying upon this advice, the respective boards of trustees, on June 18, 1917, enacted ordinances creating independent graded school districts, coextensive with the corporate boundaries of the town. Schools were promptly established and put in operation, which carried complete courses in all subjects required by law to be taught in the common schools. The course of study was approved by the county superintendent and the state superintendent.
The Elkhorn Coal Corporation owned a large property in Floyd county which it gave in for assessment each year to the county assessor, but each year it paid the graded school tax on its property lying within the two towns referred to, and, as it had paid this tax, the county court made orders exonerating it from the payment of common school taxes on so much of its property as lay within these two towns. Thus things ran along for four years, but in Allen, Sheriff, v. Elkhorn Coal Corporation,208 Ky. 108, 270 S.W. 743, decided March 6, 1925, it was held by this court that these towns were without authority to create separate school districts and that the ordinances enacted in 1917 were invalid. Appellee Moore *Page 39 was the sheriff of Floyd county during the years 1918, 1919, 1920 and 1921. His term expired on the first Monday in January, 1922. He made no attempt to collect the common school taxes on the property in these towns while in office. The orders of the county court exonerating this property from such taxes were delivered to him as they were made and in his settlements he was credited by them. At the end of his term he made a final settlement in which he was credited as before by these orders, and this settlement was approved. After his term expired, and in December, 1922, Moore, ex-sheriff, made a levy on the property of the Elkhorn Coal Corporation for the common school taxes on its property in these two towns, and advertised the property for sale on January 22, 1923. Thereupon the coal company brought this action to enjoin him from selling its property under the levy. At the institution of the action an injunction was granted, but on final hearing the circuit court discharged the injunction and dismissed the petition. The coal company appeals.
As a matter of fact the coal company during each of the four years in controversy paid the graded school taxes, which were higher than the common school taxes, and this money went to educate the children in these two districts, and thus took them out of the territory in which the common schools were maintained, and thus left the whole of that fund to be apportioned among those schools. But the first question in the case is: Has the sheriff, nearly a year after his term expired, power to levy on and sell the property of the taxpayer for these taxes, when he had, during his term, treated them always as not in his hands for collection? In 35 Cyc. p. 1545, the rule is thus stated:
"The mere delivery of a process or writ to a sheriff does not give him an indefeasible right to execute it, but, if he does not commence to execute it before going out of office, he can not afterward proceed to do so."
To the same effect, see 24 Rawle C. L. p. 918; Ferguson v. Williams, 3 B. Mon. 302, 39 Am. Dec. 466; Blackwell v. Lewis,122 Ky. 845, 93 S.W. 40, 29 Ky. Law Rep. 385.
Moore was not charged with these taxes or liable therefor; he had been regularly credited by these taxes in his annual settlements, and in his final settlements, *Page 40 and the final settlement had been duly approved. He was thus released entirely from all obligation to collect these taxes as long as that settlement stood, and it has been surcharged in no way. It is insisted that the orders of the county court exonerating the property were void because made without notice to Moore. But a person who consents to an order can not complain that he did not have notice of it and consent may be given after the order has been entered no less than before. Moore consented to these orders by presenting them as proper credits in his settlement, and he can not now maintain that they were entered without authority. Having been credited by these taxes, and being under no liability for them, the outgoing sheriff was not authorized after his term to collect them. 12 C. J. p. 578, note 38b; 6 Rawle C. L. p. 600.
No other question is decided. The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded for a judgment perpetuating the injunction.