Inhabitants of Sandy River Plantation v. Lewis

84 A. 995, 109 Me. 472, 1912 Me. LEXIS 136
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 13, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 84 A. 995 (Inhabitants of Sandy River Plantation v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Inhabitants of Sandy River Plantation v. Lewis, 84 A. 995, 109 Me. 472, 1912 Me. LEXIS 136 (Me. 1912).

Opinion

HaeEy, J.

This is an action of debt, to recover taxes assessed against the property of the defendants in the year 1910 by the assessors of Sandy River Plantation, in which assessment is [474]*474included the Forestry District tax for that year. At the close of the testimony the presiding Justice directed a verdict for the plaintiff, for the amount of the tax sued for, and interest thereon from the date of demand, May 30, 1910, and the defendants bring the case to this court upon exceptions to the directing of the verdict as. .aforesaid.

In considering the exceptions it should ’be remembered that this is an action at law to recover the tax, and not a proceeding seeking-to enforce a forfeiture for its non-payment, and that an action for the recovery of a tax assessed will not be defeated by any mere irregularity, but only by such omission or defects as go to the jurisdiction of the assessors, or deprive the defendant of some substantial right, or by some omission of an essential prerequisite to the bringing of the action. Greenville v. Blair, 104 Maine, 4447 Rockland v. Ulmer, 87 Maine, 357.

1. It is objected that there is no evidence of the legal election or qualification of the assessors of said plantation for the year 1910, because the book of records, which purported to show their election, had been mutilated and pages upon which the record of the annual meeting for 1910 had been attempted to be made, had been cut out, and the record introduced as the record1 of that meeting was made in February, 1911.

There is no evidence that the pages cut from the record book was the record of the annual meeting. The legitimate inference is that the writing upon the leaves cut from the book was done by a daughter of the clerk, in .an attempt to make the record for the clerk to sign, but he never signed, or .attested it as the record. It was found to be contrary to the facts, or wrong in some particulars, and then the record that was introduced in evidence was made as the record of the annual meeting of 1910, and the clerk testified at the trial that it was the record of that meeting, made according to- the facts, and it was properly attested by him. The fact that it was not made-until February, 1911, did not affect its validity. The clerk could make the record of the meeting at any time during the year following his election.

2. It is objected that the records of the plantation do not show before whom the alleged assessors qualified, as required by chapter-4, section 27, Revised Statutes. It was held in Hale et al v. Cush [475]*475ing, 2 Maine, 218, that the statute requiring such a certificate to be returned and filed, was directory, and that case has been cited with approval,, although the same point was not directly involved, in Purrington v. Dunning, 11 Maine, 176; Chapman v. Inhabitants of Limerick, 56 Maine, 390, and Farnsworth Co. v. Rand, 65 Maine, 19, and is decisive of that objection.

3. It is objected that the record fails to show a legal, qualification of the assessors. The record states that J. L. Clark was chosen first assessor by ballot, and duly qualified. The record states the same as to the other two assessors, except it states that S. H. Learned was chosen second assessor, and C. S. Marden third assessor. The only act that either of them could do, and should do, to qualify them as assessors was to take the oath of office, and the record says they duly qualified.

In Fdwardson v. Garnhart, 56 Mo., 81, the court held, “That a recital in a referee’s report that he had been duly qualified is at least prima facie evidence that he has been sworn as the statutes require.” In Hale v. Seltzer, 25 La. Ann., 320, it was held: “The word qualify in its legal use means to take an oath to discharge the duties of an office.” In People v. McKenney, 52 N. Y., 374, it was held: “That to qualify for an office, means to take an oath of office.” In State v. Neibling, 6 Ohio State, 40, the court said “Qualified in courts imports nothing more than that the person elected has complied with the requirements of the statutes by giving bonds and taking the oath of office.” In State v. Abbott, 55 Kan., 154, it was said of the word qualified: “It means to take such steps as the statute requires before a person elected or appointed to an office is allowed to enter on discharge of its duties.” And in People v. Pallen, 75 Hun., 289, the court held, in the language of the Century Dictionary, that the word “qualify” means to make oath to any fact; to take the oath of office before entering upon its duties.

We think the words of the record, showing that they each, naming them, duly qualified, is at least prima facie evidence that they were sworn, as required by law, and nothing appearing in the case to overcome that presumption, that they were authorized to perform the duties of assessors.

4. It is objected that the assessors had no1 authority to commit the taxes prior to June 1, 1910, and the evidence shows that they [476]*476were committed April 21, 1910. Section 90, chapter 86, Laws of 1905, reads: “In July of each year said assessors shall commit the same with a warrant in the usual form to the collector of taxes.” The law contemplates that when the taxes are committed, all things have been done by the assessors to complete the assessment, the date of the commitment to the collector has nothing to do with the validity of the assessment, and to rule that, by committing the taxes to the collector before the date named in the statute, rendered the assessment void, would be to hold that an act of the assessors that had nothing to do with the assessment, done after the assessment had been completed, would render the assessment void'. The assessment was made as of April 1, 1910, and whether the assessors completed their duties in April or July would not affect the validity of the assessment, and the direction in the statute to commit the tax to the collector in July of each year was directory.

5. The next objection is that the Forestry District tax is unconstitutional, because it places a burden on all real property within the limits of the district, in addition to all other property taxes assessed throughout the State, and the case of Dyar v. Farmington Village Corporation, 70 Maine, 515, is cited as sustaining that position. In that case the Legislature authorized the Farmington Village Corporation, by a two-thirds vote of the voters of said corporation, to raise, by loan or taxation, $35,000 to aid in building a railroad, and the act was held unconstitutional, because it was unconstitutional to impose local taxes for public purposes, and it w:as held that a railroad was for public purposes. The doctrine of that case cannot be questioned, but it recognizes the doctrine contended for by the plaintiff in this case, that taxation for local purposes by assessments upon property benefitted, and' in proportion to the benefits conferred upon if, are valid. The forestry tax was not a tax for public purposes, but for the special benefit of the forest lands within the district.

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Bluebook (online)
84 A. 995, 109 Me. 472, 1912 Me. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inhabitants-of-sandy-river-plantation-v-lewis-me-1912.