State Ex Rel. Abington v. Reynolds

Certiorari to the St. Louis Court of Appeals to quash its record in Abington, Appellant, v. Harwell, Respondent, designated hereinafter as the "original action." The appellant, who was at the time Collector of the Revenue of Butler County, sued the respondent for money had and received, consisting of commissions on taxes collected by the latter to the former's use. At the close of a jury trial the court sustained a general demurrer to appellant's evidence and directed a verdict for the respondent. An appeal to the St. Louis Court of Appeals resulted in an affirmance of the judgment of the trial court. The writ herein was thereupon invoked on the ground that the ruling of the Court of Appeals was in conflict with certain decisions of this court.

The facts, as disclosed by the opinion, are that Harwell had in March, 1913, been elected Township Collector of the Revenue of Poplar Bluff Township in Butler County, then under township organization. At the general election held November 3, 1914, the continuance of township organization was, under the provisions of Section 11745, Revised Statutes 1909, submitted to the voters of that county, with the result that a "majority of all the votes cast on the question was against its continuance."

On November 28, 1914, the Governor, acting under the authority of Section 5828, Revised Statutes 1909, and Section 11 of Article V of the State Constitution in regard to the filling of vacancies in office, appointed and commissioned Abington Collector of the Revenue of Butler County. The county court of that county on December 1, 1914, under a provision of Section 11745, supra, appointed one Duncan Collector of the Revenue of said county, who qualified by taking the oath of office and tendering an official bond which was accepted by the county court, but he never attempted to exercise any of the duties of the office. On the same day Abington presented to the county court a bond as Collector of the Revenue of said county. The court refused to approve the same on the ground that the *Page 451 power to appoint a collector was lodged by the statute (Sec. 11745) in the county court and not in the Governor. On December 17, 1914, Abington executed and submitted to the county court a new bond as Collector of the Revenue of said county in the sum of $125,000, the approval of which was refused by the county court on the sole ground, as before, that the appointment made by the Governor was unauthorized. The only difference between the two bonds was that the second was $5,000 larger in amount than the first.

During the time intervening between the election for the discontinuance of township organization in said county in November, 1914, and the ruling of the Supreme Court in State ex inf. Attorney General v. Duncan, 265 Mo. 26, on April 2, 1915, in disregard of the appointment of Abington by the Governor and the attempted appointment of Duncan as county collector by the county court, Harwell and the other township collectors continued in the exercise of the duties of the offices of township collectors in said county, and it is for the recovery of the amount of the commissions on collections made by said Harwell during that time and retained by him that the original action herein was brought by Abington.

In December, 1914, the Attorney-General instituted in the Supreme Court a proceeding by quo warranto to determine the right of Duncan to the office of county collector, and that of Harwell and others named to the offices of township collectors of Butler County. This is the action heretofore referred to as State ex inf. Attorney General v. Duncan. It was held in that case that the provision in Section 11745 requiring an affirmative vote of "all those voting at an election to discontinue township organization" was invalid as in contravention of the constitutional provision (Section 9, Article 9) which requires only "a majority vote of all of the votes cast upon the question" to discontinue this form of county government; as a consequence of this ruling, the returns showing that a majority of the votes cast on the question were against township organization, *Page 452 it was held to have been thereby discontinued; and it was further ruled that the county court, notwithstanding the provision of Section 11745, supra, attempting to empower it so to do, was not authorized to appoint a county collector because of the contravening constitutional provision (Section 11, Article 5) and the statute (Sec. 5828, R.S. 1909) in conformity therewith, which invest the Governor with this power; that upon the discontinuance of township organization Harwell and the other township collectors were divested of authority to act as such; and it appearing that the Governor had exercised the power conferred on him by the appointment of Abington as Collector of the Revenue of said county, that the latter was entitled to said office, and a writ of ouster was directed to issue against all of the respondents named in said proceeding, which included Duncan and Harwell. Following this ruling of the Supreme Court the county court, on the 15th day of April, 1915, approved the second bond of Abington as collector theretofore submitted to it, and he entered upon the discharge of the duties of the office.

The Court of Appeals held that Abington was not authorized to sue for and recover from Harwell commissions retained by the latter on taxes collected by him during the time intervening between Abington's appointment and induction into office. Hunter v. Chandler, 45 Mo. 452 is cited in support of this conclusion. In that case a demurrer to the petition had been sustained by the trial court. In reviewing this ruling we held, it appearing from the petition that Hunter was not at the time in possession of the office, that his title thereto should have been established in a separate proceeding as a condition precedent to his right of action for the fees of same. This conclusion was but an application of the general rule that a right of action in any case is dependent upon it appearing from the petition that the plaintiff has a substantial interest in the matter in controversy. Where the matter involved is the fees of an office it must appear that the plaintiff's *Page 453 title to the office has been determined. With the correctness of this conclusion under the facts in that case we have no controversy. The vexing question is whether the allegations of Abington's pleadings, as disclosed in the opinion of the Court of Appeals, show that his title to the office had been determined at the time of the institution of the original action.

