58 Vt. 1 | Vt. | 1886
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action of replevin is brought to recover the possession of a mare distrained as the property of the plaintiff, and of which he is entitled to the possession unless the defendant’s justification is made out.
The defendant attempts to justify the taking as collector of taxes for the town of Chittenden. As such collector, the defendant had put into his hands by the authorities of the town of Chittenden, certain rate bills of taxes, with warrants attached, assessed upon the grand list of 1883, containing certain taxes against the plaintiff.
To make out his justification, the defendant must show that the taxes which he is ordered by his warrant to collect are legal taxes. It is indispensable to the legality of a tax that it should be assessed upon a grand list of the polls and taxable estate of the inhabitants, made in substantial compliance with the requisitions of the statute. No tax can be upheld which is made upon an illegal list.
I. It is claimed by the plaintiff that the grand list of the town of Chittenden, for the year 1883, is illegal; because the listers for that year did not, before entering upon their official duties in taking and making up the list, take and subscribe the oath of office required by section 29 of chapter 2 of the Constitution of Vermont. By reference to said section it will be seen that the Constitution requires that every officer, whether judicial, executive, or military, in
This requirement of the Constitution has never been regarded by the people, nor by the legislature of the State, as extending to and including such officers as derive their authority to act from towns and other municipal bodies; and to hold that it includes town, village, and school district officers would be giving a new construction to the language used in the section.
We think this requirement to take.and subscribe an official oath applies only to such officers, judicial, executive, and military, as are strictly state officers, and such county and probate officers as were by section 9 of said chapter 2, before the amendments thereto, required to be elected by the general assembly; to wit, first, such as derive their authority to act from the votes of the freemen of the State at large; second, such as are either elected or declared to be elected by the legislature of the State, or appointed by the governor of the State, and hold and discharge the duties of their respective offices under, the authority of a commission duly executed and issued to them by the governor.
Chapter 2 of the Constitution, with the amendments thereto, relates to the plan or frame of the State government, and to the executive, legislative, judicial, and military departments thereof; to the qualification of freemen; to the election and qualification of the members of the legislature; to the election and qualification of governor, lieut.-governor, state treasurer, secretary of state, auditor of accounts, judges of the Supreme Court, major and brigadier generals, and other purely state officers, county officers, probate judges, and justices of the peace. It has no reference to the plan and frame of town governments, nor to the qualification of voters therein, nor to the election and qualification of the officers thereof. Towns are not the creations of
Sec. 11 of said chapter ,2 of the Constitution provides, among other things, that the governor shall have power to commission all officers; sec. 21 provides that eveinj officer of the State, whether judicial or executive, shall be liable to be impeached by the general assembly; and sec. 29 provides that every officer, whether executive, judicial, or military, in authomty widen- this State, shall take and subscribe the oath of office prescribed therein.
It- is apparent that the word officer, as used in these sections, has reference only to such officers of the State as are either elected by the freemen at large or required to be commissioned by the governor, which includes all officers to which reference is made in said chapter.
No one would claim that the power given to the governor “ to commission all officers” extended to and included town officers, nor that town officers were subject to impeachment by the general assembly; yet such a claim would be no more inconsistent than the claim that town officers are executive or judicial officers in authority under this State, because they are elected under and derive their power to act from a general law of the State.
Listers are elected by the legal voters of the several towns and derive their power to act as such from their election under the provisions of the statute, and are in authority by virtue solely of their election by their fellow townsmen in town meeting assembled; and in order to qualify them to act they must take and subscribe only such oaths as are prescribed by the laws of the State; and the taking and subscribing of the constitutional oath in question before entering upon the execution of their office is not one of the requirements of the statute.
No fair-minded person would seriously claim that a surveyor of wood, an inspector of leather, or a board of fence viewers, town officers required by the statute to be elected annually, the same as listers, are officers judicial or executive in authority under this State, within the spirit and meaning of the Constitution, and required to take and subscribe the constitutional oath of office before entering upon the execution of their several offices, notwithstanding their acts are mainly of a judicial character; and there is no stronger reason for holding listers to be officers in authority under this State, within the spirit and meaning of the Constitution, than there is the class of town officers last mentioned.
It was held in Lemington v. Blodgett, 37 Vt. 210, that selectmen are not required to be sworn before entering
II. Among the other objections made to the legality of the plaintiff’s list, one is, that it was not made up in compliance with the requisitions of the statute.
