24 Mich. 262 | Mich. | 1872
This is an action to recover back taxes alleged to have been illegally collected of the plaintiff by distress and sale of his goods and chattels. The illegalities alleged are two: Fir§t, that the tax was levied upon an excessive -valuation; and second, that it was collected by levy and sale after the tax warrant had expired, and without any legal renewal - or extension of the process.
The facts upon which the first point is raised are the following: The plaintiff was assessed for the year 1869
as the owner of two parcels of land, one of which was valued upon the assessment roll at seven thousand dollars and the other at five thousand. The charter of the city as amended in 1869 (Sess. L. 1869, Vol. 2, p. 561) provides for a board of review, consisting of the controller, the supervisors and the city attorney, who meet at a time and place to be prescribed by the common council, and “continue in session at least three days successively, and as much longer as may be necessary, at least six hours in each day during said three days ;” and the charter declares that “ any person desiring so to do may examine his or her assessment on said roll, and may show cause, if any, why the valuation thereof should be changed; and the said board shall decide the
The plaintiff, it appears, when a time had been fixed for the meeting of this board, appeared in person at the forenoon session thereof on July 7, 1869, and claimed that the valuation of his lands was too high, and stated his reasons why the same should be reduced. The board thereupon passed a resolution reducing the valuation of one parcel to six thousand two hundred dollars, and that of the other to four thousand five’ hundred dollars; which resolution was duly entered of record. In the afternoon of the same day, however, before proceeding to other business, in the absence of the plaintiff and without his knowledge, another resolution was passed, rescinding the first, and declaring that the original valuation was not too high. The tax was subsequently levied upon the land on the basis of that valuation.
The plaintiff insists that when the board had once heard and passed upon his application for a reduction of the valuation, their power over the subject was exhausted, and they had no jurisdiction afterwards to reconsider and reverse their action. It is insisted for the defendant, on the other hand, that the whole subject is under the control of the board for the whole of the three days during which they remain in session; that it is their final determination only that is conclusive, and that all claims for reduction must be considered as open for consideration, and parties interested bound to take notice of their action thereon, until the time of their final adjournment. And it is further insisted that the first action of the board was erroneous, because not based on sworn evidence.
We are of opinion that the public authorities erred in
As the circuit court reached a conclusion the opposite of this, it follows that the judgment must be reversed.
We do not think there is any force to the objection taken to the extension of the tax warrant. It was extended by the common council, which under the charter had full authority. Their action is objected to because there Avas no renewal indorsed upon the warrant, and no formal Avritten notification of any kind given to the treasurer, of the
The judgment is reversed with costs, and a new trial ordered.