Amoskeag Manufacturing Co. v. Manchester

46 A. 470, 70 N.H. 200
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 5, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 46 A. 470 (Amoskeag Manufacturing Co. v. Manchester) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amoskeag Manufacturing Co. v. Manchester, 46 A. 470, 70 N.H. 200 (N.H. 1899).

Opinion

Parsons, J.

“ Selectmen, for good cause shown, may abate any tax assessed by them or by their predecessors.” P. S., c. 59, s. 10. “ If they neglect or refuse so to abate, any person aggrieved, *202 having complied with the requirements of chapter fifty-seven, may, within nine months after notice of such tax, and not afterwards, apply by petition to the supreme court, . . . who shall make such order thereon as justice requires.” P. S., c. 59, s. 11. The defendants contend that the plaintiffs cannot maintain this petition because of failure to comply with the requirements of chapter 57 of the Public Statutes; but they appear to concede in argument that “ fraud, accident, or mistake are equitable grounds for relief when the petitioner has failed to conform to the statute.” Assuming this to be a correct statement of the law (Parsons v. Durham, ante, p. 44), the objection to the maintenance of the petition is disposed of by the findings of the referees. Whether any inventory was returned, whether any statements made in it were incorrect, whether if incorrect such statements were made in good faith, in honest mistake, or were false with fraudulent intent, are all questions of fact which are not open here. Consequently we are not at liberty to consider the defendants’ argument that “ the inventory returned was a fraudulent deception intended to mislead the assessors.” Until the findings of fact made by .the referees are set' aside by appropriate proceedings at the trial term, as either contrary to or against the weight of the evidence, such findings are conclusive. Searles v. Churchill, 69 N. H. 530. It appears that the inventory or return prescribed by law was seasonably made, under oath, to the assessors. In answer to the interrogatory calling for the average value of the plaintiffs’ stock in trade during the preceding year, the sum named was only about one third the actual value known to the agent making oath to the inventory. Such statement was not the statement the law requires, which wTas its full and true value in money. But the referees find that the statement was made, as it was made, in good faith and with no intent to mislead the assessors, and that they were not misled. If made in good faith, it was an honest statement. An honest statement is not and cannot be a false statement. As there was no mistake or misruiderstanding in the mind of the agent who made the inventory as to the actual value of the stock, the statement made could have been made honestly only through a misunderstanding of the import of the question in answer to which the statement was made. It appeared that the illegal action of the assessors in Manchester, in failing, as required by law, to appraise all taxable property at its full and true value in money (P. S., e. 58, s. 1),— a dereliction in duty not peculiar to Manchester assessors,— had created a distinction known to those interested in taxing questions between the actual value of prop-erty and the sum at which it should be appraised for taxation, the latter being known as its taxable value. Fundamental principles *203 of jirstice and equality, recognized in the constitution and numerous decisions of the court, have established that each taxpayer is entitled to have his property valued for taxation by the same standard as that of other taxpayers. If Mr. Straw, the plaintiffs’ agent, understood the interrogatory he essayed to answer to call for the taxable value of the plaintiffs’ stock in trade as that term was understood in Manchester, and had exercised due diligence to ascertain what ratio such taxable value bore to the real value of similar property, he might in good faith have answered the question by a statement of the sum at which his investigation led him to believe the plaintiffs’ stock in trade should be appraised, in view of the illegal action of the assessors in the appraisal of the property of others. Whether he did honestly make the statement in this way was a question for the referees. They have answered the question in the affirmative, and it cannot be said as matter of law that their finding is wrong. The statement complained of was incorrect, was not a compliance with the statute, and was not legally justified by the illegal action of the assessors. But as the referees find in substance, on all the evidence, that the making of the statement was an honest mistake, upon the defendants’ concession as to the law, and the authority of Parsons v. Durham, ante, p. 44, decided at this term, such mistake does not deprive the plaintiffs of their right of appeal.

The only objection to the inventory that appears to have been insisted upon before the referees, or that was' suggested before us until after the case was submitted, related to the statement as to the stock in trade. In the defendants’ last brief, recently filed, claim is made that the inventory does not sufficiently describe the plaintiffs’ real estate. This objection was known to the defendants before the trial commenced. It involves a question of fact and should have been taken before the referees, and, not being suggested until this late dav, must be regarded as waived. Melvin v. Weare, 56 N. H. 436, 441.

The remaining question is what “ order justice requires ” upon the facts found. This question is for the court. Cocheco Mfg. Co. v. Strafford, 51 N. H. 455, 475. The defendants urge that the report of the referees should be set aside because different rates of taxation were imposed upon different species of property. But there is no occasion to set aside the report, or even to recommit it, should the method suggested by the referees for determining the amount of the abatement to which the plaintiffs are entitled not meet our approval.

The report contains, clearly stated, all the facts essential to the present inquiry. The case does not show any motion for judgment at the trial term, or order as to what judgment should *204 be rendered upon the facts found. The report is before us, and the questions arising thereon have been fully argued. We have, therefore, considered the principles governing such order as must finally be made.

The referees have appraised the plaintiffs’ taxable estate in three classes,— real estate, stock in trade, and other personal property. The plaintiffs claim that to determine the proportional appraisal upon which the tax against them should have been assessed, their real estate should be appraised at six tenths of its true value, their stock in trade at one third, and their other personal property at its full value, the referees having found that the assessors’ valuation of other property than that of the plaintiffs of these classes was in such proportions to its true value. The defendants claim that the plaintiffs’ whole property should be appraised at sixty per cent of its true value as found by the referees.

The general principles of uniformity and equality essential to legal taxation under our constitution and laws have been so fully and frequently elaborated “ during the last fifty-three years ” that any discussion at the present time of principles no longer “ a subject of debate or doubt ” would serve no useful purpose. State v. Jackman, 69 N. H. 318; Winkley v. Newton, 67 N. H. 80;

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Bluebook (online)
46 A. 470, 70 N.H. 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amoskeag-manufacturing-co-v-manchester-nh-1899.