132 Mass. 89 | Mass. | 1882
In this case, two questions are presented for our decision: first, Was the tax paid under such a protest in writing as to entitle the plaintiff to recover it back if it had been illegally assessed? and, second, Were the instructions of the presiding judge upon the matter of a change of domicil correct ?
The Gen. Sts. c. 12, § 56, provide that “no tax paid to a collector shall be recovered back, unless it appears that it was paid after an arrest of the person paying it, a levy upon his goods, a notice of sale of his real estate, or a protest by him in writing.” In the case at bar, the question arises upon the last branch of this provision, namely, whether the tax was paid after a protest in writing. The case finds that before the tax was paid there was written across the face of a tax-bill, which tax-bill was in the
No objection is made because of the fact that the protest is signed by attorney, nor is any question made of the authority of the attorney, so that it is to be considered as if signed and presented in person by the plaintiff under the same circumstances in which it was actually presented.
Three objections are made to the sufficiency of this as a written protest: First, that it does not appear to have been presented to a proper officer of the city. Second, that it was not, in and of itself, a separate and independent document with such formalities as would attract the attention of the proper officer who should receive it. Third, that it was not left with an officer of the city, but was taken away by the protesting party.
As to the first of the objections, it is said that “ the statute requires the delivery of the protest relied upon to some executive or other officer of the city or town.” The counsel for the defendant does not, however, designate the officer to whom he contends that it should be delivered; nor does the statute, in express words. Inasmuch as the statute does not state the officer to whom the protest is to be made, we think that by its language there is a strong implication that the protest should be made to the collector, and that, whether a protest made to a different officer would be sufficient or not, a protest properly made by the tax-payer to the collector is sufficient. The language of the statute is, “ no tax paid to a collector shall be recovered back, unless it appears that it was paid after .... a protest by him in writing.” The various other conditions, such as arrest of person, notice of sale of land for nonpayment, or levy upon his goods, must all be within the knowledge and under the direction of the collector, and not necessarily within the knowledge of any other officer of the city; so that the notice given to the collector would place him and the city in the same relation to the subject of knowledge of protest as to every other of the conditions upon which money could be
Secondly, it is said that the protest which the law requires is a formal, separate and independent document. But the tax-bill by which the tax-payer knows that a tax has been assessed upon-his poll and his estate comes from the collector, and the amount of it is to be paid to the collector. It would therefore seem that, to insure certainty and identity, the particular tax-bill which makes claim of the payment of the illegal tax may properly be called to the attention of the collector as identifying the illegal tax; and a protest being written upon it, and as in this case stating “ this tax,” seems calculated to give more direct, immediate and accurate information of the tax-payer’s claim than could be derived from any separate and independent protest, however formal and carefully prepared.
The objection also suggested, that, in the haste of the receipt of taxes by the collector, a protest across the face of the instrument might not be observed by him, applies in our judgment with equal force to any other omission of duty in the collector, like the failure to preserve a separate paper handed to him by the tax-payer immediately before the presentation of his tax-bill and money for the collector’s receipt. Indeed, it seems scarcely possible that a collector should take a tax-bill into his hands for the purpose of affixing his own signature to it, and actually affix his signature, without observing the writing across the face of his printed bill. But if it were true that the collector would be less likely to take notice of the protest thus presented, than if it had been presented in some other form, it would be no objection to its sufficiency.
The remaining objection is an objection arising from the fault of the defendant, rather than from that of the plaintiff. The tax-payer has done his whole duty when he has made and presented to the collector a protest in writing against the tax. He cannot be responsible for the disposition of that protest by the officer. The officer may wilfully destroy it. The tax-payer cannot be responsible for that. The collector may carelessly lose possession of it, or he may negligently put it in the wrong place, or deliver it to a wrong person. None of these contingencies can affect the validity of the protest, nor does it make
In the opinion of a majority of the court, the protest offered was rightly admitted in evidence.
The other question raised is upon the correctness of the instructions of the presiding judge upon the question of domicil.
