1 Denio 233 | Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors | 1845
The main question which the defendants make in this case, is, whether a town collector of taxes is responsible "for the payment of the taxes collected by him, to the several public officers, to whom he is directed to pay by his warrant, though the moneys thus collected have been stolen from his possession without any fault, want of care or omission of duty on the part of such collector.
It is supposed that the principle was decided in favor of the defendants in the case of The Board of Supervisors of Albany v. Dorr and others, (25 Wend. 440.)
The statute (1 R. S. 346, § 19) requires that “ Every person chosen or appointed to the office of collector, before he enters on the duties o£ his office, and within eight days after he receives notice of the amount of the taxes to b'e collected by him,-shall execute to the supervisor of the town and lodge with him a bond, with one or more sureties to be approved by such supervisor, in double the amount of such taxes, conditioned for the faithful execution of his duties as such collector.” The bond is required to be filed within six days thereafter in the office of the county clerk, who is required to'make an entry thereof in a book to be provided by him, in the same manner in which judgments are entered of record; and the statute declares it shall be a lien on all the real estate held jointly and severally by the collector or his sureties within the county, at the time of filing 1 thereof, and shall continue to- be such lien till its condition, together with all costs and charges which may accrue by the prosecution thereof, shall be fully satisfied. The statute (1 R. S. 398, § 6) makes it the duty of every collector, within one week after the time mentioned in his warrant for paying the moneys directed to be paid to the town officers of his town and to the county treasurer, to pay to Such town officers and county treas-' urer the sums required in such warrant to be paid to them respectively, first retaining the compensation to which he may be legally entitled. In payment of such moneys, the town officers to whom paid are required to deliver to the collector duplicate receipts therefor, one of which is required to be filed by the collector with the county treasurer, which entitles him to a credit in the book of the county treasurer for the amount therein stated to have been received; and no other evidence of such payment can be received by the treasurer. Section 10 provides, thal if any of the taxes mentioned in the tax list annexed to his war rant shall remain unpaid, and the collector shall not be able tc
It is also objected that the second plea of the defendant Shat-tuck is bad, on the ground that it does not contain any positive averment that, the defendant had collected the money. If the loss of the money, after it has been collected, by theft, is a defence, it must follow that the plea should aver the collection of the money, and the loss of the identical money collected, to enable the plaintiff to take issue on that fact. In this plea, neither
The first plea of the defendant Shattuck is claimed by the plaintiff to be bad by reason of duplicitybut the defendant insists that that portion of the plea denying that the defendant is indebted to plaintiff, may be regarded as surplusage, and the plea stand. The plea unites non est factum and nil debet. The latter, pleaded alone to debt on bond, is confessedly bad on demurrer. I am unable to see, that its identity is lost, or character changed, on account of its union with nonest factum, and I do not think that it is so harmless as that it may be regarded merely as surplusage.
I think the demurrers to all the pleas well taken. • The defendants must have leave to amend on the usual terms.
' Judgment accordingly.
The judgment of the supreme court in this caso was affirmed by the court for tne correction of errors, in December, 1844.