Preliminary to a discussion of the sufficiency of the petition, it is pertinent to say that the elementary rule which the Court of Appeals ignored should have been applied, that upon the filing of a motion for a judgment on the pleadings, as was done in this case, the mover admits, either directly or impliedly, the truth of all facts well pleaded by the opposite party. [State ex inf. Hadley v. Railroad, 237 Mo. l.c. 346; State ex inf. v. Goffee,192 Mo. 670; State ex rel. Attorney General v. Simmons Hardware Co., 109 Mo. l.c. 123.]

It will be sufficient to say, without setting forth the petition at length, that the appointment, qualification and induction into office of Abington as collector of Butler County is affirmatively pleaded therein, and that he was in the possession and exercise of the duties of the office at the time of the institution and prosecution of the original action. This being true, his title to the office, as evidenced by the express declaration to that effect in the opinion rendered by this court in the quo warranto proceeding of State ex rel. Attorney General v. Duncan, supra, need not, except as an affirmative judicial recognition of such title, be held to be determinative of his right to institute the action for the recovery of his fees. That right was sufficiently determined by the admitted declarations of his pleadings, and instead, therefore, of the case of Hunter v. Chandler sustaining the conclusion reached by the Court of Appeals, it is, under the facts in the original action, an authority to the contrary, in that if it had been shown therein, as it was in the original action, that the plaintiff was in possession of and entitled to the office, his right to the action for the fees of same would have been upheld instead of denied. The Court of *Page 454 Appeals opinion, therefore, while not in this particular in direct contravention of our ruling in Hunter v. Chandler, supra, is contrary to its spirit and purpose and fails to correctly limit its application to one suing to recover fees who is not an incumbent of the office. Where, therefore, the party sued, as in the original action, admitted not only the plaintiff's title to but his possession of the office, what principle of justice or private right demands, as a prerequisite to his right to sue for the fees of such office, that he shall establish his title to same in a separate proceeding? A fact established needs no procedure or proof for its further establishment, and the separate proceeding required by the Court of Appeals ruling would have served no substantial purpose in the administration of justice. Its only effect would have been to impose an onerous and unnecessary prerequisite upon the plaintiff.

Abington's right of action having been established by the admission of the truth of his pleadings, a discussion as to the effect, except as stated, of the quo warranto proceeding instituted by the Attorney General (State ex rel. v. Duncan, supra) may be eliminated as unnecessary to a determination of the matter at issue. The regularity of Abington's appointment and commission and that he pursued the course directed by the statute to authorize him to be inducted into the office are conceded; his failure, therefore, to secure the possession of same was not due to his neglect or remission, but the unauthorized refusal of the county court to approve his bond made and executed as the law required. It follows as a necessary consequence of these facts that upon his submission to the county court of the required bond on December 17, 1914, he became the de jure collector of the revenue of the county and as such entitled to the fees of same (Auditor v. Menominee Co., 89 Mich. 552, 51 N.W. 483; Hamlin v. Kassafer, 15 Or. 456, 3 Am. St. Rep. 176; McMillin v. Richards,45 Neb. 786, 64 N.W. 242; Stott v. Chicago, 205 Ill. 281, 68 N.E. 736; People v. Staton, 73 N.C. 546); and upon his induction into the office *Page 455 on the 15th of April, 1915, he was authorized to sue for and recover any fees collected by another from the time he became entitled to such fees of which he had been deprived through no fault of his. In ruling to the contrary the Court of Appeals contravened the opinion of this court in State ex rel. Evans v. Gordon, 245 Mo. l.c. 28, in which we held it to be settled law that compensation is an incident to the title to an office and that it belongs to the de jure officer, who may upon establishing his title thereto, recover the fees of same from ade facto officer who has received them. The rule should and does apply with more strictness to one who has usurped an office belonging to another and has received the fees of same. [Mayfield v. Moore, 53 Ill. 428, 5 Am. Rep. 52; Glascock v. Lyons,20 Ind. 1, 83 Am. Dec. 299; 22 R.C.L. title "Public Officers." sec. 244.]

There is no claim here of a de facto incumbency of the office. Harwell was a mere intruder. The office of township collector had been abolished, and there being no de jure office there could be no de facto officer [Ex parte Snyder, 64 Mo. l.c. 62; State v. O'Brian, 68 Mo. l.c. 154; State ex rel. Board of Education v. Nast, 209 Mo. l.c. 723.]

The conclusion of the Court of Appeals that Abington did not become an officer de jure until his bond had been approved by the county court is without merit. Sections 11434 and 11440, Revised Statutes 1909, which define the conditions of a collector's bond, are cited in support of this conclusion in that they require that such bond shall be given "to the satisfaction of the county court." This simply means that such a bond shall be given as the law requires and such requirements are clearly defined in the statute. It is conceded that they were in this instance fully complied with and the record affirmatively shows that the reason assigned by the court for its refusal to approve the bond was wholly unauthorized. The logic or lack of same of the conclusion is, therefore, that it results in the denial of a conceded right for an unauthorized reason. *Page 456

Contravening, as the Court of Appeals opinion does, the rulings of this court as to the effect of a general demurrer or a motion for a judgment on the pleadings and in regard to the right of the relator to sue for the fees herein, it follows that its record should be quashed and it is so ordered.

Graves, Williams and Williamson, JJ., concur; Blair andGoode, JJ., concur in result; Woodson, J., not sitting.