The evidence tended to show that the plaintiff was born in Boston in 1824, and had lived there until June 1876, when he sailed for Europe with his family. He testified that when he left Boston he had definitely formed the intention of not returning to Boston as a resident; that in the fall of 1876 he had decided to make Waterford, Connecticut, his residence, and then formed the intention of purchasing land there, which he bought on May 28, 1877; and that he remained in Europe until 1879, when he returned to this country, and went to Waterford. On this evidence, the judge instructed the jury, “ that a citizen, by the laws of this Commonwealth, must have a home or domicil somewhere on the first day of May for the purpose' of taxation; that in order to change such home or domicil, once acquired, and acquire a new one, the intention to make the change and the fact must concur; that if the plaintiff, with no definite plan as to the length of time he should remain abroad, and no definite purpose about a change of domicil, went to Europe with his family, that would not effect a change of his domicil from Boston, and he would remain liable to taxation there; but that if he left Boston in 1876 with his family to reside in Europe for an indefinite length of time, with the fixed purpose never to return to Boston again as a place of residence, and with the fixed purpose of making some place other than Boston his residence whenever he should return to the United States, and had in his mind fixed upon such place of residence before May 1, 1877, and remained in Europe until after that time, he was not liable to this tax as an inhabitant
Certainly, the latter part of this instruction would be understood to be in conflict with the former; for, not referring now to the words used by the judge, the obvious meaning of the whole sentence is, first, to instruct the jury that a man once having a home here is taxable here until both the purpose to change his home and the fact of changing his home concur; and afterwards to instruct them that, if his intention to make another place his home is formed after he leaves this country, and before. the first of May, such intention removes his liability to taxation, even although the fact of change does not concur with the intention. Although there is this obvious inconsistency, it arises partly from inherent difficulties in the case, partly from the impossibility of stating a fixed rule which shall be applicable to all cases, under the infinite variety of circumstances attending them, and the various adjudications which have been made upon the subject. The source of the difficulty is in the use of words of exactly, or substantially, or partially, the same signification, but at different times used with different significations.
There are certain words which have fixed and definite significations. “Domicil” is one such word; and for the ordinary purposes of citizenship, there are rules of general, if not universal acceptation, applicable to it. “ Citizenship,” “ habitancy ” and “ residence ” are severally words which may in the particular case mean precisely the same as “ domicil,” but very frequently they may have other and inconsistent meanings; and while in one use of language the expressions a change of domicil, of citizenship, of habitancy, of residence, are necessarily identical or synonymous, in a different use of language they import different ideas. The statutes of this Commonwealth render liable to taxation in a particular municipality those who are inhabitants of that municipality on the first day of May of the year. Gen. Sts. o. 11, §§ 6, 12. It becomes important, therefore, to determine who are inhabitants, and what constitutes habitancy.
Nor do we think that the opinion in Briggs v. Rochester gives the true force as used in the Constitution of the word “ inhabitant ; ” for we cannot doubt that for the purposes of taxation the word “ inhabitant ” must be used in the same sense as when used in reference to electing and being elected to office; especially as at that time the payment of a tax duly assessed was one of the qualifications of an elector; and more especially as the Constitution itself professes to give its definition of “inhabitant ” for the purpose of removing all doubt as to its meaning. Its language is, “ And to remove all doubts concerning the meaning of the word ‘ inhabitant ’ in this Constitution, every person shall be considered as an inhabitant, for the purpose of electing and being elected into any office, or place within this State, in that town, district or plantation where he dwelleth, or hath his home.” Const. Mass. c. 1, § 2, art. 2.
We cannot construe the statute to mean anything else than “ being domiciled in.” A man need not be a resident anywhere. He must have a domicil. He cannot abandon, surrender or lose his domicil, until another is acquired. A cosmopolite, or a wanderer up and down the earth, has no residence, though he must have a domicil. It surely was not the purpose of the Legislature to allow a man to abandon his home, go into another State, and then return to this Commonwealth, reside in different towns, board in different houses, public or private, with no intention of making any place a place of residence or home, and thus avoid taxation. Such a construction of the law would create at once a large migratory population.
Although we have said that the case of Briggs v. Rochester has been recognized in Colton v. Longmeadow, 12 Allen, 598, yet we ought to state that the decision in Colton v. Longmeadow was placed upon entirely different grounds. It was there held that the plaintiff had lost his domicil in Massachusetts because he had actually left the Commonwealth, and was actually in itinere to his new domicil, which he had left this Commonwealth for the purpose of obtaining, and which in fact he did obtain. If it should be deemed sound to hold that a person, who, before the first of May, with an intention in good faith to leave this State as a residence and to adopt as his home or domicil another place, is in good faith and with rear sonable diligence pursuing his way to that place, is not taxable here upon the first of May, the doctrine should be limited
We think, however, that the sounder and wiser rule is to make taxation dependent upon domicil. Perhaps the most important reason for this rule is, that it makes the standard certain. Another reason is, that it is according to the general views and traditions of our people.
One cannot but be impressed by certain peculiarities in Briggs v. Rochester. The bill of exceptions in that case begins thus: “ It was admitted by both parties and so presented to the jury, that the only question at issue was the domicil of the plaintiff on the first of May, 1858; and that if he was then an inhabitant of the defendant town, the tax was rightly imposed; but that if he was not on that day an inhabitant of said town, he was not then rightly taxable and taxed therein.” Nothing can be more clear than that all parties understood, and the case was tried upon the understanding, that domicil and inhabitancy meant the same thing; otherwise, domicil, instead of being “ the only question at issue,” would not have been in issue at all. And the judge in giving his opinion says that, if domicil in its strictly technical sense, and with its legal incidents, was the controlling fact, the plaintiff was rightly taxed in Rochester.
