Smith v. Messer

17 N.H. 420
CourtSuperior Court of New Hampshire
DecidedAugust 15, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 17 N.H. 420 (Smith v. Messer) 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
Smith v. Messer, 17 N.H. 420 (N.H. Super. Ct. 1845).

Opinion

Gilchrist, J.

Numerous exceptions are presented by this case, of which all, from the fourth to the twelfth Inclusive, of those so numbered and exclusive of the ninth, relate to discrepancies in the descriptions which have been necessarily given of the demanded premises in the various written acts relied upon by the parties to sustain their respective titles. The land appears to be perfectly [426]*426described, by the report of the commissioners, who assigned dower to the plaintiff out of the farm of her deceased husband, which is her title to the same.

The statute of July 4, 1829, under which the proceedings were had which constitute the title of the other party, provides that “ the selectmen shall deliver to the collectors a list of all taxes assessed upon the land of non-residents, and therein insert the name of the owner of the land, if known ; otherwise the name of the original proprietor, and the number of acres taxed, and the number of the lot and range,” &c., “and if the name of the owner and the original proprietor of any such land be unknown, the quality of the land, the nupaber of the range and lot, if lotted; otherwise such description of the land taxed as it is usually known by, being inserted in said list, shall be a sufficient description of said land.” A copy of that list is to be delivered to the deputy secretary, and after it has been returned to the collector, he shall advertise in the manner prescribed, that so much of the delinquent’s land as shall suffice to pay the taxes and costs, will be sold at a time and place designated, &c.; and this advertisement is. required to contain the same description of the land taxed as is required to be made in the lists aforesaid.

In the list furnished by the selectmen to the collector, the premises are described: “ The following described non-resident improved real estate, supposed to [be] widow Ann Smith’s dower. One piece of land set off' by IT. Gv Messerve in settlers’ lot No. 18, with one half the pearl ash, one half acre. Also, one piece of land as set off by Edmund Chamberlain, in settlers’ lot No. 5, 128 rods long, 38 wide — 25 acres.”

Now whether that description covers the same land assigned as the plaintiff’s dower by Chamberlain, except so far as regards certain easements in the barn, which, it seems, are not embraced in the description, is a question of [427]*427fact. For any thing that appears it well might have done so. But if it did not, the only consequence is, that the plaintiff is still entitled to such part of the land and buildings, held in dower, as are not so embraced. It is not a necessary consequence that all the proceedings are invalid for the purpose of passing such portions of the land as were regularly assessed, advertised and sold. Upon a principle that would annex such consequences to an omission of this sort, it would be a difficult thing for selectmen or assessors to make a valid tax, or collectors to make a title under their proceedings to collect a tax. The principle asserted seems to be no less than this, that if, in assessing a tax, a part of the land of a non-resident is, by accident, or through a mistake of the assessors as to the boundaries, title, possession, or otherwise, omitted to be included in his tax, the assessment is null as to him, and no effectual proceedings can be had to enforce it. The law7 which requires the assessors to make a just and perfect invoice and valuation of the property, subject to tlioir proceedings, for the purpose of making an equal assessment upon the owners of the property, was never, as we think, intended to involve such extreme consequences.

The description of the land contained in the assessment appears to conform to the requirements of the statute. The name of the owner and of the original proprietor being omitted, the presumption is that they were unknown, and the description is such as the land is commonly known by. Cardigan v. Page, 6 N. H. Rep. 182.

In the advertisement it is described as one “ piece of land set off by Edmund Chamberlain on settlers’ lot No. 5, 128 rods long and 88 rods wide — 25 acres.” Is this the same description as is contained in the list? In requiring the same description to be given, we need not suppose that the statute requires the descriptions to be copies of one another. Where that degree of accuracy is intended it is commonly expressed. A similar descrip[428]*428tion, or an advertisement descriptive of the same land, seems sufficient to answer all the purposes contemplated by the statute, and to fulfill, indeed, its literal requirements. This. advertisement is, therefore, sufficient if it will enable one to identify the land. It describes it as twenty-five acres, as part of the settlers’ lot No. 5, and as having been set off by Edmund Chamberlain. The owner’s name was not inserted because it was not known; a presumption which is allowed in general where it is not inserted. Cardigan v. Page, 6 N. H. Rep. 182. Mrs. Smith had a life estate in it, but was not, in a proper sense, the owner. The description is such as would enable one to find the land, as well, perhaps, as the designation of lots and original proprietors’ names, authorized . by the statute. It is seldom that lands are capable of being so described by unquestionable natural boundaries, ' and still more seldom that they are in fact so described as to enable one to find them without a knowledge of conventional lines, and the ownership or the reputed ownership of adjoining estates. The part of the settlers’ lot, numbered five, set off by Edmund Chamberlain, was a description of this sort.

The description has more minuteness in the record of the sale, where the words, “ supposed to belong to widow Arm Smith,” are appended, and the deed contains the same description in words.

' No "title can pass by a collector’s deed under the statute, but an estate in fee-simple. The sale is of the land by some description sufficient to fix its location and boundaries, and no attempt on the part of the collector to limit the estate would be of any avail. The matter of the seventh exception, therefore, fails. All interested in the land are delinquent if the taxes are not seasonably paid.

The seventh section of the act referred to (N. H. Laws 566), requires the collector to lodge with the town-clerk the newspapers containing the advertisements of the sales, [429]*429and there is no evidence that that was done within ten days, as required by the statute. But it is plain that this is an omission which in no way affects the legality of the proceedings prior to that default. If they have, up to that moment, been regular, the purchaser has paid his money, and acquired an interest in the land, which cannot be taken from him by the mere omission of the collector to comply with certain directions which the law has prescribed for his guidance.

The statute prescribes, as to advertising the sales, that the advertisements shall be published, in the papers named, three successive weeks, beginning eight weeks before the day of sale. It is absurd to suppose that this beginning must be exactly eight weeks before the sale. If it is more than that time there is an evident compliance with the requirement.

It sufficiently appears that Hutchinson was de fado collector, exercising the functions of that office under color of an election ; and it was held in Tucker v. Aiken, 7 N. H. Rep. 113, that the acts of an officer de facto

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 N.H. 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-messer-nhsuperct-1845.