Court Opinion

ID: 4136243
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-02-18 02:11:25.198535+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:35:06.364424
License: Public Domain

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               THEATITORNEY                GENERAL
                           OFTEXAS

    Mr. Jack N. Fant                 Opinion No. WW--736
    County Attorney
    El Paso County                   Re:   Whether County Tax Assessor
    El Paso, Texas                         and Collector may make a
                                           refund of alleged over-
                                           payment of occupation tax
                                           on certain amusement machines
                                           collected under Article 7047,
    Dear Mr. Fant:                         V.C.S.
              We quote from your opinion request as follows:
            "In the early part of February, 1958, Frontier
          Music Company, Inc., paid the County Tax Assessor
          and Collector a certain sum of money as occupation
          tax on fifty Class ID' amusement machines. This
          payment was made pursuant to Article 7047 which
          allows counties to levy such an occupation tax
          in an amount of one-half the amount paid to the
          State.
            "It seems that after this tax was paid a
          decision was rendered by a Justice of the Peace
          Court in Dallas and that pursuant to said decision
          the State Comptroller's Office agreed to a payment
          of a lesser tax to the State. Frontier Music Com-
          pany, Inc. made application to the County Tax
          Assessor and County Judge for a refund of their
          alleged overpayment and this application was approved
          and said refund made. This Company made a similar
          application to the City for a refund of an alleged
          overpayment to them. Up to the present time the
          City has not made a refund of this money due to the
          fact that their Legal Department has a serious
          question as to the legality of such refund. The
          City Legal Department has informed me that they have
          received certain communications from your Comptroller's
          office which indicate that said office approved the
          refund of the overpayment made to them by this Com-
          paw.
            "The City and County are both interested in this
          matter even though the County has already paid said
          refund and I should therefore like an opinion from
Mr. Jack N. Fant, Page 2     Opinion No. WW   736

    your office on this matter because there are certain
    other companies that are in a similar position and that
    may make application for such refund.
      "My investigation as to the law applicable to this
    matter leads me to believe that a refund should not
    be made if the payment was voluntarily tendered.
    We believe that this payment was in fact made
    voluntarily but there is a doubt as to this feature
    because of the business compulsion doctrine as
    expressed by some of the cases.
      "I further believe that certain companies in
    this City and possibly in other cities in the State
    did not pay their occupation tax at the time the
    payment became due in order to purposely await the
    outcome of this Justice of the Peace decision in
    Dallas. After this case was decided and the Comp-
    troller agreed to the reclassification of these
    machines these companies then paid their tax on
    the new reclassification and thus paid a lesser
    amount than the Companies who had been punctual
    in paying their tax when due. The effect of re-
    fusing a refund to these companies would be to
    penalize them for paying their taxes promptly.
       "Because of the possibility of other companies
     asking for a similar refund and in order to be
     able to properly handle this problem in the future
     I would appreciate your furnishing me with an opinion
     as hereinabove requested."
         In reference to the question of voluntary payment, -
                                                            vel
non, it is stated in 64 A.L.R. 9 at page 14:
       "The rule in Texas although said by the Court
     to be, perhaps, more liberal than is sanctioned
     by the current of authority elsewhere, recognizes
     that a payment of taxes may be compulsory, although
     not made to relieve the person or goods from
     seizure or detention, actual or threatened, where
     it is made under cir&mstances creating a moral
     pressure of 'equal influence preventing the free
     Will.' Galveston Gas Company v. Galveston County,
     ml)    54 Tex. 287 ..." (Emphasis added)
         Duress may be implied as well as express and the legal
liabilitv to reoav or refund is the same in both instances.
Austin National-Bank of Austin v. Sheppard, 71 S.W.2d 242 (Tex.
Com.App. 1934, opinion adopted); National Biscuit Company v.
State, 135 S.W.2d 687 (Tex.Sup.Ct. 1940). The case of Crow,
Mr. Jack N. Fant, Page 3      Opinion No. WW-736

et al. v. City of Corpus Christi, 209 S.W.2d 922 (Tex.Sup.
Ct. 1948) is closely analogous to the situation in question.
This case involved an action to recover certain taxes paid
to the City of Corpus Christ1 under an invalid ordinance.
The Plaintiff admitted that the taxes and charges were paid
without protest or notice of protest to the city, but asserted
that he would not have paid them except for the penal pro-
visions contained in the ordinance. The holding of the Court
is embodied in the statement contained in the decision at
page 925:
            The city received from the companies
     money'to which it now appears it was not entitled
     and, under the circumstances detailed, it would
     not be just for the city to continue to retain
     the money. It appears from the record as a whole,
     and is consonant with the trial court's judgment,
     that it was paid to the city under the pressure
     of the particular means employed for its collection,
     which were tantamount to compulsion of duress within
     the purview of the cited cases. It would be against
     good conscience for the city not to pay back to
     petitioners the money thus received ..."
The Court recognized that the common law doctrine of duress has
been expanded and that many courts have adopted the doctrine
of "business compulsion" under which it is established that
where a reasonably prudent man finds that in order to preserve
his property or protect his business interest, it is necessary
to make a payment of money which he does not owe, and which
in equity of good conscience the receiver should not retain,
the payment may be recovered. See 40 Am.Jur. 831.
          The case of State of Texas v. Akin Products Company,
 et al., 286 S.W.2d 110 (Tex.Sup.Ct. 1956) upon which the de-
\cisions in the gas gathering tax refund c&es1 were based,
 established the proposition that taxes paid under the duress of
 an unconstitutional statute may be recovered on the ground that
 the p%aymentthereof is involuntary. At page 111, the Supreme
 Court, quoting the decision of the Court of Civil Appeals,
 stated:
       "In the event the Plaintiffs had refused to post
     the required bond and pay the required taxes, the

