Tozier v. Woodworth

188 A. 771, 135 Me. 46, 1936 Me. LEXIS 5
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 30, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 188 A. 771 (Tozier v. Woodworth) 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
Tozier v. Woodworth, 188 A. 771, 135 Me. 46, 1936 Me. LEXIS 5 (Me. 1936).

Opinion

Dunn, C. J.

In 1934, plaintiff was chosen, and qualified, as collector of taxes in the Town of Unity. A tax collector is a public officer, owing to the public and not to the town alone, the duties imposed by statute. Thorndike v. Camden, 82 Me., 39, 44, 19 A., 95. The assessments committed to this collector included a tax on certain land and buildings, title to which appears to have, since the levying of the tax, come, by conveyance from the record owner, to defendant.

[47]*47The instant action is assumpsit, plaintiff suing in his official capacity, for breach of an alleged express agreement, on the part of the new owner of the real estate, to pay the amount of the imposition which, previously to transfer, had been laid against the property.

There is allegation in effect in the declaration in the writ, that over a stipulated period of time no longer existing, plaintiff, confiding in and relying on the promise of defendant, forbore all effort to collect the tax; and of violation by defendant of his aforesaid engagement.

On the case being reached for trial, a jury was waived, and hearing had before the court, Mr. Justice Worster presiding.

In paving the way for decision, which went for defendant, the Justice ruled, and held, in substance, that at all events, the undertaking by defendant was founded upon an illegal consideration, namely, omission by plaintiff, in contravention of public policy, to do his duty.

Specific exceptions are a vehicle bringing contention to the contrary forward.

The findings and rulings, mentioned before, aptly and correctly recite the situation in full aspect, and give reasons for conclusions reached below, as follows:

“This is an action on the case brought by the plaintiff, as collector of taxes of the town of Unity, against the defendant ■on his oral promise of May 14th, 1935 to pay the plaintiff the 1934 taxes on real estate, which had been assessed against the Unity Lake Land and Improvement Association, which promise was made after the real estate had been conveyed to the defendant by his parents by deeds dated August 6th, 1934, containing provisions to the effect that the defendant assumed and agreed to pay ‘taxes, as known to the grantee.’
“Among other things it is, in effect, alleged in the plaintiff’s declaration, that said 1934 taxes were assessed against the Unity Land & Lake Improvement Association, which was the owner of said land on April 1, 1934.
“But, according to the evidence, no taxes were assessed against it by that name. A tax, however, was assessed against [48]*48the Unity Lake Land and Improvement Association, and the name, last given, appears as the corporate name in the copy of a mortgage given by it, which was admitted in evidence.
“Whether the word ‘Lake’ should precede or follow the word ‘Land’ in the corporate name would not affect the identity of the corporation or the validity of the tax, so far as this case is concerned, if it should be made to appear that the corporation was known as well by the one name as the other. Farnsworth Co. v. Rand, 65 Me., 19, 23.
“At the Hearing, Mr. Knight, one of the assessors, was asked, ‘Did you make an assessment to the Unity Lake Land and Improvement Association?’
“The defendant objected on the ground that it was not material. Asked by the Court to state the ground of his objection, the defendant said:
“ ‘This is a tax against a named defendant, and the tax collector is bound to sue those parties named in the book, and not any strangers. I have no connection with the Unity Lake Land and Improvement Association, and never did have.’ He further said: ‘I wish to have exceptions upon those points. The warrant tells him to collect the tax against the person named in the book, and my name is not in the book.’
“No objection was interposed based upon any alleged variance in the corporate name. The point not having been made, it is not now open to the defendant. Had the point been made at the hearing, the plaintiff would have had opportunity to offer evidence as to the corporate identity.
“The mere fact that there was no allegation of identity in the declaration would not have barred the plaintiff from establishing the contention that the corporation was known as well by the one name as the other, if it was so known. Dodge v. Barnes, 31 Me., 290; Approved in Vumbaca v. West, 107 Me., 130, 132; Farnsworth Co. v. Rand, supra.
“This point avails the defendant nothing.
“But, the defendant claims, and I find, that on April 1, 1934, this real estate was not owned by said corporation, by. any name whatsoever.
[49]*49“Plaintiff proved, however, that the taxes on said real estate were assessed against the Unity Lake Land and Improvement Association in the year 1933, and claimed that because of that fact the assessment was properly made against it in 1934, since no notice of change of ownership or occupancy had been given. Sec. 26, Chap. 13, R. S. Maine.
“Defendant, in reply, contends that on April 1, 1934 this corporation was ‘defunct’; and that the cited statute did not authorize this assessment against a ‘Defunct’ corporation merely because the taxes had been assessed against it the previous year.
“The case of Morrill v. Lovett, 95 Me., 165, is not in point. It was there held that such a statute did not authorize an assessment of taxes against a dead man merely because the taxes on the same property had been assessed against him the year before.
“But it does not appear that this corporation has even yet been dissolved, so it cannot be said that it was ‘dead’ or ‘defunct’ on April 1,1934.
“Evidence that the Unity Lake Land and Improvement Co. was, on September 2, 1925, excused from filing corporate returns, and that it has ceased to do business, falls far short of proof of dissolution, even if it should be conceded that it is the same corporation as the Unity Lake Land and Improvement Association.
“Merely ceasing to transact business does not work a dissolution. Prop. of Baptist Meeting-House v. Webb, 66 Me., 398.
“While no direct evidence was offered to identify the land described in the assessment books as being the same land described in the deeds to the defendant by words of description unlike the description recorded in said books, yet, since the defendant entered into negotiations with the plaintiff relative to the payment of these 1934 taxes without raising any objection as to the identity of the land, and does not raise the point in the record, it is fairly inferable, and for the purposes of this case, I find, that the land described in the assessment books is the same land described in said deeds to the defendant.
[50]*50“But, even conceding that it is the same land yet this action cannot be maintained on the theory that the defendant became liable to pay this tax because of his assumption and agreement to pay, under the provisions in said deeds.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 A. 771, 135 Me. 46, 1936 Me. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tozier-v-woodworth-me-1936.