109 A. 810 | Conn. | 1920
The facts relating to the assessment of the tree plantation in question, under the provisions of Chapter 205 of the Public Acts of 1911, and its continuance as a tree plantation to October 1st, 1913, are fully set out in Baker v. West Hartford,
The town, however, insists that the three-acre tract should be taken by itself. The court found that, standing by itself, this would not constitute a continued plantation as contemplated by the statute, and that if this tract could be taken by itself the appeal should be dismissed. This part of the finding is a legal conclusion not warranted by the subordinate facts found and set out at length. We think, in this case, the court was justified in insisting upon treating the tract as a whole. The owner had done nothing, either actively or passively, to separate the three acres from the rest. It is found that the entire tract was enclosed by a wire fence, that it had been used solely for a tree plantation, and that the owner had done nothing indicating any intention to use it for any other purpose in the future. The rodents did greater damage on this portion than on the rest, but that of itself cannot be charged to the owner as making it a separate tract.
We do not wish to be understood as saying that a part cannot be taken from a larger tract and subjected to taxation for failure to continue the use as a tree plantation, but upon the facts of this case there has been no such separation. Moreover, should we take the finding as to these three acres as though that were all the land affected, the finding does not show a failure to continue it as a tree plantation. There are *589 still nearly 400 trees to the acre. The replacement between the time of destruction and the taxing date was an impossibility, and, as indicated above, such a situation furnishes no reasonable ground for a finding that the owner had on October 1st, 1918, failed to continue the plantation. To so hold would be clearly unjust. Whichever way the three acres is taken, under conditions as they existed October 1st, 1918, whether by itself or as part of the eighteen acres, the judgment sustaining the plaintiff's appeal and erasing this tract from the plaintiff's tax list was right.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.