117 A. 12 | N.H. | 1922
The court is without authority to enjoin the collection of a tax. The aggrieved taxpayer's remedy is a petition for abatement under the statute. Rowe v. Hampton,
"Selectmen, for good cause shown, may abate any tax assessed by them or by their predecessors." P. S., c. 59, s. 10.
"Sect. 11. If they neglect or refuse so to abate, any person aggrieved, having complied with the requirements of chapter 57, may, within six months after notice of such tax and not afterward, apply by petition to the superior court in the county, which shall make such order thereon as justice requires." P. S., c. 59, s. 11; Laws 1913, c. 67.
It is conceded that under the finding that the plaintiffs' failure to file an inventory, if they did not do so, was due to accident and mistake, such failure to comply with the requirements of chapter 57 is not a bar to the maintenance of this proceeding as a petition for abatement. Kerby v. Charlestown,
The defendants further object that no formal application to the selectmen to abate the tax was made prior to the bringing of the petition. As to this, it is found that prior to the formal assessment of the tax, the selectmen informed the plaintiffs of their purpose and their reasons therefor and in a conference upon the subject notified them the tax would not be abated, and it was also found that an abatement would have been refused if formally applied for. Under these circumstances a formal application to the selectmen for abatement of the tax after notice of its assessment would have been "a useless ceremony, which the law of this jurisdiction never requires." Blodgett, J., State v. Moore,
The defendants stand upon the proposition that "an exemption under the statute does not pass with a sale of the property." If this be so as matter of law, no occasion for a discussion of the proposition is presented. The plaintiffs do not stand upon the vote exempting the East Jaffrey Manufacturing Company but upon the vote exempting them by name "the Bean and Symonds Company."
Whether, if the East Jaffrey Co. had erected the buildings for themselves and subsequently sold them to the plaintiffs, the purchase of the buildings by the plaintiffs would bring such buildings *346 within the terms of the vote may perhaps be debatable, but the question is not here, because it is found that the East Jaffrey Co. in erecting the buildings were acting for the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs therefore bring themselves within the terms of the vote.
Tax abated.
All concurred.