In the view we have taken, it has not been found necessary to inquire or determine whether the alleged defects in the assessment of the plaintiff's non-resident taxes rendered the sale of his land invalid, nor, if so, whether a deed thereof from the collector would constitute a cloud on the title of which equity might properly take cognizance; for there is no ground on which this bill can be sustained.
If the assessment was illegal, a plain and adequate remedy at law was afforded the plaintiff by a petition under the statute for an abatement of his tax (Savings Bank v. Portsmouth,
There is also another ground for dismissing the bill, which is that it is practically a proceeding to prevent the payment of a tax by injunction, which courts of equity will not ordinarily assume to do, and never in a case like this. Savings Bank v. Portsmouth, supra; Brown v. Concord,
Bill dismissed.
SMITH, J., did not sit: the others concurred.