63 N.H. 320 | N.H. | 1885
"Towns may, by vote, exempt from taxation, for a term not exceeding ten years, any establishment therein, or proposed to be erected or put in operation therein, and the capital used in operating the same, for the manufacture of fabrics of cotton, wool, wood, iron, or any other material; and such vote shall be a contract binding for the term specified therein." G. L., c. 53, s. 10. Under the authority thus delegated, the town of Northwood, at a legal meeting held in 1882, and in accordance with an article in the warrant therefor, passed a vote exempting certain manufacturing property for a second term of ten years, and, by virtue of that vote, the defendants, as selectmen and assessors of the town, omitted to assess the property for purposes of taxation in the annual assessment for 1884.
Waiving the question of the sufficiency of the vote by reason of its general terms (Cox Needle Co. v. Gilford,
The second exemption by Northwood, not being within the terms or the meaning of the statute, nor within the apparent scope of its powers as a town was a mere nullity, under which no rights could be acquired; and as the vote conferring the exemption is the only justification set up by the defendants for their neglect to assess the property embraced in it, no legal defence whatever is made.
Petition granted.
CLARK, J., did not sit: the others concurred.