Chase v. Sparhawk

22 N.H. 134
CourtSuperior Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 15, 1850
StatusPublished

This text of 22 N.H. 134 (Chase v. Sparhawk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior 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
Chase v. Sparhawk, 22 N.H. 134 (N.H. Super. Ct. 1850).

Opinion

Woods, J.

The principal question raised by the case, relates to the sufficiency of the list of taxes committed to the collector, in virtue of which, in connection with the warrant of the defend[138]*138ants, the property was taken, which forms the subject of the present action.

Chap. 43, § 8, of the Rev. Stat. provides, that £<a list of taxes by them assessed shall be made by the selectmen under their hands, with a warrant under their hands and seals, directed to the collector of such town, requiring him to collect the same and to pay over to the State and county treasurers, and to the selectmen or town treasurer, such sums, at such times, as may be therein prescribed.” Was such a list delivered to the collector as is required by the provisions of the act referred to ? The act would seem to point out the duty of the selectmen, in relation to the matter under consideration, in a plain and explicit manner. Two distinct instruments are to be made out and delivered to the collector. The one is denominated a list of taxes, and is to be under the hands of the selectmen ; the other a warrant under the hands and seals of the selectmen, directed to the collector, and directing him to collect the sums specified in the list accompanying it. The list of taxes, then, is to be under the hands of the selectmen, and the warrant is to be under the hands and seals of the same officers.

The instruments contemplated are therefore plainly to be complete, each in itself, independently of the other ; each is to bear upon its face the official sanction of those town officers, and each in the particular form and manner of the authentication prescribed, differing from the other. The list of taxes is to be under the hands of the selectmen in their official capacity, while the warrant is to be under their hands in their official character, and is to bear the sanction of their seals also. The mere official signatures and seals affixed to the warrant, were not, in our opinion, a signing of the list of taxes referred to in the same, — they did not afford the sanction which the statute prescribes. They did not purport to be any thing but the signing and sealing of the warrant alone. The list was not then under the hands of the selectmen, as the statute requires. The statute clearly contemplates a succession of acts to be done by the selectmen. The taxes are first to be assessed, and a record thereof is to be made in a book of records of their doings, and such assessment, or a copy of it, is [139]*139to be recorded by the town clerk, &c. The making of the list of the taxes assessed, succeeds the assessment itself, and necessarily precedes in the order of duty, the making and delivery of the warrant to the collector, with the accompanying list of taxes.

The list, then, intended by the statute, we think, is to be a perfect list of the taxes assessed, bearing the evidence of the sanction of the selectmen, by being under their hands, and in no manner dependent upon, or requiring any aid from the warrant to be subsequently made, in order to its sufficiency and perfection as a list. The form of the lists of assessments adopted by the late Chief Justice Richardson, and to be found in his Town Officer, at pages 244, 245, indicates most distinctly his view of the statute requirements, in the particular under consideration. .In the form there given, below the list of the names of the persons assessed and the sums severally assessed against each, is found a certificate that what precedes the certificate is a list of the assessments made by the selectmen, and the same is signed by them in their official capacity, and all this is followed by a warrant under the hands and seals of the selectmen. It is believed, also, that this is the form usually adopted in practice.

The language of the act seems to us plainly to require this sanction of the list, and it is adopted in the book of forms supposed by us to be in common use. The form adopted in this case, then, is sanctioned, neither by the obvious meaning of the act itself, nor by usage.

We do not feel warranted in allowing any essential departure from the strict requirements of the statute, as the same seem to be understood and practised, and when, as we think, the practice is in conformity with the intention of the act itself. When the provisions of the statutes are plain in their terms, they should be strictly complied with, unless it is seen that the plain purposes of them will be defeated, or that some great evil will result from a literal or strict construction.

We think the list should contain a certificate that the list committed to the collector is a list of the taxes assessed by the selectmen, and should be a distinct instrument, under their hands, and that the same is not to be regarded as being under their [140]*140hands, when not. signed by them, but only referred to in the direction in the warrant to collect the list. This view is sustained by certain decisions in the Supreme Court in the State of Maine, in cases analogous to the present one.

In Colby v. Russell et al. 3 Greenl. Rep. 227, a question arose in reference to the sufficiency and legality of the list of an assessment, under a private statute, of a tax upon the plaintiff as one of the members of the corporation, known as the Fryeburg Canal. The act required the assessors to “ make perfect lists of their assessments under their hands or the hands of a major part of them, and commit the same to the collector of said corporation, with a warrant under their hands and seals, in the manner hereinafter directed.”

The assessment in question was not signed by either of the assessors, but in the same paper book which contained it, there was a warrant under the hands and seals of the assessors, requiring the collector, among other things, to “ levy and collect the tax in the list herewith committed” to him. , In that cáse, it was holden that the signing of the warrant, though it were on a leaf of the same book which contained the assessment, was not a proper and sufficient signing of the assessment, required to be committed to the collector, accompanying the warrant.

The case of Foxcroft v. Nevens et al. 4 Greenl. Repz. 72, was an action of debt upon a bond given by Nevens, on his being chosen collector of taxes for the town of New Gloucester, and conditioned that he should well and truly collect all such rates, for which he should have sufficient warrant under the hands of the assessors, according to law, and pay the same into the treasury. The pleadings presented the question, whether the warrant delivered to the defendant Nevens, by the assessors, was a sufficient warrant. In support of the issue on his part, the plaintiff offered in evidence a book purporting to be a tax-book, or list, but wanting the signatures of the assessors, together with a warrant in legal form under the hands and seals of the assessors, annexed to the said tax-book or list, and directing the collector to collect the taxes mentioned in said list. The court say, they (the assessors) were to commit rates or assessments to the col[141]*141lector, with a sufficient warrant for their collection. How this is to he done the statute prescribes. The assessments thus to be committed, are to be under the hands of the assessors, or a major part of them. It appears, in the case before us, that no assessments under the hands of the assessors were committed to the collector. This is an essential requisite, and cannot be dispensed with.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Humphry v. Strong
14 Mass. 262 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1817)
Walker v. Cochran
8 N.H. 166 (Superior Court of New Hampshire, 1835)
Coventry v. Boscawen
9 N.H. 227 (Superior Court of New Hampshire, 1838)
Henry v. Sargeant
13 N.H. 321 (Superior Court of New Hampshire, 1843)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 N.H. 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chase-v-sparhawk-nhsuperct-1850.