1 Wis. 345 | Wis. | 1853
By the Court,
This was a motion for a mandamus to compel the assessors of the town of Del-avan, in the county of Walworth, to reduce the valuation of the personal property of the relator to the sum of $3,000, the same having been assessed hy them at the sum of $10,000.
The relator, in his affidavit accompanying the motion, sets forth, that previous to the completion of the assessment roll of the town of Delavan, for the year 1853, he was called upon by two of the assessors of
An alternative writ was issued, to which the respondents made return ; that during the week immediately preceding the first Monday of July, 1853, they repeatedly called on the relator to render them a list of his taxable personal property, and he repeatedly promised to do so, until the last of June, 1853, when he positively refused to furnish said list, and thereupon they assessed his personal property at$10,000,the lowest sum they could conscientiously assess. That on the first Monday of July, the relator handed to them an affidavit, of which the following is a copy, and demanded that the respondents should reduce his assessment to the sum named in said affidavit, to wit, $3,000.
“ "Walworth County, ) “ Town of Ddavam,, ) “ I, John L. "Ward, being duly sworn, say, that the value of my personal estate liable to taxation, after deducting my property invested in the stock of any incorporated company, liable*347 to taxation on its capital, does not exceed three thousand dollars.
“ JOHN L. WARD.
“ Subscribed and sworn to before me, ) this 4th day of July, A. D. 1853. )
“ Milo Kelsey,
“Justice of the Peace?
Bat the respondents, believing that the relator had forfeited his right to have his assessment reduced, by his non-compliance with their request, according to section 25 of chapter 15 of the Revised Statutes, refused to reduce the assessment.
And for further return, the respondents say, that the affidavit is insufficient, because it does not allege that the personal property of the relator, on the 1st day of June^ 1853, did not exceed the sum of $3,000, but states that it “ does not now, the 4th day of July, exceed that sum.”
And further, that they did not believe the statements in the affidavit to be true, for they believed his personal property had largely increased the last year, and the last year he had given in to the assessors his personal property at $13,000, and had paid the taxes on that sum.
And further, before the service of the alternative mandamus, they had fully reviewed and completed their assessment roll, and had duly attached thereto their certificate, according to the provisions of section 33 of chapter 15 of the Revised Statutes, and submit whether they have any further control over the assessment roll, and whether the same is not now within the control of the chairman of the board of supervisors of the town, according to the provisions of section 34 of the same chapter of the Revised Statutes.
Section 26, of chapter 15 of the Revised Statutes provides, that if any person whose real or personal estate is liable to taxation, shall, at any time before the assessment roll shall be completed, make affidavit that the value of his personal estate liable to taxation, after deducting his property invested in the stock of any incorporated company, liable to taxation on its capital, does not exceed a certain sum to be specified in the affidavit, it shall be the duty of the assessor to value such personal estate, at the sum specified in such affidavit-
Section 25, provides, that every assessor may require any person giving in the amount or list of Ms taxable property, to make oath before him that the same is full and correct, and any person refusing to make such oath, shall not be permitted afterwards to reduce the valuation made by such assessors, of his property for that year.
This section does not require any person to give in or make out for the assessor, on his demand or request, a list or amount of his property liable to taxation. It merely authorizes the assessor to require of the person voluntarily furnishing a list of his taxable property, to make oath to the fullness and correctness thereof. And it further imposes upon the person who refuses to make oath to the fullness and correctness of the list voluntarily furnished by him, the disability to avail himself of the provisions of the 26th. section.
The relator was not bound to furnish a list of his property- He incurred no forfeiture by refusing to do so on the request of the assessors. Had he fur-
The ground assumed by the respondents, is therefore incorrect. It is not his refusal to give in a list of his property, that precludes him from a reduction under the 26th section, but his refusal to make oath to the fullness and correctness of the list which he chooses to give in.
It is also insisted, that the affidavit of the relator presented to the assessors was insufficient, because it did not state the value of his property on the first day of June, 1853.
Section 16, requires the assessors to make out an assessment roll, of all the taxable property, real and personal, in their town on the first day of June. No doubt the intention of the act is, to fix the property for taxation, in its location and ownership, on the first day of June. But the 26th section prescribes the affidavit to be made, and the relator has conformed his, to the reqmrements of the statute. Having done so, it is not in the power of this court, to say that it is insufficient. The assessors might have assessed, and probably did assess his property, as they believed it to exist on the first day of June ; and they may have been correct. The affidavit of the relator, made on the 4th day of July following, may also have been true, for he may have disposed of personal property to the amount of $7,000, between those periods. But if it had been the intention of the legislature, that the affidavit prescribed by the 26th section, should state the value of the personal property, which the affiant owned on the first day of June, that intention should have been expressed. It cannot be gathered
The respondents further return, as a reason for not • reducing the said valuation to the amount specified in such affidavit, that they did not believe that the matters alleged therein were true, and they give some reasons why they disbelieved it.
Section 29 requires the assessors to meet on the first Monday of July, for the purpose of reviewing their assessment, and to continue such review from day to day, as long as shall be necessary for that purpose, and on the request of any person feeling himself aggrieved, if such person shall not previously have made affidavit concerning the value of the property assessed to him, pursuant to this chaptei*, the assessors shall, on affidavit made as provided in this chapter, (15,) reduce the assessment of such person to the sum specified in such affidavit.
The assessors are not permitted to question the truth of the affidavit. They have no discretion in the matter. They have no light to investigate further. The statute is imperative upon them. They must reduce the assessment to the sum specified in the affidavit.
Again, the respondents say, that before the service of the alternative writ, they had fully completed their assessment roll, and attached thereto their certificate; and that they had no further control over the same.
Section 34 provides that the assessment roll, after
The respondents say that they had completed the roll, and attached thereto their certificate ; bnt they do not say that they had delivered the same to the chairman of the board of supervisors. Their return, in this respect, is evasive. There is sufficient time, previous to the first of October, for them to perform their duty, and they cannot be excused from such performance, because they have seen fit to certify an assessment roll which they have attempted to complete in their own wrong', and in which they have disobeyed a positive mandate of the law.
The law providing for • a reduction of the assessment, upon the affidavit of the party assessed, may need amendment, so as to make the valuation refer to the first day of June in each year. But we think the relator has complied with the law as it is, and that the return of the respondents is insufficient.
A peremptory mandamus must be awarded.