Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

Honorable T! M. Timble First Assistant State Superintendent Austln, Texas Dear Sir: Ouinion No. O-1266 Re: Refunding of school taxes paid to a school district on property, which.is lo- cat& outside of said s&i001 district, We.are in receipt of your letter of August.10, 1939, in which you request the opinion of this depart- ment on the following question: "A tax'payer who has Ijroperty ad- jacent to a school ,district has been prying taxes for school purposes to this adjacent district for the last several years, bel,#ing that her property was in this district. Now it deveiops~ th+t the property is not in this distri'ct, bvt in an adjoining district which has no school tax. Can we lawfully refund her taxes paid to us, and, if so, what is the procuedure?" It is a general principle of law that taxes which nre voluntarily paid are not thereafter recoverable. Arrott vs. Allegheny County, 194 At. 910 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania): Burley vs. Lindheimer County, 11 N. E. .(2d) 926 N. W. 8Q.(Supreme Court.of Nebraska). Atkins Guardian vs. McCoy, 120 S. W. (2d) 1019 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky)'. These cases make no distincticn between a payment under a mistake of law, or a payment under a mistake of fact by the taxpayer. In the case at hand, we have a situation where a legal,tax was paid by a taxpayer under a mistake of fact; Honorable T. M. Trimble, page 2 o-1266 The taxpsysr believed her property to.be in the taxing dis- trict bvhere it was assessed by the tax assesscn fcr that district. There is a conflict of authority throughout the United States as to whether or not such a payment under a mistake of fact is a voluntary payment. Several. cases htive held the payment of school taxes on prcperty not located within the taxing district tc be voluntary, an&, therefcre, not reco,vsrable by the taxpayer. Gilson vs. Board of Com- missioners of Allen County, et al., 1.62 Pac. 1158 (Supreme Court of Kansas); Edwards vs. Board of Commi,ssicners cf Oklahoma County, et al., 36 Pac. (2d) 6 (Supreme Court of Oklahona); cialser, et al. vs. Board of Education cf School District No. 1, 42 N. E. 346 (Supreme Court of 111inci.s). The better view seems to be, hoc/ever, that the payment of taxes on property outside of a toxin2 district, under a mistake of fact, is not a voluntary payment, and are recoverable by the taxpayer. "It is a well settled general rule that,-if a wrongful or illegal tax is paid by the person assessed voluntarily and without compulsion, it cannot be re- covered back in an action at law, or by way of set-off, unless there is some constitutional or statut,ory provisicn expressly or impliedly giving him such rights, although tl-o tax is paid without compulsion, and this rule has been apelie:, even though payment was made under pro- test. But the rule does not apnly to a tax paid on land whcl3,y outside the tax- i.;: juu&sc$ction of the county levy!.ng . 61 C. J. 985. "In many instances it seems that the mistake as to'the correct tax dis- trict is, for practical purposes at least, one cf fact; as where there is no uncertainty as to the location of legal boundaries, or as to the legal au- thority of the district in question, or the general regulari~ty of the tax pro- ceeding, but merely from factual forget- fulness or inadvertence in the listing of the property for tc.xaticn. In suc?~ cases the better view seems to be that there may be recovery if, under the cir- cumstances a denial of recovery would be unjust. " 95 A.ti.R. 1224. * Honorable T. M. Trimble, Page ‘3 o-1266 A number of $aases in other jurisdiction3 .have allowed a recovery of taxes paid on prcoerty nbt within the taxing district even thcugh the taxes y/ere paid willingly by the taxpayer who believed his property to be within the taxing district. Churchill vs. Board cf Trustees of Highland rark Graded School, 89 S. ii. 122 (Court of Ap eals of Kentucky); City of Indianapolis vs. Patterson, E1 I?. E. 551 (Supreme Court of Indiana); Miller vs. City of Oneida, 272 N. Y. Sup;;. (Supreme Court of Nc*v York); In re: Wing, 295 N. Y. Supp. 336; BridRe- port.:.Hydraulic Co. vs. City of Bridgeport, 130 At. 184 (Suprcnc Court of Error of Connecticut); Pederson vs. Stanle County, 11;9 l?. ;ij*422 (Supreme Court of South~ Dakota 7 . The 'Supreme'Court of Texts in the case of the County of Galveston vs. J. C. Gorham, 5~9 Tex. 279, first recognized that there was a distinction between an il- legal tax paid under a mistake of law and a legal tax paid by the taxpayer under a mistake of fact. In answer- ing the question of whether or not a taxpayer had the right to recover taxes paid illegally under a mistake of law, the. court said: "We are of opinion that they have not, because in such case it 5s volun- tarily paid, and it,.under the circum- stances, is not contrary to good con- science for the county to reta5.n it.' .It was voluntary, because it was without objectIon paid under a mistake of law, if-it was illegal, and there was no mis- take or fact inpayin.q it, and no deceit, Fraud. or compulsion used in collectinp: it, or in causing it.to be paid', on the part of the county or of any of its of- i ficers, that prevented the will cf the parties paying it from befing freely ex- secised in doing the act. Tho court further said: "When money is paid under a mutual mistake of la:'<,the mistake of !.aw, in and of itself, is no ground for recovcr- ing it back." "A mistake of fact on the part c,f p_"c twhopays, ond deceit or fraud and- ~compulsion on the part of one who re- -. Honorable T. M. Trimble, page 4 0-1266 ceives, under which money'is‘ paid,-are each and all legally recognized as facts sufricient in and of-themselves to per- vert the will OS the acrtv dcinn the act. so thatAt could be said knd hayd, that then did not concur with the act done, thereby relieving him from the responsi- bility for and the consequences of the .