2 Watts 421 | Pa. | 1834
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
It is setlled that cultivation without residence gives character and denomination for the purposes of assessment.; nor is it material in a question of denomination that the cultivator is an intruder. With the actual owner the assessor has nothing to do, it being sufficient for his purpose that there is an occupant personally responsible for the public charge. The limitation to this is, that an occupancy of the same spot shall not subject him to a double charge, as was determined in Campbell v. Wilson, at the last term at this place, 1 Watts 503, where it was held that, actual possession of land comprised by the lines of interfering surveys, has not the effect to make both tracts seated, being referable to the title under which the possessor entered, and leaving the residue of the other survey to be dealt with as unseated for its proper tax. But a proprietor having a field notoriously beyond the lines of his survey, and without apparent connexion with his fields and improvements on his own tract, could not avoid being personally charged with the tax for the land entered upon, by the plea that he is a trespasser. The primary object of the legislature has been to charge the person and not the land where the person is ordinarily accessible; and to that intent, actual residence on the land is not indispensable. A tract attached to a farm is seated for the purpose of charging the tenant or the owner, though residing on the adjoining tract; and the same thing is true of an outlot not suffered to lie waste. On this subject, we recognise the principles of Stokely v. Bonner in their full extent. Nor can a distinction be taken where the adjoining proprietor has extended his fields into an unseated tract by mistake or design. The difference between a clearing over and a clearing with a view to a separate tenement, is but in the comparative readiness with which they would present themselves to the senses of the assessor. But though the truth of the case be actually different, the assessor is presumed, from the nature of his duties, to have made himself acquainted with the lines and
Judgment affirmed.