54 N.H. 527 | N.H. | 1874
“A list of all taxes by them assessed shall be made by the selectmen under their hands, with a warrant under their hands and seal, directed to the collector of such town, requiring him to collect the same.” Gen. Stats., ch. 53, sec. 8. In Chase v. Sparhawk, 22 N. H. 134, the warrant and a list were in a book. The warrant, duly signed and sealed, commanded the collector to collect the taxes “ in .the list herewith committed.” For aught that appeared in the lan
“ Two distinct instruments are to be made out and delivered to the collector. The one is denominated a list of taxes, and is to be under the hands of the selectmen; the other a warrant under the hands and seals of the selectmen, directed to the collector, and directing him to collect the sums specified in the list accompanying it. The list of taxes, then, is to be under the hands of the selectmen, and the warrant is to be under the hands and seals of the same officers. The instruments contemplated are therefore plainly to be complete, each in itself, independently of the other; each is to bear upon its face the official sanction of those town officers, and each in the particular form and manner of the authentication prescribed, differing from the other. The list of taxes is to be under the hands of the selectmen in their official capacity, while the warrant is to be under their hands in their official character, and is to bear the sanction of their seals also. The mere official signatures and seals affixed to the warrant were not, in our opinion, a signing of the list of taxes referred to in the same; they did not afford the sanction which the statute prescribes. They did not purport to be anything but the signing and sealing of the warrant alone. The list was not then under the hands of the selectmen as the statute requires. The statute clearly contemplates a succession of acts to be done by the selectmen. The taxes are first to be assessed, and a record thereof is to be made in a book of records of their doings, and such, assessment, or a copy of it, is to be recorded by the town-clerk, &c. The making of the list of the taxes assessed succeeds the assessment itself, and necessarily precedes in the order of duty the making and delivery of the warrant, with the accompanying list of taxes. The list, then, intended by the statute, we think, is to be a perfect list of the taxes assessed, bearing the evidence of the sanction of the selectmen, by being under their hands, and in no manner dependent upon or requiring any aid from the warrant to be subsequently made, in order to its sufficiency and perfection as a list. * * "We think the list should contain a certificate that the list committed to the collector is a list of the taxes assessed by the selectmen, and should be a distinct instrument, under their hands, and that the same is not to be regarded as being under their hands when not signed by them, but only referred
Such is the ground of the decision in Chase v. Sparhawk. It was not held that the signatures of the selectmen must be the last words of the list, nor that they must occupy any particular place in it. A B writes a note, “I,.A B, promise to pay C D,” &c., and does not repeat his name at the end : it is a note under his hand nevertheless, — more strictly and literally under his hand than it would be if it were written by another person, and his signature were under it. That an instrument may be under the hand of one whose name is not at the end of it is a point well settled and not open to any doubt. Neither was it held that a list under the hands and seal of the selectmen is not a list under their hands. The fact that the statute required the list to be under their hands, and the warrant to be under their hands and seals, was relied upon as evidence tending to show that the statute required two instruments, and not as tending to show that a list would be rendered invalid by the seals of the selectmen. If a list were under their hands and seal, acknowledged before a magistrate, sworn to, approved by the judge of probate, recorded in the registry of deeds, and enveloped in any amount of irrelevant and unnecessary forms and solemnities, it would legally be none the worse for all that.
The opinion in Chase v. Sparhawk is based on the sole ground that the list and the warrant must be two instruments, each complete in itself. The statute is, “ a list of all taxes by them assessed shall be made by the selectmen under their hands, with a warrant under their hands and seal.” This authorizes, but in our opinion does
The object of requiring the list to be under the hands of the selectmen is the authentication of the list. “ We think the list should contain a certificate that the list committed to the collector is a list of the taxes assessed by the selectmen.” Chase v. Sparhawk, p. 139. This means, not that the statute requires anything in the form of a certificate, but that the list should appear to be what it is, a list of taxes under their hands. All this is included in the idea of a duly authenticated list.
The tax-collector’s book, used in the present case, was made for this business. It contains two printed chapters of statutes, decisions, and forms, for the instruction of the collector ; a printed interest table, to assist him in calculating interest on taxes overdue ; and a printed form of an instrument, filled out, signed, an¡i sealed by the selectmen. This instrument is directed to the collector : requires him to “ collect of the several persons named in the list, herewith committed to you, the taxes in said list set against their names, respectively, the whole amounting to the sum of $6,880.19; ” directs him to whom to pay the money when collected, and contains this certificate: “ The list on the following pages is a correct list of the assessment of the state, county, town, and school and school-house taxes, for the year 1870, upon the ratable polls and inhabitants of said Alexandria, made by us the selectmen of said Alexandria.” This is such a certificate as the court in Chase v. Spar-hawk say the list ought to contain, and such as does not appear in that case. After the signatures of the selectmen is the notice, of which a copy is given in the reserved case. After the notice and three blank pages are names of persons, including the plaintiff, with sums set against their names.
If two such books, duplicates, had been delivered to the collet there could have been no difficulty in regarding one of them ^ list and the other as a good warrant, if two instruments were necessary. It is not denied that this book is a good warrant, — and nothing is wanting to make it a good list, according to the rule laid down in
If there is no other question in the case, the defendants are entitled
To judgment.