& These,are such facts as it is prac-' ,ficable to judicially investigate, and there is r&great public policy in fore- stalling their investigation, when they exist in a degree vlell defined, and prac- tically capable of exerting a controlling influence upon the acts of the party who has paid the money, as it may then be said, against his will, or at least in the ab- se,nce of its free exercfse." 'The same f,acts as outlined in your letter con- fronted the fieaumont Ckrt of 8ivi.l Appeals in the case of Frost vs. Fowlertcn &:nsolidated School District Ko. '1L, et al., 111 S. W. (2d) 7.54. In this case, a ma? named ‘hiaster- son paid school taxes to Fowlerton'Consolidated School ais- trict No. 1. frcm the years 1911 tc 1926, inclusive. ae paid the taxes in good faith, and the Schcol District accepted them in good faith. When it WPS discovered tbz~tl&aster- son's property was not within the limits of the School Dis- trict, the ,trustees of the uistrict, .in an effort to refund him his taxes, excuted and delivered to him a warrant for the same, which was in issue in the case. The court said: "The payment of the taxes by Itias- terson, through a mutual mistake, on property not within the Schocl District, was not a 'voluntary payment' within the .rule denying recovery for taxes paid vol- untarily and withcut compulsion. The general rule is thus well stated by 61 C. J. 985.” The court then quotes the section from Corpus Juris vihich has been previously quoted in this opinion. The court then qllotes from the case of Pederson v3. Stan- ley Couzt; (p:~~icusly cited) as follows: "It 5-s the contention of appel- -lent ",:?a'; under the general rule that taxe3 voluntarily paid cannot be re- Honorable T. M. Trimble, page 5 O-1266 covered the respondent was not entA.tled to recover a judgment for the said amounts so paid to Stanley County. rig are of the view that the said rule has no apalication to the facts of this case. The property of respondent was .hholly outside of the taxing jurisdicticn or taxing district of Stanley County, and was therefore not taxable at ell in that county, and the amounts so paid by re- spondcnt to said Stanley county were in fact not a tax at cll, Stanley county was wholly withcut jurisdictio,n or au- thority to levy and collect such sums as a tax against the property of rospond- ent .? The court, in the same case, stated further; "The fact that the taxes paid by @asteron - the very money paid by him - had been expended by appellee and was not in his possession when the warrant was issued, did not take from the trus- tees the poner to issue the warrant." As to the manner of payment of this warrant, .the court states as follows: II. . .possible appellee could not have paid the warrant from the state and county funds, but appellee had other funds derived from local taxes, tuition fees, etc. The expenditure of these funds falls within the provisicns of Section 2 of Ar- title 2827; which provides: 'Local school funds from district taxes, tuition fees of pupils not entitled to free tuition and other local sources may be used for the purposes enumerated for State and county fbldS, and for purchas~ing appliances and supplies for the payment of insurance pre- miums, jnnitors;,,and other employees, for buying school sites, buying, building and repairing school houses, and for other purposes necessary in the conduct of the public schools to be determined by the Board of '*rustees, the accountsand vouchers for county district to be ap- ,. -__ . Honorable T. M. Trimble, page 6 o-1266 proved by the county superintendent; pro- vided, that when the State "vailable School Fund in any city or district is sufficient to maintain the schools thereof in any year for at least eight mcnths, and leave a sur- plus, such surplus may be expended for the purposes mentioned herein." It is the opinion of this department,, therefore, that the trustees of this school district may refund the m,o%ay collected from this taxpayer by issuing her a warrant drawn on the local maintenance fund collected from local taxes, tuition fees, etc, The mcney may not be paid from the State and county fundafurnished the school dis- trict. In this respect, however', o~~~attention is called to the case of Pfluger, ,et al vs, iI ..~. Independent utto School aistrict, 3!+&S.V. (2d) 632 (Court of Appeals of Austin), where a plea of limitations v&$Tsustained by the Court in a case where taxes had been paid to a school dis- trict on property not located within said SchooIdistrict. The court held that the facts in that particular case were such as to arouse the suspicion of the taxpayer so as to start the running of the two year statute of limitaticns, by which the taxpayer was barred in that case* Yours very truly ATTORNEY GEKERAL OF TEXAS BY Billy Goldberg Assistant BG:FG APPROVED SEPTENBER .5',1939 GERALD C. MANN ATTORNEY GEXERAL OF TEXAS APPROVED OPINIOK COMMITTEE BY BVVB, CHAIRMAN