The plaintiff made out and seasonably delivered to the listers an inventory of his taxable property and poll, sworn to in due form, in which he answered all the interrogatories required to be answered. And as the case stands upon the exceptions, treating whatever facts Mr. Baker’s testimony tends to show, as found and in the case according to the concession, the inventory returned contained a full, true, and correct statement of all the plaintiff’s taxable property. But the listers, having the knowledge that Lewis I. Wins-low, one of their number, had paid the plaintiff $875 on the 21st day of September, 1882, and $1,331 more to his attorney for him, on the 11th day of February, 1883, were not satisfied with his said inventory,' because he had not returned any part of said money for taxation. They called upon him and urged him to put in some of that money for taxation; but he refused, and made some explanation, which was not satisfactory to them, and declined to change his inventory. The listers, thereupon thinking they had sufficient reason to believe that the plaintiff’s inventory did not contain a full, true, and correct statement of his taxable property, disregarded the same and attempted to make up the plaintiff’s list under the provisions of sec. 17 of No. 2 of the Acts of 1882, which reads as follows:
“ Sec. 17. If a person or corporation wilfully omits to make, swear to, and deliver said inventory, or to answer*9 any interrogatory therein, as by this act required, or make a false answer or statement therein, or if the listers have sufficient reason to believe that an inventory does not contain a full, true, and correct statement of the taxable property of the person or corporation filling out such inventory, according to the requirements of this act, then said listers shall ascertain, as best they can, the amount of the taxable property of such person or corporation; shall appraise the same at its value in money, and shall double the amount so obtained. And if the sum obtained by doubling is, in the opinion of the listers, less than the amount of the taxable property of such person or corporation, they shall further assess such person or corporation for a sum which will, in their judgment, make up such amount. * * * * And one per cent, of the amount obtained by doubling, and of the extra assessment, if any, or of the assessment, as the case may be, shall, with the amount of the taxable poll, if any, constitute the list of such person or corporation.”
It will be noticed that this sec. 17 differs from sec. 10, No. 78 of the Acts of 1880 (R. L. s. 326), mainly in the addition of the following clause: “ And if the sum so obtained by doubling is, in the opinion of the listers, less than the amount of the taxable property of such person or corporation, they shall further assess such person or corporation for a sum which will, in their judgment, make up such-amount,” and the clause following for assessing when no property of the tax-payer is found. No authority is given by this section to double the sum thus arbitrarily assessed. The doubling is limited, as it was under the Act of 1880, to the appraised value of the property actually found in specie, &c., and appraised.
In Howe v. Bassett, 56 Vt. 141, it was held that under the Act of 1880, no power was given to the listers to assess a person arbitrarily for taxable property, not visible; that the listers must find the amount of taxable property and then appraise it at its value in money and double the sum so ascertained; that the act contemplated that the listers should find property in specie, capable of appraisal, the value of which they were alone authorized to double and
The listers, in their attempt to make up the plaintiff’s list under the provisions of said section 17, set down the plaintiff’s real estate, which he had returned in his inventory, at $1,500, the quadrennial appraisal thereof in 1882, the value at which it was required to be put in the list when the list is made up from a full, true, and correct inventory; then they appraised the plaintiff’s stock, which was given in his inventory, at $197. They found no other taxable, visible property in specie, notes, bonds, debts due, stocks, or of any kind, which was capable of appraisal as property, the value of which they were authorized to double; but they thought they had sufficient reason to believe that he had at least $1,500 of the money paid him by Winslow; they did not, however, find it in specie, debts, bonds, or notes due him, yet they proceeded to assess him arbitrarily, “$1,500, money, as we have good reason to believe,” as they stated in the notice which they sent to the plaintiff, dated April 25, 1883, and added this latter sum to the value of the real estate and stock, making the sum of $3,197. They then doubled this sum so ascertained, making $6,394; and- one per cent, of the sum, so ascertained by doubling, with the
The listers were not authorized by the statute to double the sum of $1,500, which they had thus arbitrarily assessed the plaintiff. In doubling the sum so arbitrarily assessed, they did not act in compliance with the provisions of the statute, and the list which they thus made up and set to the plaintiff was illegal, and will not uphold any tax assessed thereon, and affords no justification for the seizure of his property by the defendant upon the tax warrants in his hands. As the view we entertain of this point is decisive of the case against the defendant, it is not necessary that we should express opinions upon the other points which have been argued upon the hearing.
Judgment reversed, and judgment for plaintiff for one cent damages and his costs.