Another noticeable fact in Briggs v. Rochester is this, that if the tax-payer in the pursuit of his purpose is beyond the line of the State before the first of May, he is not liable to taxation in the State; but if by detention he does not cross the line of the State till the first of May, he is taxable here. We cannot adopt a rule which shall make liability to taxation depend upon proximity to a state line.
We have said that we prefer the test of domicil, because of its certainty and because of its conformity to the views and traditions of our people, and, we may add, more in accordance with the various adjudications upon the subject in this State,
In one of the earliest cases, Harvard College v. Gore, 5 Pick. 370, 377, Chief Justice Parker, in defining the word “inhabitant” as used in the laws, defined it as one which imported not only domicil, but something more than domicil. “ It imports citizenship and municipal relations, whereas a man may have a domicil in a country to which he is an alien, and where he has no political relations.....An inhabitant, by our Constitution and laws, is one who being a citizen dwells or has his home in some particular town, where he has municipal rights and duties, and is subject to particular burdens; and this habitancy may exist or continue notwithstanding an actual residence in another town or another country.” There are other passages in the same opinion which, although used alio intuitu, yet clearly indicate the current of judicial thought; for example, “ The term ‘ inhabitant ’ imports many privileges and duties which aliens cannot enjoy or be subject to; ” p. 373; “ does not fix his domicil or habitancy;” p. 372; “a pretended change of domicil to avoid"his taxes;” p. 378. There are other similar expressions running through the whole opinion.
In Lyman v. Fiske, 17 Pick. 231, the views of Chief Justice Parker in Harvard College v. Gore were considered by Chief Justice Shaw; and although expressing no dissent from the views of Chief Justice Parker, it is evident that in his apprehension the word “inhabitant” as used in the Constitution imported one domiciled, and he did not deem it important to consider whether it imported anything else in relation to political rights, duties and liabilities than the word “domiciled” would import. But as the views of that magistrate are never to be slightly regarded, and as he gave the opinion in both the cases decided by this court, cited by Mr. Justice Metcalf as settling that the words “domicil,” “habitancy” and “residence ” have not precisely the same meaning, we cite from his
It is entirely clear that in his opinion, so far as relates to municipal rights, privileges, and duties, there is substantially no distinction between “domicil” and “habitancy.” And, as further illustrating the views of that magistrate and the general sentiment of our people as to the use of such language in legislative enactments, we cite his language in Abington v. North Bridgewater, 23 Pick. 170, 176: “In the several provincial statutes of 1692, 1701 and 1767, upon this subject, the terms ‘ coming to sojourn or dwell,’ 1 being an inhabitant,’ 6 residing and continuing one’s residence,’ 6 coming to reside and dwell,’ are frequently and variously used, and, we think, they are used indiscriminately, and all mean the same thing, namely, to designate the place of a person’s domicil. This is defined in the Constitution, c. 1, § 2, for another purpose, to be the place 1 where one dwelleth, or hath his home.’ ”
Authorities could be multiplied almost indefinitely in which it has been held by this court that, so far as it relates to municipal rights, privileges, powers or duties, the word “ inhabitant ” is, with the exceptions before referred to, universally used as signifying precisely the same as one domiciled. See Thorndike v. Boston, 1 Met. 242, 245; Sears v. Boston, 1 Met. 250, 252; Blanchard v. Stearns, 5 Met. 298, 304; Otis v. Boston, 12 Cush. 44, 49; Bulkley v. Williamstown, 3 Gray, 493, 494.
A very strong case of retention of domicil, while in itinere to a new one which is subsequently reached, is Shaw v. Shaw, 98 Mass. 158, in which the court say that the rule of Colton v. Longmeadow, which merely followed Briggs v. Rochester, “ is such an exception to the ordinary rule of construction as ought not to be extended.”
Upon the whole, therefore, we can have no doubt that the word “ inhabitant ” as used in our statutes when referring to liability to taxation, by an overwhelming preponderance of authority, means “ one domiciled.” While there must be inherent difficulties in the decisiveness of proofs of domicil, the test itself is a certain one; and inasmuch as every person by universal accord must have a domicil, either of birth or acquired, and can have but one, in the present state of society it would seem that not only would less wrong be done, but less inconvenience would be experienced, by making domicil the test of liability to taxation, than by the attempt to fix some other necessarily more doubtful criterion.
Whether the cases of Briggs v. Rochester and Colton v. Longmeadow should be followed in cases presenting precisely similar circumstances, the case at bar does not require us to