White v. Smith

BRICKELL, C. J.

The act of the General Assembly, approved February 18, 1891, (Pamph. Acts, 1890-91, p. 1139), authorizes any person who by mistake has paid taxes which he ought not. to have’ paid, to apply to the commissioners’ court to have such taxes refunded. Upon such application being made, and the mistake being established to the satisfaction of the court, they may direct and order the probate judge to draw a warrant on the county treasurer in "favor of such person for the amount of county taxes shown to have been so improperly paid ; and the court may authorize the probate judge to certify to the Auditor such mistake and the amoúnt of- State taxes which have been so improperly paid. On the presentation of such certificate to the Auditor, if he finds the same correct in fact and amount, it is his duty to draw his warrant on the State Treasurer for the amount so certified by the probate judge, which is payable from any funds in the treasury not otherwise appropriated.

The appellees presented to the commissioners’ court of the county of Jefferson, an application for the refunding to them State and county taxes for the years 1891,1892, 1893, on certain real estate, which by mistake were paid twice. On the healing of the application, the court adjudged the relators were entitled to have the excess of taxes refunded, and ordered the judge of probate to'certify to the Auditor such mistake and the amount of State taxes improperly paid. On the presentation of the certificate to the predecessor of the appellant, he refused to draw a warrant on the treasurer for the amount so certified.

Thereupon, the appellees filed in- the court below, a petition for a writ of mandamus commanding the drawing of such warrant, alleging the forpgoing facts, and further alleging, that the refusal to draw the warrant was arbitrary, without auy suggestion or claim by the Auditor that he found anything incorrect in said certificate or order, or that there was any error in fact or amount as shown by said certificate and order, or otherwise, The Auditor appeared in answer to the alterna' *235tive writ, and demurred to the petition assigning numerous causes, which are reducible to two inquiries. The first is, whether the duty imposed on the Auditor is mandatory, or discretionary, involving the exercise on his part of a degree of judgment in finding or ascertaining whether the certificate of the judge of probate is correct in amount. The second is, whether the claim of the relators is within the purview of the statute (Code of 1886, § 109 ; Code of 1896, § 2008), requiring that “all amounts against the State must be accurately and fully itemized, and accompanied with the affidavit of the party, stating the correctness of the same, and that no portion of such amount has been paid.” The demurrers were overruled, and the Auditor declining to answer or plead further, judgment final, awarding a peremptory mandamus was rendered, from which this appeal was taken.

The statute is intended to provide the tax-payer, who by mistake has paid taxes he ought not to have paid, a speedy, inexpensive remedy to reclaim the money from the State and county treasury into which it' has passed. It is the successor of preceding statutes having a common object — the promotion of justice and equity between the State and the county and the tax-payer. If by mistake, whether of law or of fact, the State or county has through the medium of taxation received the money of the tax-payer to which it was not entitled, exequo etbono, it is but natural right and justice that the mistake should be corrected and the money refunded. The commissioners court-'of the county in which the taxes were assessed, levied and paid, has on its files the assessment book and the reports by the tax collector of all taxes which have been paid, and of all which are unpaid, and is the tribunal of peculiar fitness to ascertain the facts the statute requires shall be ascertained, before the judge of probate is authorized to draw a warrant on the county treasurer for the amount of the county taxes, and before authorizing him to make the certificate to the Auditor. When the facts have been ascertained — j udicially ascertained — and properly certified to the Auditor, the statute would not accomplish its plain and manifest purpose, as to the taxes which had passed into the State treasury, forming part of the adjudication of the court, if the duty of the Auditor is discretionary — if he could in the exercise of his own judgment withhold the war*236rant on the State treasury. There would be no remedy for the tax-payer except an appeal to the General Assembly, with its delays, and legislation would be multiplied. The statute recognizes the tax-payer as aggrieved — that money has been taken from him in the form of taxes by mistake, to which neither the State nor county is entitled — and it recognizes the duty and obligation of each to refund it. Construing the statute in its entirety, keeping in view the purposes it was intended to accomplish, a simple ministerial duty is imposed on the Auditor — the examination of the certificate of the judge of probate, to ascertain whether it is in fact an authentication of the, action of the court of county commissioners, and that the amount of the State taxes it recites, corresponds to that recited in the order of the court. A duty of like kind devolves-on every county treasurer, in the payment of claims against the county which have been audited and allowed by the court of county commissioners. The fact of audit and allowance is certified, or the order of payment is drawn by the judge of probate. The treasurer necessarily examines the one, or the other, to ascertain its genuineness. While the examination may be said to involve judgment in some degree, the duty to be performed is ministerial, simple and well defined — the payment of •the claim in the order and upon the conditions the statute may prescribe.

When the claim is ascertained by the court of county commissioners, it passes beyond the form-of an account —it is .established by the judgment of the court, and needs no verification or itemization. The judgment imports and, until impeached in a proper mode and by proper procedure, is the absolute evidence of its own verity. The statute (Code of 1886, § 109 ; Code of 1896, § 2008), to which we have referred, manifestly has reference to special claims against the State, remaining in the form of open accounts, and not to claims the amount of which have been ascertained and declared in the course of judicial proceedings before and by a court of competent jurisdiction. Besides, the want of verification and itemization, was not the ground of the refusal of the Auditor to draw the warrant, and we are not inclined to the opinion, if there was any force in the objection, that he could now be heard to make it.

We find no error in the judgment of - the city court, and it must bo affirmed.