46 A. 470 | N.H. | 1899
"Selectmen, for good cause shown, may abate any tax assessed by them or by their predecessors." P.S., c. 59, s. 10. "If they neglect or refuse so to abate, any person aggrieved, *202
having complied with the requirements of chapter fifty-seven, may, within nine months after notice of such tax, and not afterwards, apply by petition to the supreme court, . . . who shall make such order thereon as justice requires." P.S., c. 59, s. 11. The defendants contend that the plaintiffs cannot maintain this petition because of failure to comply with the requirements of chapter 57 of the Public Statutes; but they appear to concede in argument that "fraud, accident, or mistake are equitable grounds for relief when the petitioner has failed to conform to the statute." Assuming this to be a correct statement of the law (Parsons v. Durham, ante, p. 44), the objection to the maintenance of the petition is disposed of by the findings of the referees. Whether any inventory was returned, whether any statements made in it were incorrect, whether if incorrect such statements were made in good faith, in honest mistake, or were false with fraudulent intent, are all questions of fact which are not open here. Consequently we are not at liberty to consider the defendants' argument that "the inventory returned was a fraudulent deception intended to mislead the assessors." Until the findings of fact made by the referees are set aside by appropriate proceedings at the trial term, as either contrary to or against the weight of the evidence, such findings are conclusive. Searles v. Churchill,
The only objection to the inventory that appears to have been insisted upon before the referees, or that was suggested before us until after the case was submitted, related to the statement as to the stock in trade. In the defendants' last brief, recently filed, claim is made that the inventory does not sufficiently describe the plaintiffs' real estate. This objection was known to the defendants before the trial commenced. It involves a question of fact and should have been taken before the referees, and, not being suggested until this late day, must be regarded as waived. Melvin v. Weare,
The remaining question is what "order justice requires" upon the facts found. This question is for the court. Cocheco Mfg. Co. v. Strafford,
The report contains, clearly stated, all the facts essential to the present inquiry. The case does not show any motion for judgment at the trial term, or order as to what judgment should *204 be rendered upon the facts found. The report is before us, and the questions arising thereon have been fully argued. We have, therefore, considered the principles governing such order as must finally be made.
The referees have appraised the plaintiffs' taxable estate in three classes, — real estate, stock in trade, and other personal property. The plaintiffs claim that to determine the proportional appraisal upon which the tax against them should have been assessed, their real estate should be appraised at six tenths of its true value, their stock in trade at one third, and their other personal property at its full value, the referees having found that the assessors' valuation of other property than that of the plaintiffs of these classes was in such proportions to its true value. The defendants claim that the plaintiffs' whole property should be appraised at sixty per cent of its true value as found by the referees.
The general principles of uniformity and equality essential to legal taxation under our constitution and laws have been so fully and frequently elaborated "during the last fifty-three years" that any discussion at the present time of principles no longer "a subject of debate or doubt" would serve no useful purpose. State v. Jackman,
It is, in fact, conceded by the plaintiffs "that the constitutional rule of equality requires a proportional and equal valuation of the different kinds of taxable property." It is also true, as claimed in the plaintiffs' brief, that "it is equally elementary that the law requires all property to be appraised at its true value. Yet if A's estate is appraised at that value and all other property in the town of X at fifty per cent of that value, A is entitled to a reduction of his valuation from the legal to the illegal rate." The reason is that in no other convenient way can A's tax on the property owned by him be made proportional to that paid by his neighbors, for the remedy of a reassessment of the whole tax upon all taxable property in the town, upon a legal appraisal at its true value, would be inconvenient and impossible of execution. But it does not follow where A's property is appraised proportionately upon the whole with that of other taxpayers, that if the selectmen have appraised one class of property for which A is taxed to other taxpayers at a lower rate, A is entitled to a reduction on that class to the same illegal rate, and thereby his assessment of the common burden be reduced below his share, and the shares of owners of *205
