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Maxwell v. County of San Luis Obispo

Supreme Court of California
Dec 29, 1886
71 Cal. 466 (Cal. 1886)

Summary

In Maxwell v. San Luis Obispo, 71 Cal. 466, [12 P. 484], the payment was made under a threat of litigation by the tax collector to prosecute the parties unless they took the license for which the payment was demanded; but the court held that as the invalidity of the law which authorized the collector of license taxes would have been a perfect defense to such prosecution, the payment was voluntary.

Summary of this case from Lewis v. City & County of San Francisco

Opinion

         Department Two

         Hearing in Bank denied.

         Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Luis Obispo County.

         COUNSEL:

         The payment in question was voluntary, and cannot be recovered. (De Baker v. Carillo , 52 Cal. 473; O'Brien v. Colusa Co ., 67 Cal. 503; Wills v. Austin , 53 Cal. 152; Herz v. San Francisco , 33 Cal. 134; Conn. Life Ins. Co. v. McCormick , 45 Cal. 580; Commercial Bank v. Rochester, 41 Barb. 341; 6 Wait's Actions and Defenses, 663; Younger v. Santa Cruz Co ., 68 Cal. 241; Grimley v. Santa Clara Co ., 68 Cal. 575.)

         F. Adams, J. R. Patton, and V. A. Gregg, for Appellant.

          J. M. Wilcoxon, William Graves, and William Leviston, for Respondent.


         The payment was involuntary, and may be recovered. (Louisville v. Anderson , 79 Ky. 334; Tuttle v. Everett , 51 Miss. 27; Erskine v. Van Arsdale, 15 Wall. 75; Babcock v. Granville , 44 Vt. 326; Cooley on Taxation, 568; State Tonnage Tax Cases, 12 Wall. 209; Bend v. Hoyt, 13 Pet. 267; Shoup v. Willis, 5 West Coast Rep. 834; Robinson v. Longley, 18 Nev. 71.)

         JUDGES: Sharpstein, J. McKee, J., and Thornton, J., concurred.

         OPINION

          SHARPSTEIN, Judge

         The only question which we have to consider in this case is, Does the complaint state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action? The action was brought to recover moneys alleged to have been paid by the assignors of plaintiff to the tax collector of San Luis Obispo County, and by him paid into the treasury of said county.

         Such an action may be maintained under some circumstances, one of which is, that the money was paid under compulsion or the legal equivalent.

         " The illegality of the demand paid constitutes, of itself, no ground for relief. There must be, in addition, some compulsion or coercion attending its assertion, which controls the conduct of the party making the payment." (Brumagim v. Tillinghast , 18 Cal. 271.)

         In this case plaintiff alleges that the moneys sued for were exacted and collected by the tax collector without authority of law, and as a condition precedent to the carrying on of business by the assignors of plaintiff, and by threats and menaces of legal prosecutions, suits, actions, and processes against said assignors, and attachments, seizures, confiscations, and sequestrations [12 P. 485] which he, the said tax collector, gave out and made to said assignors, and to each of them, for the purpose of causing them and each of them to pay to him said moneys, and that said moneys were all paid under and by reason of such threats and menaces, and would not have been paid but for such threats and menaces.

         The tax collector had no real or apparent power to execute the threats of seizures, confiscations, or sequestrations. The law under which he assumed to exact license taxes authorized him to direct suits to be brought for the recovery of such taxes, and to have attachments issued in such actions. (Pol. Code, sec. 3360.)

         And it is made a misdemeanor for any person to carry on business for which a license is required by law without having a license. (Pen. Code, sec. 435.)

         The assignors of plaintiff were not liable to anything beyond civil and criminal prosecutions in which the invalidity of the law which authorized the collection of license taxes would have been a perfect defense.

         In Benson v. Monroe, 7 Cush. 125, S. C., 54 Am. Dec. 716, the court said: "It is an established rule of law that if a party with a full knowledge of the facts voluntarily pays a demand unjustly made on him, and attempted to be enforced by legal proceedings, he cannot recover back the money as paid by compulsion unless there be fraud in the party enforcing the claim, and a knowledge that the claim is unjust. And the case is not altered by the fact that the party so paying protests that he is not answerable, and gives notice that he shall bring an action to recover the money back. He has an opportunity, in the first instance, to contest the claim at law. He has or may have a day in court; he may plead and make proof that the claim on him is such as he is not bound to pay."

         In Muscatine v. K. N. P. Co ., 45 Iowa 185, the court said: "We are of the opinion that the mere danger of a multiplicity of suits is not sufficient to make these payments compulsory. No adjudicated case has been cited in favor of such proposition."

         In O. S. N. Co. v. Tappan, 16 Blatchf. 296, the court said: "It is stated in general terms, in some of the decisions, that where money is paid to a public officer upon an unlawful demand to save the person paying from the infliction under color of authority of great or irreparable injury from which he can only be saved by making the payment, such payment is made under an urgent and immediate necessity, and may be recovered back. But it will be found that none of these decisions were in cases where the injury apprehended by the party paying could only be inflictad by the decision of a court in favor of the validity of the claim made against him."

         The question whether money paid to a tax collector to avoid prosecution under a void law constitutes a voluntary payment, has never become, so far as we are advised, been before this court.

         But it has been held that the payment of an illegal tax under a threat to sell property in case of non-payment was a voluntary payment. (Bank of Santa Rosa v. Chalfant , 52 Cal. 170; Bucknall v. Story , 46 Cal. 589.)

         " When a voluntary payment is spoken of, the qualifying word is not used in its ordinary sense, and many payments are held to be voluntary which are made unwillingly and only as a choice of evils or of risks." (Cooley on Taxation, 811.)

         " All payments are supposed to be voluntary until the contrary appears." (Cooley on Taxation, 810.)

         Tested by what we must consider as an established rule, the complaint in this case does not show that the payments alleged to have been made were not voluntary; and therefore fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

         Judgment reversed, and the court below is directed to sustain the demurrer to the complaint.


Summaries of

Maxwell v. County of San Luis Obispo

Supreme Court of California
Dec 29, 1886
71 Cal. 466 (Cal. 1886)

In Maxwell v. San Luis Obispo, 71 Cal. 466, [12 P. 484], the payment was made under a threat of litigation by the tax collector to prosecute the parties unless they took the license for which the payment was demanded; but the court held that as the invalidity of the law which authorized the collector of license taxes would have been a perfect defense to such prosecution, the payment was voluntary.

Summary of this case from Lewis v. City & County of San Francisco
Case details for

Maxwell v. County of San Luis Obispo

Case Details

Full title:E. L. MAXWELL, Respondent, v. COUNTY OF SAN LUIS OBISPO, Appellant

Court:Supreme Court of California

Date published: Dec 29, 1886

Citations

71 Cal. 466 (Cal. 1886)
12 P. 484

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