Meserve v. Folsom

62 Vt. 504 | Vt. | 1890

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Powers, J.

The listers of Wheelock, after making up the plaintiff’s list, notified him in writing that “ agreeable to an act revising, consolidating and amending the laws relating to the grand list and in accordance with section 17 of said act,” they had assessed him in a stated amount for money on hand and debts due, and agreeably to said act had doubled the same, etc.

By this notice the plaintiff could not be misled concerning the proceedings of the listers. The public law of the State is referred to as the basis of their procedure.

Section 17, which sets forth the method by which the list of persons not returning an inventory is made up, is in express terms referred to. The word “ assessed” used in the notice is *508not to be construed in a technical sense, but is to have the meaning that plain people give it in dealing with questions touching-the making of a grand list.”

The entire system of taxation, so far as it devolves upon town officers, is to be looked upon by courts with a practical eye. It is to be remembered that, as a general rule, men not learned in the law nor skilled in dialectics arc to have the administration of the law and so it is presumable that the Legislature, in prescribing methods and formalities which are to be observed, has couched them in language which is to be understood in its popular sense by the people at large.

It is true that, technically speaking, the listers could not assess” the plaintiff and then double the assessment.

But in this notice they informed him how they had assessed him and referred to the law, which he was bound to know, to-show how they had finally made up his list. The notice prescribed by the statute must be formulated in such a manner as-will apprise the taxpayer reasonably of the action taken, to the end that he may seek relief by appeal, if he desires.

The notice in this case fully complies with this rule, and could not mislead the taxpayer unless he employed some skilled attorney to misread it for him.

The evidence that the plaintiff paid no taxes in 1880 and 1881 was properly admitted. The plaintiff complains that this evidence created a prejudice against him, indicating that he was a tax dodger. But that prejudice is one that his own conduct inspired, if it was created at all. The evidence drawn out of the plaintiff in cross-examination indicated that he had led a roving life so far as his domicile for taxation purposes was concerned.

The defendants claimed that the plaintiff resided in Wheelock in 1888. The plaintiff claimed that he did not. As tending to show that he did not, he claimed that he resided either in Sutton or in Lyndon. It was the duty of the plaintiff to have a taxable residence somewhere. Though it is true that a tax assessment is a proceeding in invitum and the law which operates to take from a citizen his property for public purposes is *509to be strictly construed, nevertheless the taxpayer is under a duty in view of the protection afforded him by the law, to contribute his just proportion to support the government under which he lives, and the question of his liability to taxation in a given locality is to be tried in the light of this fact. Hurlbut v. Green, 42 Vt. 316.

As evidence that he did not reside in Sutton in 1882 it was proper to show, among other things, that he paid no taxes there in 1882, the payment of taxes being one of the indicia of residence. So, too, evidence that he paid no taxes anywhere in 1881 is evidence, inasmuch as the case showed that he had been in Caledonia county since 1874, and thus that he should have been taxed in that county. This evidence shed some light upon the character of his domicile in Caledonia county just before his claimed residence in Sutton in 1882, and strengthened the notion that his residence had been ambulatory all along to 1883. Whatever unfavorable inferences these facts gave rise to were the outgrowth of the plaintiff’s neglect of his public duty.

Residence for purposes of taxation is made up of actual domicile coupled with a voluntary and concurring intent. The intent to reside, in many cases, is decisive. It is equally true that the intent to reside but in such a manner as to avoid taxation will not be controlling if the actual domicile is established by clear evidence. To shed light upon the true nature of this intent, in the concrete case, it is competent to show other domiciles, near the time and having similar features and disclosing a characterizing intent. The plaintiff had resided in Caledonia county, somewhere, during the three years prior to 1883. He could not satisfy his own mind, even, whether in 1883 his residence was in Sutton or in Lyndon, although he left Topsham in 1874 and never afterwards kept house outside Caledonia county. We are given no light as to his whereabouts down to 1882, except that in 1880 and 1881 it was in a place where he had no taxes to pay.

Now to enable the jury to collect the intent which underlaid his domicile in Wheelock in 1883, as the defendants claimed, or *510his domicile in Sutton or Lyndon as the plaintiff claimed, it was proper for the jury to look at the character of his domicile in 1882 and 1881 and 1880, if he had any, or claimed to have had any; and if such domicile had the result to clear him from the payment of taxes, the inference is both logical and fair, in view of the fact that he owed a public duty to pay taxes somewhere, that his residence was of a shifting and roving character; and as every man is presumed to intend the natural consequences of his own voluntary acts, it follows that the intent to escape taxation was the underlying purpose of his unsettled domicile.

If his domicile in 1883, as he himself defines it, was of a similar character, the same intent is fully collectable. Eastman v. Premo, 49 Vt. 355.

Now the jury are to take the defendants’ evidence tending to show a fixed domicile in Wheelock in 1883 and set over against it the claim of the plaintiff as to his domicile in Sutton or Lyndon, equivocal as his counsel concedes, and in the light of the plaintiff’s duty and the light of his discharge of that duty just before 1883, say, first, did he have a domicile in fact in Wheelock in 1883 and, secondly, was it intended by him to be of a fixed and permanent character for all purposes except taxation. If it be this, the law will not permit the fact of actual domicile to be controlled by the unlawful intent.

As evidence that the plaintiff’s claimed residence in Sutton in 1882 was fictitious, among other facts, the defendants were allowed to ask the plaintiff in cross examination if he was allowed to vote in Sutton in 1882, and he replied that he was not. It is now argued that this question called for the action of the board of civil authority and this was heai’say evidence. But the question was not admitted for the purpose of proving what the board said or did respecting the plaintiff’s residence in Sutton. It was admitted to show a fact — to show that one of the characteristics of residence was lacking.

It is clear that it would have been competent for the plaintiff to prove the fact that he did vote as evidence that he had a voting residence in town. It would have been competent for *511him to prove that he had a grand list and paid taxes in Sutton, as evidence of his taxable residence in Sutton. The converse of these facts is plainly competent evidence for the defendants. If lie had voted the implication is that the board of' civil authority conceded that he had a voting residence in town. If he had a grand list, the implication is that the listers decided that he was a resident taxpayer in town. Hurlbut v. Green, supra.

The evidence of Mr. Ingerson, the lister of Lyndon, and of the grand list of that town for 1883 was properly admitted to negative the claim of the plaintiff that his residence was in Lyndon that year rather than in Wheelock. Whatever tended to overthrow his claim supported the claimed residence in Wheelock. Hurlbut v. Greene, supra.

The slight excess in the plaintiff’s tax did not vitiate the assessment. Rowell v. Horton, 57 Vt. 31. And no wrongful detention of the plaintiff is shown which would operate to make the defendants trespassers ab initio. Bart of the tax at all events was lawful and would justify his arrest and detention. It is not to be presumed that he was detained until the unlawful excess was paid. Being rightfully held for part the detention was justifiable. Shorland v. Govett, 5 Barn. & Cres. 435 ; Stoughton v. Mott, 25 Vt. 668.

No error is apparent in the discretion exercised by the trial court respecting the admission of the book relating to the quadrenial list of Wheelock. A large discretion must necessarily be confided to the trial judge respecting the order and the time when evidence may be received.

Proof is often received after an argument has commenced; and in this case, though the book was put into the case after verdict and before judgment, it is not apparent that the verdict would have been affected had it been offered earlier, and, at all events, if it was error the plaintiff should have interposed an objection to the judgment.

As the charge is not referred to by the exceptions and is not before us, no question arises upon it.

Judgment affirmed.