other property increased. All property alike is to be appraised "at its full and true value in money." P.S., c. 58, s. 1. There is no foundation for the proposition that owners of one kind of property should pay more or less than their share of the common burden because of the character of their estate. "The statute makes the proceeding for the abatement of a tax a summary one, free from technical and formal obstructions. The question is, does justice require an abatement? . . . The justice to be administered is to be sufficiently exact for the practical purposes of the legislature, who did not intend to invite the parties to a struggle for costs, or a ruinous contention about trifles. The points to be considered are such as the nature of each particular case presents. They cannot be fixed by an invariable rule." Manchester Mills v. Manchester,
"The court is not authorized to make an order of abatement that would violate the constitutional right of the other taxpayers . . . by transferring to them a part of the burden of the plaintiffs' stockholders." First National Bank v. Concord,
Hence, if all the other taxable property in Manchester had been appraised at its true value in the aggregate, the appraisal of the plaintiffs' in the aggregate at the true value of the whole would not have imposed more than their share upon them. If it *206 appeared that by errors in valuation some individuals among the remaining taxpayers paid more and some less than their share, that fact could not affect the plaintiffs' obligation to pay their share. If all the remaining taxable estate in the city were appraised at one half or some other per cent of its true value, and the plaintiffs' whole property at a higher ratio to its true value, it is evident the plaintiffs would be called upon to pay more than their share. In one sense, in this proceeding the plaintiffs are one party and all the remaining taxpayers the other party. The question is, in what way between these two parties the constitutional rule of equality of burden shall be carried into effect. As it appears that by the appraisal made by the assessors the taxable estate in the city other than the plaintiffs' was appraised at less than its true value, the appraisal of the plaintiffs' whole property at the same ratio would assign to the plaintiffs their share of the burden. The plaintiffs are bound to pay their share. An unequal distribution of the remainder among the other taxpayers, because of erroneous appraisals among individual taxpayers, is no reason why the plaintiffs should pay less than their share. If it were, the fact that some individuals pay more would establish with equal certainty the plaintiffs' obligation to pay more than their share. The ground upon which an abatement is granted is the reduction of the plaintiffs' assessment to their share of the tax. It is not granted merely to make their assessment similar with the assessment of other taxpayers in the same business or owning the same property. From the referees' report, the assessed value of all taxable estate in the city other than the plaintiffs', and its true value, is really computed. The true value of the plaintiffs' whole property is found. Justice requires that it should the same ratio to its true value as the assessed value of all other taxable estate bears to its true value. For the sum paid in excess of the amount of the tax upon such an appraisal, the plaintiffs are entitled to an abatement. The principles upon which this result is reached appear to be conceded; but it is claimed, in substance, that it is settled by judicial decision in New Hampshire that each class of property should be appraised upon a petition for abatement at the same ratio to its true value as other similar property was in fact valued by the assessors. An examination of the cases does not sustain this claim.
This exact question was raised in Manchester Mills v. Manchester,
If the reason of the rule were found in the proposition that similar property should be similarly appraised, no reason can be assigned for including all property taxable as real estate in one class; for upon that ground no reason exists why the plaintiffs might not claim that their mills and machinery are appraisable only at the ratio of other mills and machinery, their locks and canals and "outside" property at the ratio of other locks and canals and other like property, or why a private dwelling-house should be compared with anything but similar real estate. The divisions and subdivisions that might be made upon the theory of proportional assessment of similar estate would be endless. The error consists in assuming as a principle what was merely a rule found convenient in particular cases to give effect to general principles of uniformity and equality. Certainly, an application of the rule to all the different species of property classed in the statutes under the head of stock in trade (P.S., c. 55, s. 7, par. VI) is sufficient to show its unreasonableness.
The plaintiffs are entitled to an abatement. From the referees report, the average valuation of all other taxable estate in the city *208 can be determined. At the trial term this question will be heard unless the parties agree, and the amount of the abatement determined upon the foregoing principles.
Case discharged.
CHASE and PEASLEE, JJ., did not sit: YOUNG, J., concurred in the last point only: the others concurred.