208 Mass. 188 | Mass. | 1911
This case calls for a construction of the R. L. c. 12, § 50, which is re-enacted in the St. 1909, c. 490, Part I. § 49, and is as follows: “ After personal property has been legally assessed in any city or town to an executor, administrator or trustee, an amount not less than that last assessed by the assessors of such city or town in respect of such property shall be deemed to be the sum assessable, until a true list of such property is brought in to the assessors. . . .”
The plaintiffs are the executors of the will of John Blackie, who died in Boston in December, 1907. As such executors, they never have brought in to the assessors a list of the property in their hands belonging to his estate. Under the R. L. c. 12, § 47, it was the duty of the assessors, in the absence of such a
The plaintiffs contend that, under the section quoted above, the plaintiffs could never be taxed for an amount greater than that for which they were taxed in the year 1908, even though the assessors, estimating only upon such information as they could obtain, assessed them in that year upon less than half their taxable property.
The statute does not warrant this construction. By the terms of the section, executors are assessable in a case of this kind for “ an amount not less than that last assessed ” as in their hands. There is nothing to prevent an assessment for a larger amount if they have a larger amount in their possession. This provision is for the convenience and protection of assessors, and for the interest of the general taxpayers, so that the tax can safely be assessed upon the former amount, if the executors fail to perform their duty to bring in a list. If they have distributed the property, or any part of it, they can protect themselves and the estate by bringing in a list as required by the R. L. c. 12, § 41, or by showing a distribution under the R. L. c. 12, § 23, cl. 7, which sections with slight changes are re-enacted in St. 1909, c. 490, Part I. §§ 41, 23, cl. 7.
It is the policy of our law to make assessments upon all property not specially exempt from taxation. R. L. c. 12, §§ 23, 47.
The dictum in Vaughan v. Street Commissioners, 154 Mass. 143,147, was outside of the questions involved in the decision, and is not to be treated as an adjudication of the court.
Judgment for the defendant.