265 Mass. 327 | Mass. | 1928
In the Superior Court the defendant’s demurrer to the plaintiffs’ amended declaration was sustained. The plaintiffs appealed from the order, “Judgment for the defendant.”
The first count sets out that the plaintiffs were mortgagees of certain real estate in New Bedford; that the mortgagor was one Bindas; that default was made by the mortgagor, and the plaintiffs, on September 23, 1927, “took possession of said land for the purpose of foreclosing said mortgage”; that the collector of taxes for the defendant city advertised the land for sale September 29, 1927, for nonpayment of taxes for the year 1926; that “said taxes had been paid on
Collectors of taxes in the cities and towns of this Commonwealth are not agents of the cities or towns; they are public officers, and the cities and towns, in which they act as such officers, cannot be held to answer for the default or neglect of a collector of taxes in the performance of his duty. Graton v. Cambridge, 250 Mass. 317. Graton v. Cambridge, 259 Mass. 310. See Bolster v. Lawrence, 225 Mass. 387, 389, where the cases are collected. If a clerical error was made by the collector or by one of his clerks in entering on the official books as payment of taxes on the property mortgaged to the plaintiffs, a payment made by another tax payer on his own property, the defendant city was not responsible under the law for this mistake. Whatever remedy the plaintiffs may have, if any, it cannot be obtained against the city in this action. There is nothing in G. L. c. 60, § 98, which gives the plaintiffs the right to recover against the defendant city for the error or neglect of its tax collector.
Order “Judgmentfor the defendant” affirmed.