Wheeler v. Board of County Commissioners

COLLINS, J.

The plaintiff in this action seasonably interposed an answer in proceedings to enforce the collection of taxes assessed against his real property for the year 1895. December 24, 1897, he withdrew this answer, and in open court stipulated for the entry of judgment, and against the property, for the sum of $192.67, which judgment was then and there duly entered. It appears that the auditor subsequently failed to perform his duty, for there was no sale of the property in satisfaction of the judgment, and no further attempt made to enforce its collection in the statutory manner. April 19, 1899, plaintiff applied to the county auditor for a statement showing the amount due on the property as taxes for the year in question. He received an official statement, and thereupon paid to the county treasurer the amount therein asserted to be due; the amount so paid being $236.98, or $44.30 in excess of that actually due. The judgment did not bear interest, because there had been no sale (State v. Baldwin, 62 Minn. 518, 65 N. W. 80); and no penalty or costs had attached. In other words, the total amount necessary to be paid in order to relieve the property from the lien of the judgment, and the sum which should have been specified in the statement of the auditor, was $192.68, and no more. This action was brought to recover the amount of this excessive payment, upon the ground that plaintiff, having no *245knowledge of tbe amount legally due, bad tbe right to rely, and did rely, implicitly upon tbe statement made by tbe county auditor as to tbe sum be was obliged to pay. Tbe court below found for tbe plaintiff, ordered judgment against tbe defendant for tbis excess, and tbe appeal is from an order denying a motion for a new trial. Tbe order appealed from will have to be affirmed.

1. Counsel for tbe defendant bas assumed, and plaintiff’s counsel bas not contended otherwise, that the statement made by tbe auditor was not one required to be made by him under tbe statute, citing Crosswell v. Benton, 54 Minn. 264, 55 N. W. 1125. G. S. 1894, § 1590, is very plain upon this point, and nothing more need be said, except that it was the duty of the auditor to furnish tbe statement in question on demand, and that in tbe case just referred to an entirely different statement, made by an auditor, was involved.

2. In view of tbe fact, that before plaintiff could pay bis taxes be was required to obtain tbe auditor’s statement as to the amount due, it is evident that be should be allowed to rely upon the implied assertion therein that tbe full amount alleged was actually due, and necessary to be paid. It is true that be knew the amount of tbe judgment as entered, or must be presumed to have known it; but be did not know, nor could be ascertain without examination of tbe auditor’s books, that there bad been no sale, as provided by law, and consequently that tbe judgment bore no interest; and, further, for tbe same reason, that no penalty or costs bad accrued. He could safely presume, when reading tbe statement and discovering tbe claimed amount to be in excess of tbe judgment, that tbe auditor bad performed bis duty, that there bad been a sale, and that a penalty or costs or interest based thereon bad been properly charged against bis property. We do not think that when such a payment is made it can be regarded as voluntary, or made without any mistake of fact.

Tbe case is unlike those referred to by defendant’s counsel, and found in tbe citation of authorities in tbe appellant’s brief as reported in Falvey v. Board of Co. Commrs. of Hennepin Co., 76 Minn. 257 (79 N. W. 302). Nor is that case at all in point, for there tbe owner of tbe real property in question paid bis taxes *246with full knowledge that the levy and assessment were illegal, and that he had a defense properly to be asserted in the tax proceedings. He allowed judgment to be entered against his property, paid the sum alleged to be due, and then attempted to recover this amount from the county. As was said, such recovery, if permitted, would be a mere evasion of the tax law as to the finality and conclusiveness of judgments in tax proceedings.

Order affirmed.