44 Mich. 359 | Mich. | 1880
This in its purpose is a praiseworthy suit, f or it is brought to compel obedience by public officers to their duty under the law. The plaintiffs in the year 1878 were owners as partners of taxable property in the township of Lexington in the county of Sanilac, and the supervisor for the year listed it for taxation, and it was taxed. The defendant was township treasurer, and plaintiffs have paid the tax to him under the compulsion of his process, and now seek to-recover it back as an illegal exaction. The ground of illegality is, that the supervisor, instead of assessing the property of the township at its true cash value, as the law and his official oath required, assessed the real estate at only one-third its cash value, and the personal estate at only one-half its cash value, and that he failed altogether to assess much personal estate that should have been brought into this list. The circuit court refused to permit evidence of these facts to be given, and the suit failed. 0
It was conceded by the plaintiffs that the tax proceedings-for the year were regular upon their face. The supervisor under the sanction of his oath made his certificate, stating in due form that he had assessed all the property at its true cash value, and that the assessment roll contained a true statement of the aggregate valuation of the personal estate of each and every person named in the roll. If he purposely did something different, and disobeyed the law after having taken an official oath faithfully to perform his duty under it, he has not only shown himself regardless of the obligations of an oath, but he has been guilty of a public offense. "Whether he has been guilty of such a wrong to these plaintiffs as gives them a right of action is another question. • The failure to
It would be out of place for us to intimate yffiat remedy we might think the taxpayer might have against the supervisor — First, because every case must stand upon its own peculiar facts; second, because a case against the supervisor is not now before us; and third, because the wrong primarily is a public wrong, and ought to be redressed in a public prosecution. It may be said and is said that the public remedy is worthless, because the local communities sympathize with the habitual disobedience of law, and convictions are impossible, and also because no sufficient penalties are prescribed ; but such difficulties, if they exist, cannot give new rights of action. If these ought to be created, the legislature must create them.
If tax proceedings on their face are fatally defective, a suit will lie to recover back money paid under them. Smith v. Nat. Bank 17 Mich. 479; Grand Rapids v: Blakely 40 Mich. 367; Wattles v. Lapeer 40 Mich. 624. But a tax assessment is in the nature of a judgment, and the authorities are numerous that it cannot be assailed for fraud or irregularity in a suit against an officer who holds process fair on its face for enforcing a tax based. upon it. Holden v. Eaton 8 Pick. 436; Lincoln v. Worcester 8 Cush. 55; Cheever v. Merritt 5 Allen 563; Hubbard v. Garfield 102 Mass. 72; Savacool v. Boughton 5 Wend. 171; Nowell v. Tripp 61 Me. 426; Cunningham, v. Mitchell 67 Penn. St. 78; Greene v. Mumford 4 R. I. 313; Glasgow v. Rowse 43
There is in our minds no room for question that the judgment under review was legally correct, and it must be affirmed with costs.