42 Vt. 480 | Vt. | 1869
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The case of Hurlburt v. Green, 41 Vt., 490, seems to bear directly upon the questions made upon the exceptions in this case. . The plaintiff as the collector and representative agent of the town brought this suit to enforce a tax and get satisfaction of it. Of course it is the province of the defendant to put the plaintiff to show that the tax is legal and enforcible.
As to the second request: It is true that the action of the listers in the discharge of many of their duties under the statute is in a sense judicial as distinguished from acts ministerial, and so if they act and adjudge in good faith upon matters that the law requires them to adjudge upon, they will have immunity from liability as for a wrongful act. Davis v. Strong, 31 Vt., 332. But this does not give such adjudication necessarily the conclusiveness claimed for them in this case as to other persons. In order that adjudications should be thus conclusive, it is necessary that the tribunal should have jurisdiction of the person as well as the subject. It is difficult to see how the listers can have jurisdiction of the person unless that person be an inhabitant of the town. When that question is made as in this case, to invoke the decision of the listers as concluding the question would seem to be an easy mode of disposing of it, but at the same time not quite clear in its grounds or processes. It would seem to be an arbitrary assumption of jurisdiction when the very fact on which it depends is denied and not proved, and then to conclude the party as to that fact by the
The judgment of the county court is affirmed.