15 Mass. 144 | Mass. | 1818
delivered the opinion of the Court. We are of opinion that assessing more than five per cent, above the sums voted by the town to be raised, makes the assessment illegal and void; and the assessing that highway tax as a money tax is also in direct violation of the law, and for that cause, also, the assessment is void.
It is impossible to distinguish between that part of a tax which might have been rightly assessed, and that for which no authority is given, so that the assessment should be valid for one part and void for another. This point was settled in the case of Stetson vs. Kempton &A.
With respect to the objection that, as one of the taxes was le
The amount of the tax for 1815, which was legally assessed, we understand, makes no part of the damages * recovered; and we cannot see any tenable ground upon which any reduction of the damages can be allowed. When the property of a man is taken without lawful authority, he has a right to the value of that property, at the least in damages. A tax is no debt, until it is assessed and demanded; and if not legally assessed, it is the same as if never assessed at all; so that to reduce the damages, on the ground that the plaintiff owed a part of the money claimed from him, would be unauthorized by legal principles.
What, then, is to be done, when assessors have neglected then duty or gone beyond their authority ? Is the whole tax to be lost ? There is no need of this. The tax may be re-assessed, or the town may renew their vote to raise the money. And it is better that they should suffer this inconvenience than that the property of the citizen should be taken from him, to satisfy arbitrary exactions, limited by no rule but the will of assessors. Strictness in these particulars is wholesome discipline — as it will, from motives of interest, produce care and caution in the selection of town officers, and diligence in them when chosen.
Judgment on the verdict,
Bangs vs. Snow, 1 Mass. Rep. 181.