47 A. 600 | N.H. | 1899
If the selectmen to whom application is made to abate shall "neglect or refuse so to abate, any person aggrieved, having complied with the requirements of chapter fifty-seven, may . . . apply by petition to the supreme court . . . who shall make such order thereon as justice requires." P.S., c. 59, *45 s. 11. "Every person . . . shall fill out the blank inventory in all respects according to its requirements, . . . and shall deliver such inventory to the selectmen or assessors on or before the fifteenth day of April of that year." P.S. c. 57, s. 8. The defendants' motion to dismiss was based upon the claim that the requirements of the latter section had not been complied with. The plaintiff says (1) that the selectmen waived the filing of the inventory, and (2) that he neglected to file it through accident, mistake, and misfortune.
The first of these positions cannot be maintained. The selectmen not only have no power to waive the filing of inventories, but they are liable to a penalty if they willfully fail to enforce the law. It is not solely for the benefit of the selectmen that the inventory is required. The town and its taxpayers are also interested. The main purpose of the inventory is to obtain a true list of all taxable property in the town. Every taxpayer is interested in this for a just assessment of his tax depends upon having a full and true list of all other taxable property as well as of that of his own. It is more likely that such a list will be obtained if each taxpayer is compelled to make an inventory in writing under oath (P.S., c. 57, ss. 8, 9), thereby rendering himself liable to be punished if he swears falsely (Ib., s. 11); if he is rendered liable to be doomed in case he willfully fails to make the inventory in the way provided (Ib., s. 15); and if he is deprived of a right to petition the supreme court for an abatement of his tax in case he willfully neglects to furnish an inventory. Ib., c. 59, s. 11. The selectmen had no power to waive this important requirement. The same conclusion has been reached in Massachusetts, under a somewhat similar statute. Winnisimmet Co. v. Chelsea, 6 Cush. 477, 483.
The section of the statute under which the petition is brought (P.S., c. 59, s. 11) has been substantially in its present form since 1842. R.S, c. 44, s. 2; G.S, c. 53, s. 11; G.L, c. 57, s. 12. Prior to its re-enactment in 1891, the court held that if the failure to comply with the requirements of another part of the statute, referred to therein, was due to accident, mistake, and misfortune, without fault on the part of the plaintiff, the failure did not prevent the maintenance of a petition for abatement. Trust Co. v. Portsmouth,
Whether the plaintiff was prevented from filing his inventory by the causes above stated was a question of fact to be determined at the trial term, and upon this question evidence of his ignorance of the law was competent. Parker's Appeal,
Case discharged.
Young, J., did not sit: CHASE and PEASLEE, JJ., dissented: the others concurred. *47