48 Vt. 648 | Vt. | 1876
The opinion of the court was delivered by
It is found that the grand list of the plaintiff town for 1872 was not sworn to by the listers. This invalidate^ that list for the purposes of taxation. All taxes assessed thereon while it remained in that condition, were invalid, and their collection could not be enforced by law. If paid under protest, the tax-payers could recover them back from the town. Houghton v. Hall, 47 Vt. 333. The act of the Legislature, purporting to legalize that grand list, need not be considered in disposing of the questions which arise in this case, inasmuch as, if it should .be conceded that the act rendered the grand list legal and valid from and after its passage, it could not affect the validity of the tax which had been assessed on that list while it was illegal and invalid.
The receipt given by the collector, Smith, to the town authorities, is not to be construed to import an absolute agreement on his part to collect and pay over to the proper treasurers therein named,
The consideration of the legality of the warrant attached to the town tax, is unimportant. Although the taxes assessed on that list were illegal, and their collection could not be enforced, the tax-payers could waive the defect, and did so, so far as they voluntarily paid said taxes to the collector. All taxes thus paid to him, he received in the discharge of his duties as collector, and in such a manner that the money thus received became absolutely the money of the town, freed from the right of the tax-payer to recover it back. For all the money thus collected and not paid over, but misappropriated or misapplied, the defendants are liable on the bond in suit. It is found that the collector has paid over to the town treasurer all the money which he has collected on the tax, but that he directed $1000 of it to be applied on receipts held by the treasurer for taxes assessed for previous years. This was a misapplication of that sum so far as regards the collector. Whether the town treasurer at the time he so applied that sum was aware that it was a part of the tax of 1872, and that the
Judgment reversed, and cauSe remanded.