9 Wend. 281 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1832
By the Court,
The only question necessary to be discussed is, whether the defendant was justified in levying on the cattle while in the county of Steuben. There was some reason to think that no positive levy had been made until the cattle had been driven, in their course, to the barn of the plaintiff, within the bounds of the county of Yates, as the plaintiff then inquired whether the defendant was in earnest, implying a doubt in his own mind on that subject; but the jury have settled that question. The judge refused evidence of the fact that the county line had been in dispute j this was offered in explanation of the defendant’s admission that the levy had been made in the county of Steuben. I confess I do not see the materiality of the testimony in any point of view unless it was in mitigation of damages; and on that point the judge adopted the true rule, the actual value, unless it had been shewn that the oxen were purchased in by the plaintiff himself, or on his behalf.
To ascertain the right of the collector to make the levy south of the county line, it will be proper to enquire whether that part of the plaintiff’s farm composed part of the district No. 7, in the town of Starkey. By the act relating to the assessment and collection of taxes, 1 R. S. 389, § 1, it is enacted that every person shall be assessed in the town or ward where he resides when the assessment is made, for all lands then owned by him within such town or ward, and occupied by him, or wholly unoccupied. By section 4, it is enacted that “ where the line between two towns or wards divides a farm or lot, the same shall be taxed, if occupied in the town or ward where the occupant resides; if unoccupied, each part shall be assessed in the town in which the same shall lie ; and this whether such division line be a town line only, or be also a county line.” The latter member of the sentence applies to all that precedes it; so that if a person who owns a farm which is divided by a town line or a county line, he is to be assessed for his whole farm in the town where his house is situated, as
It was the intention of the legislature to place the assessment and collection of school taxes upon the same footing as the assessment and collection of the ordinary taxes for town and county charges; they intended to provide, and have provided, that all the real property in the state shall be liable to be assessed once, and only once, for the support of common schools; that the valuations may be as uniform as possible, it is provided that they shall be taken as far as possible from the last assessment roll of the town, and when that cannot be done, they shall be ascertained in the same manner as the town assessors are required by law to proceed in the valuation of taxable property. It probably happens that in dividing the towns into districts, the district lines pursue the lines of lots according to the original survey of the patents or grants of lands in the towns, or perhaps the districts may be divided by
The 78th section authorizes the assessment of a farm within the district to the owner who resides out of the district, where it is not occupied by a tenant or agent, nor liable to be taxed in an adjoining district. This section is confined to a cultivated farm, on which the owner has no tenant nor agent, and which is carried on by the owner himself, and not liable to taxation elsewhere ; for, if the owner reside in an adjoining district, and the property in question composes part of the farm on which he lives, then it is liable to be taxed in an adjoining district.
In the cases provided for in the 77th and 78th sections, the owner is considered a taxable inhabitant in the district where
New trial granted.