 State v. Tennessee Gas Transmission Co., 289 S.W.2d 309 (Tex.
Civ. App. 1956,Transcontinental                         Gas
Pipe Line Corporation, 292 S.W.mTex.Civ.App.        1956, ref'd.);
State v. El Paso Natural Gas Company, 300 S.W.2d 170 (Tex.Civ.
APP. 1957).
Mr. Jack N. Fant, Page 4     Opinion NO. ~-736

     Act /?he Texas Citrus Commission Act, H.B. 29,
     Acts 51st Leg., R.S., 1944, Ch. 93, page 150, held
     unconstitutional by the Texas Supreme Court
     in H. Rouw Company-v. Texas Citrus Commission,
     151 Tex. 182, 247 S.W.2d 231/ did these things:
     (1) imposed a penalty at the rate of $50 each
     day for the violation; (2) declared that the taxes
     were the personal obligation of the taxpayer, and
     imposed interest at the rate of 10% on all unpaid
     taxes; (3) declared the failure to post the bond
     or pay the tax as illegal, and (4) expressly
     directed the courts, on request of the commission,
     to restrain or abate any violations and to grant
     injunctive relief which could be mandatory."
            It is submitted that insofar as the law applicable
to the situation described in your opinion request is concerned,
the foregoing cases are controlling. There is no distinction
sufficient to justify different legal treatment between a
situation where taxes are required to be paid under ordinances
or statutes    subsequently declared unconstitutional, and a
situation where taxes required to be paid under a certain statute
or ordinance are subsequently determined to have been erroneous-
ly demanded and collected.
         Article 7047a, V.A.C.S., under which the questioned
tax payments were made, contains the following penalty and
enforcement provisions:
     1. Every machine subject to payment of the tax upon
which the tax has not been paid is declared to be a public
nuisance and is subject to beinyA;;;~e,"s.~;7sne;yroyed
                                                      by the
Comptroller of Public Accounts
     2.  In the event of non-payment of the tax, the taxpayer
is required to forfeit to the State as a penalty the sum of
not less than $25 nor more than $500 for each day's violation
(Article 7047a-12).

     3. Failure to comply with any provision of the Act con-
stitutes a misdemeanor; upon conviction the taxpayer is subject
to a fine of not less than $25 nor more than $200 (Article 7047a-
13).
It is apparent, therefore that if a taxpayer made tax payments
such as are described in the opinion request under duress of
the penal and enforcement provisions of Article 7047a, such
payments are not voluntary and may be recovered. However,
determination of whether tax payments are actually made under
duress of such provisions is a question of fact. Rainey v.
Mr. Jack N. Fant, Page 5     Opininion No. ~-736

City of Tyler, 213 S.W.2d 57 (Tex.Civ.App. 1948). The latter
case involved facts directly analogous to the case of Crow
v. City of Corpus Christi. In distinguishing the Crow case,
the court stated at page 58:
       "It follows, therefore, that in cases w~here
     there is competent evidence of such a nature
     developed as might be a basis for causing reason-
     able minds to differ as to whether or not the
     payments in question were made under compulsion
     or duress, an issue of fact is presented to be
     determined by the jury, or by the court that
     tries the case. In the case under consideration
     herein, the trial judge presumptively found that
     the tax payments were voluntarily made by Rainey,
     who had the ordinance in question prepared and
     presented to the City Commission of Tyler, and
     accordingly rendered judgment that they could
     not be recovered. In the case of Crow v. City
     of Corpus Christi, as w~ellas in the Boone v.
     City of Tyler case, supra, it is to be noted
     that the holdings were predicated on the fact that
     the,,paymentswere made under duress or compulsion
     ..,
Based on this reasoning the court held that under the facts
there presented, the payments were voluntarily made and could
not be recovered.
         In your opinion request letter you set forth no facts
to which the foregoing principles can be applied. You state
only that there &s2a "possibility of other companies asking for
a similar refund .    In view of this, you are advised that if
and when such refund claims are made, your decision must be

2
 The Attorney General cannot advise the various city attorneys
of the State and cannot render opinions regarding questions
involving a city's legal problems. See Article 4399, V.A.C.S.
Consequently, this opinion cannot be construed as being rendered
in reference to the portion of the opinion request which deals
with the application to the City of El Paso for a tax refund.
Even if the city's question could be answered, in view of the
Rainey case, sufficient facts are not set forth on which to
base a conclusion.
Mr. Jack N. Fant, Page 6       Opinion No. w-736

based upon the particular facts or circumstances surrounding
each individual claim, and that If payment was actually made
under duress or compulsion of the penal and enforcement pro-
visions of Article  7047a refund should be made.

                          SUMMARY
          Refunds of taxes erroneously paid under
      Article 7047a, V.A.C.S., should be made ifs
      such taxes were actually paid under compul-
      sion or duress of the penal and enforcement
      provisions of said Article. This is a fact
      question to be,determined from the particular
      circumstances surrounding each claim for re-
      fund.
                            Yours very truly,
                            WILL WILSON
                            Attorney General of Texas

JNP:cm
APPROVED:
OPINION COMMITTEE:
John Reeves, Chairman
J. Arthur Sandlin
Robert G. Scofield
Robert T. Lewis
REVIEWED FOR THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
By:   W. V. GEPPERT   '