80 A. 257 | R.I. | 1911
Lead Opinion
This is an action for the recovery of a tax against plaintiffs assessed on personal property by the assessors of the City of Providence for the year 1905, said tax amounting to $990 and claimed by the plaintiffs to have been paid under protest and is before this court upon the plaintiffs' exceptions to the direction of a verdict for the defendant in the Superior Court.
It is conceded that the tax in question was illegally assessed under the decision of this court in Matteson v.Warwick Coventry Water Co.,
The single question presented is as to the sufficiency of the protest of the plaintiffs, who paid the tax on October 20, 1905, under the following circumstances. On that day they sent to the defendant, who is ex-officio collector of taxes in the City of Providence, a check in the words and figures following:
"PROVIDENCE, R.I. Oct 20 1905 No. 16771
INDUSTRIAL TRUST COMPANY
Pay to the order of Walter L. Clarke Treas $1521.30 Fifteen Hundred Twenty One 30 — Dollars Paid under protest
WHITFORD BARTLETT CO."
The check was accompanied by the following letter:
"PROVIDENCE, R.I. Oct. 20, 1905. MR. WALTER L. CLARK, Treas., Providence, R.I.
DEAR SIR: —
We enclose checks to cover taxes as follows: —
Check Whitford, Bartlett Co. tax ............... $990.00 William E. Whitford ........................ $366.30 Asel P. Bartlett ........................... $165.00 ___________
$1,521.30
We hereby enter our protest against the assessment and payment of the above tax." . . .
"Yours truly, WHITFORD BARTLETT CO."
On October 21, 1905, the defendant gave to the plaintiffs their tax bill duly receipted by him and endorsed on its face "Protest on file."
It is contended by the defendant that this was insufficient and that a protest in such a case is insufficient unless it specifies the grounds upon which the protest is based and *333
certain cases from other jurisdictions are cited in support of this contention. But upon an examination of these we find the following: In Omaha v. Kountze,
We are accordingly of the opinion that the protest in this case was sufficient and that the plaintiff's exceptions must be sustained; and inasmuch as we understand there is no other question in the case the defendant may show cause on October 2, 1911, why judgment should not be entered for the plaintiffs.
Dissenting Opinion
This case is before us upon exceptions to the ruling of the justice presiding in the Superior Court directing a verdict for the defendant.
The payment of the tax in question by the plaintiffs on October 20th, 1905, was entirely voluntary. Their real estate had not been levied upon, their personal property was not distrained, no suit for the collection of said tax had been commenced against them, nor had any such suit been threatened. In Dunnell Mfg.Co. v. Newell,
The court has frequently said that the taxpayer who pays without protest cannot recover back his payment, although later an illegality is found in the assessment, because he has made no objection. What objection in reality has the taxpayer made when he files a paper in form a protest with no real objection behind it except possibly a general dislike for the payment of taxes? Such a so-called protest is not an objection, it is rather a venture and perhaps *338
the expression of a hope. It is easily said that "All the facts connected with the assessment are certainly as fully known to the assessors as to the taxpayer, and they are in as good a position as he to know whether the tax is legal or illegal." (RumfordChemical Works v. Ray,
In fact our tax laws are complicated. This is shown by the many cases in our reports arising under these laws. The court has at times with much difficulty construed some of our statutory provisions regarding the assessment and collection of taxes. The decisions of the court in tax cases have not at all times been in harmony upon disputed points. In Matteson v. Warwick Coventry Water Co., 28 R.I. at p. 578, the court has adopted the statement that "the legislature has thrown uncertainty and confusion into the system of taxation throughout the state." In these circumstances it is not unreasonable to assume that in the future, as in the past, assessors will frequently make errors in their assessments. It is not unjust or burdensome to the taxpayer, if he is to recover back his payment, that he shall state his objection, in order that the community may have an opportunity of correcting its error in future assessments; and that the city or town may not continue to pay over to the state a portion of the tax collected, expend the balance in its municipal expenses and in the end return with interest all the taxes collected from those, who perhaps had no real objection, but have filed these uninforming protests.
That the taxpayer shall set out in his protest the grounds of his objection is not without authority in this state. We have two reported cases which reach an entirely different conclusion upon this subject. In Dunnell Mfg. Co. v. Newell,
This was the view adopted by the learned justice of the Superior Court and his ruling should be supported.
I am of the opinion that the exceptions should be overruled and the case remitted to the Superior Court with direction to enter judgment upon the verdict.