22 Mo. 90 | Mo. | 1855
delivered the opinion of the court.
Assuming, for the purpose of the present case, that the plaintiff ought not to have been taxed on account of the debt due him from the Potosi lead company, the assessment was not therefore void, so that the tax-book, delivered to the collector, conferred no authority upon him to collect the amount standing there against the plaintiff. It was at the utmost only erroneous, and for the correcting of such errors the law had provided a special tribunal, and directed the assessor’s book to remain in the county court clerk’s office, open to the inspection of all
Several late cases have given the relief «ought by the appellant and plaintiff -in this proceeding. We
I have always thought that the ground on which coarts of equity, in some of the states, refused to interfere- in such cases, was that the remedy was complete at law, inasmuch as the officer collecting- such a tax would be a trespasser, and- no title-would pass to any property he might sell. To put it on the ground that the assessment is merely erroneous, and if the tax payer fails to take his appeal, he is without remedy, is to make an assessor a court of general jurisdiction, whose assessments, equalling judgments in point of force, can not be impeached in a collateral proceeding — a principle which -would lead to such oppression and injustice as would appal the most hardy. The case under consideration fully illustrates the evil tendency of the principle maintained. The plaintiff here, in obedience to-the requirements of the law, furnished the assessor with a list, of his taxable property which was correct. The assessor, without informing the tax payer of his conduct, disregards the list and assesses him, in the teeth of the statute, with some seven or eight hundred dollars, on a debt due him by an insolvent corporation. As the tax payer was not informed, as he should have been by the assessor, that his list was disregarded, as he-