73 Vt. 268 | Vt. | 1901
Trespass for taking certain personal property which was distrained and sold by the defendant, as collector of taxes of the town of Somerset, to enforce the collection of certain taxes assessed against the plaintiff in that town in the year 1899, the legality of which assessment he denied. The agreed statement of facts presents two questions: 1st, in respect to the validity of the quadrennial appraisal of 1898, and
I. V. S. 387, required that quadrennial appraisals should be returned to the town clerk’s office on the first Tuesday in July, which, in the year 1898, was the 5th day of the month, whereas it was returned on July 7th. It was returned in time so that an appeal might have been taken, but this fact alone does not render the list valid. The statute gives no latitude to the listers in respect to the time when they shall return the quadrennial appraisal. No discretion is given them to use any part of the three days allowed taxpayers in which to. appeal, and it is not a sufficient answer' for the defendant that the taxpayers had ample time to take appeals after the list was returned. The statute gave them the three days to inspect and decide whether or not to take appeals. According to the reasoning of the court in Bellows v. Weeks, 41 Vt. 590, in respect to the authority of the listers over the grand list of a town after they have deposited it with the town clerk, the authority and control of the listers of Somerset over this quadrennial appraisal terminated with the 5th day df July, 1898, and after that they had no legal right to return it. Willard v. Pike, 59 Vt. 202, and cases cited in opinion.
It was held in Smith v. Hard, 59 Vt. 13, that the statute which requires the listers to arrange in alphabetical order the personal lists of taxpayers and lodge the same in the town clerk’s office on or before April 25th for the inspection of taxpayers was mandatory and not a directory statute; and certainly no reason could be given for holding V. S. 387, merely directory. Ayers v. Moulton, 51 Vt. 115. In Meacham v. Newport, 70 Vt. 264, the decision did not turn upon the mere fact that the list was returned too late for the plaintiff to take an appeal, though the fact appeared in the case. The quadrennial appraisal was held invalid by reason of the listers’ non
II. The legislature, at the session of 1898, passed an act declaring the quadrennial appraisal in question legal and valid, •and that the failure of the listers to lodge it in the town clerk’s office within the time prescribed by law should in no manner affect its validity or legality or that of the grand list arising from it. The act also gave persons aggrieved by the appraisal twenty days from the passage of the act in which to take appeals; therefore the second question is whether this act was within the scope of legislative authority.
A holding that it was beyond the power of the legislature to validate the appraisal and make the grand list of 1899 a legal basis for taxation would release the plaintiff from the constitutional duty to contribute his proportion toward supporting the laws, and the grand list for that year would be void; therefore the validating act should be upheld unless it is unconstitutional or it deprives the plaintiff of a legal right.
The power of the legislature in this respect is not limited to mere defects of form in the quadrennial appraisal, in the grand list, nor in the tax bill. Judge Cooley gives quite a long list of legislative acts declaring certain tax rolls valid and effectual notwithstanding substantial irregularities and imperfections, which acts he seems to approve as within legislative authority. Cons. Dim. 470.
In Thames Manfg. Co. v. Lathrop, 7 Conn. 550, cited by Judge Cooley in the notes on the page cited, the assessors lodged an abstract of the assessment lists in the town clerk’s office on the 20th day of December, when the law required it to be filed on the ist day of that month. The legislature passed
Judge Cooley says, p. 455, that there is no doubt of the right of the legislature to pass statutes which reach back to and change or modify the effect of prior transactions, provided retrospective laws are not forbidden by the state constitution, and no other objection exists to them than their retrospective character. He lays down this rule on p. 457:
“If the thing wanting or which failed to be done, and which constitutes the defect in the proceedings, is something the necessity for which the legislature might have dispensed with by prior statute, then it is not beyond the power of the legislature to dispense with it by a subsequent statute.”
The question now under consideration was practically decided in Bellows v. Weeks, 41 Vt. 590, where the listers had made alterations in the list after having returned it to a town clerk’s office on the 15th day of May as required by law. In that case the question was whether the legislature exceeded its constitutional power and interfered with and disturbed vested rights of the plaintiff and other inhabitants of the town. It was held that the plaintiff had a right to insist that a tax should not be assessed against him except on a legal grand list of the town, but what should or should not be a legal grand list was
In Smith v. Hard, supra, it was held that the legislature had power to pass a retrospective act legalizing a grand list that was irregular or invalid because the listers had taken but had not subscribed the preliminary oath required by the statute. In this well considered case it was held that the legislature might pass retrospective laws unless prohibited in terms by the constitution, or unless they were violative of vested rights affecting substantial equities; that this doctrine is everywhere extended to irregularities in the assessment of property for purposes of taxation and the levy of taxes thereon.
In Tunbridge v. Smith, 48 Vt. 648, relied upon by the defendant, it was only held that a grand list not sworn to by the listers was invalid as a basis of taxation, and that the legalization of the list by the legislature would not validate taxes previously assessed thereon. This case fully recognizes the power of the legislature to validate such imperfect lists, and in Smith v. Hard it was held to be inadvertently said in Tunbridge v. Smith that the healing statute would not cure the invalidity of taxes assessed upon a defective grand list before it was legalized; that it would validate such taxes.
It is the prerogative of the legislature to establish a system of taxation and to direct towns in respect to the manner of making grand lists as the basis of taxation. The making -of the quadrennial appraisal and lodging it in the town clerk’s office is wholly a matter of legislative requirement. As the legislature could by the general law, V. S. 587, require the quadrennial appraisal to be deposited on a certain day, it clearly liad power to change that date, as to the town of Somerset, by
The view taken of the validating Act of 1898 renders it unnecessary to consider the effect of Act No. 17 of that year.
Judgment affirmed.