107 Ky. 1 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1899
delivered the opinion of the court.
Appellee, a non-resident corporation, was- indicted by the grand jury of Bracken county for failing to file a descriptive list of lands owned by it located in Bracken county with the clerk of the county court, as required by section 4039, Kentucky Statutes. Upon the trial it was developed that the local agent of appellee had, by its direction, listed the property owned by it with the assessor of the county previous to the 15th day of August, 1898, and that the taxes assessed against these, lands had been duly paid.
Upon the trial of defendant, the court, in substance, instructed the jury that the listing of the property with the assessor by its local agent was a sufficient compliance with the provisions of the stat
The main question which we are called upon to determine is this: Did the listing of the real estate owned by appellee in Bracken county, by its local attorney and agent, with the assessor, dispense with the duty imposed upon it by the statute to file a descriptive list of such property with the clerk, in accordance with the provisions of the statute, supra, and is it exonerated thereby from the penalty denounced for such failure?
It was decided by this court in the manuscript opinion delivered in the case of Commonwealth v. Ellis, reported on page 342 of the 10 Ky. L. R., [9 S. W., 221], that where the non-resident owner of real estate situated in Livingston county went in person to the' assessor, and listed the lands owned’ by him in that county within the proper time, he was exempted thereby from the penalty for failing to file a descriptive list thereof with the clerk in the time required by law; but it has never been held that a non-resident owner could escape the dutj” imposed by statute by directing .an agent to list the property with the county assessor. Whilst it is a maxim of the common law that whatever a person may do of his own right with relation to property he may do by another, yet there are certain exceptions to this general rule, and there are acts of so peculiarly personal a nature that their performance can not be delegated. -To this class of cases belong making of wills, contracting of marriage, and especially the discharge of a duty which is created by statute, and which, by the express terms or
There can be no doubt of the power of the Legislature to impose upon the owner of property the personal duty of reporting it for the purpose of taxation in any form or manner it may deem best, and it is evident that the object of this statute was to compel the non-resident owners of property to furnish such information under oath as would enable the local assessors to readily ascertain its extent and location, and this information was deemed so important that the statute requires that it shall be furnished under oath, and subjects such owners to a severe penalty for failure to comply therewith. Whilst it is possible that a local agent may have more accurate information of the property owned by his non-resident employer than the employer himself, yet it might happen that he did not have such information; and the statute has imposed upon the owner the duty of furnishing this information in person either to the clerk in the manner provided by the statute or to the assessor of the county in the manner imposed upon residents, and to make oath as to the accuracy of such inform-' ation. No distinction is drawn between corporations and individuals. In cases of corporations the information must be furnished by an officer of the company, who is presumed to know its property, and this duty can not be delegated to a mere local agent of limited authority, who may not have full information as to the extent of the real property owned by the company. It therefore follows that the court erred in the second instruction given to the jury, and the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for proceedings consistent herewith.