State v. Town of New London

22 Conn. 163
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 15, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 22 Conn. 163 (State v. Town of New London) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Town of New London, 22 Conn. 163 (Colo. 1852).

Opinion

Church, C. J.

This is an action of debt, brought by the state, against the town of New London, to recover a forfeiture, or penalty, of fifteen hundred dollars, under the provisions of the second section of the act for the assessment and collection of taxes.” The facts are so fully detailed, by the. finding of the superior court, that I shall not recur to them in detail.

[167]*167By the section of the statute referred to, it is enacted, “ If any town shall refuse, or neglect, to appoint an assessor, or assessors, and cause them to be duly sworn, such town shall forfeit the sum of fifteen hundred dollars, for the use of the treasury of the state,” &c. The town of New London, at its annual meeting, orí the first Monday of October, 1850, elected three assessors, two of whom were selectmen of the town, and all of them declined to accept, and be sworn into office, and no further action was had, either by the selectmen or the town, so that no assessment list was made for that year.

The first section of the same statute is directory only, and requires the several towns in the state, on the first Monday of October, in each year, to choose a board of assessors and a board of relief; and without the penal provision of the second section, the law would be without effect.

Our whole financial system, as it affects the state, and each county, town, society, school and highway district in the state, depends upon the prompt and faithful performance, by the respective towns, of the duties required of them by the first section of this act. Stat. 1849, p. 611.

The object of the legislature, in the enactment of the penal section of the law, upon which this action is founded is obvious and can not be mistaken: it was to secure the appointment, organization and qualification of an acting board of assessors, in each town, in each year. This purpose is so obvious, that no strictness of construction can be admitted to control or evade it.

This law demands of the towns, not only that they shall appoint an assessor, or assessors, but that they shall cause them to be sworn. To appoint them, and nothing more, would be only a partial performance of the duties required. Until they have accepted, and have been sworn, they are not assessors, and it can not, in strictness, be said, that before they have been thus sworn, they have been appointed assessors.

[168]*168It is claimed by the town, in its defence, that it could do no more than to elect assessors, on the first Monday of October, 1850; it could not compel them, either to accept, or to act. But, it was the duty of the town, to elect such men as would be sworn to act, according to law: to elect such as would not accept the appointment, was a nugatory act, and of no avail. The town,was bound to do, in this matter, all it had power to do, either by its selectmen, or in town-meeting, to constitute an acting board of assessors; but this has been neglected.

By the twenty-third section of the act concerning communities and corporations,” Stat., 1849, p. 139, it is required; that the selectmen shall forthwith, after the choice of town officers, by the town-meetings, cause the officers, of whom an oath is required by law, to be summoned and sworn to a faithful discharge of their respective offices and trusts. There was no attempt to do this; so far from it, that two of the persons chosen, who w'ere themselves selectmen, refused to be sworn, without apology, or excuse, and'by their neglect of duty and rule of righteousness,

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Bluebook (online)
22 Conn. 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-town-of-new-london-conn-1852.