Vose v. Inhabitants of Frankfort

64 Me. 229
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 1, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 64 Me. 229 (Vose v. Inhabitants of Frankfort) 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
Vose v. Inhabitants of Frankfort, 64 Me. 229 (Me. 1875).

Opinion

Danfortii, J.

This is an action to recover all or a part of a tax assessed upon the plaintiff’s property and collected of him by the defendant town. The only question raised is whether the tax, or any portion of it, was for “money not raised for a legal object.”

By a special act of the legislature of 1867, c. 291, a part of Frankfort was set off and annexed to the town of Winterport. By § 3 of said act, “the territory thus set off and the inhabitants thereon, with estates, shall pay their just proportion of the present indebtedness of Frankfort over its assets, . . and shall also pay five thousand dollars additional.” These sums were to be assessed by the assessors and collected by the collector of Frankfort from time to time “the same as if this act had not passed.”

The plaintiff owned property upon the territory, and upon that property this tax was assessed in 1874. It will thus be seen that this plaintiff with the other tax-payers upon this territory, so far as regards the assessment of taxes for the payment of this debt, retained the same relation to the town of Frankfort after the set-off as before.

In pursuance of the authority in this act, Frankfort made annual assessments upon this territory up to and including the year 1874. The plaintiff claims that the whole debt, and more, was paid by the assessment of 1873, and hence the tax of 1874, now in question, was not for a legal object. On the other hand, the defendants claim that the tax of 1874 is no more than sufficient to pay the amount due ; and to show this, have produced an ac[232]*232count with, said territory which, if correct, substantiates their position.

Without stopping to inquire whether the plaintiff has selected his proper remedy, we shall examine the issue thus presented by the parties upon its merits.

By § 4 of the act referred to, Theodore C. Woodman was appointed a commissioner to determine the liabilities and assets of the town of Frankfort, and to make a written report to each town of the certain liabilities and assets, also the number and nature of the liabilities and assets, “the precise amount of which cannot be determined, and the proportion which the territory and inhabitants hereby set off, shall pay when determined, as provided in the preceding section.”

Under this authority, Mr. Woodman heard the parties, and made his report. To this report, so far as appears, no objection has been heretofore, or is now made. It is therefore conclusive upon the parties as to all things contained in it. It is the judgment of a tribunal to whose jurisdiction the parties voluntarily submitted, and from which they make no appeal.

The account upon which the defendants have made their several assessments, including that of 1874, is made up on the debit side, mainly from this report. , Several of the items contained in it are objected to, and if the objections are well founded, the tax in question, to that extent was improperly assessed. The principal item in this class is found under date of Ajuil 8,1871, and is for $3345.17 paid for bounty claims. The proportional part of this, assessed upon the territory, is $1304,01, and it is conceded that this sum is correct if the whole amount is allowable as a debt of Frankfort under the act of separation. It appears that this sum was paid under a vote of Frankfort passed March 6, 1871, which vote was predicated upon an alleged liability of the town, by virtue of a vote passed January 28, 1865. It was decided in Cushing v. Frankfort, 57 Maine, 541, that the bounties voted at the last named date were legal claims against the town. Therefore this amount, with perhaps an exception to be hereafter noticed, [233]*233was properly paid and was a debt due from the town at the date of the act of separation. Still, it is claimed that the part set off is not liable, because it is not found in the report of Mr. Woodman. In terms it is not there; but in the report we find, among the contingent claims, or, in other words, those “the precise amount of which could not then be determined,” certain specified orders for bounties issued under a vote of the town, passed March 6, 1865. It is true, as contended by counsel, that these orders were void by reason of the illegality of the meeting at which the vote authorizing them was passed, and were so held in Clark v. Wardwell, 55 Maine, 61. It is also true that the same persons to whom they were issued, had claims for the same amount and for the same services, under the vote of January 28,1865, and these orders were, in fact, only the evidence of such claims and intended as such.

While, then, the orders were of no binding force, the debt represented by them was valid. The orders were merely the form, the claims upon which, they were founded the substance. Therefore the report of the commissioner does show this debt, not the amount indeed, but an amount which has since been “determined” and no wrong is done, no principle of law is violated in holding the territory set off liable for its share of this item. On the other hand, it is in strict accordance with well settled principles of law that a void security given for an existing debt does not discharge it, but in such cases a claim under the void security may be substituted by the valid debt. Perrin v. Keene, 19 Maine, 355; McVicker v. Beedy, 31 Maine, 314.

But it is contended that two of these claims, those of Wheelden and of Colson, are exceptions to this rule, and should not be allowed, because the original claims were invalid. It is said they were drafted men and in the service at the time of the vote of January 28, 1865. This may all be true and yet their claims be valid. The vote was sufficiently comprehensive to include them under the decision in Hart v. Holden, 55 Maine, 574; and under the authority of Railroad Co., v. Brooks, 60 Maine, 568, the [234]*234article in the warrant was sufficient. So far as the facts show, no illegality in these claims appears. The payment may, for ought shown by the testimony, have been for future services.. If the p1a.int.i-ff' would avail himself of any illegality, the burden is upon him to show it.

But admitting this item, or any part of it, to be somewhat questionable as to its binding force as a debt, we must still come to* the conclusion, under the facts shown by the case, that the territory is bound to pay its share.

The debt, as already seen, was reported by the commissioner as one the amount of which was subsequently to be “determined.” By § 4 of the act, the territory and inhabitants were to pay their proportional part when determined. By whom was this amount to be ascertained? No tribunal is named. Any legal determination then must be sufficient. Here was a debt disputable, perhaps, but returned as a debt by the legally appointed commissioner, part of which, and a part which was supposed to represent the whole, had been judicially held valid. Under these circumstances shall the town, liable to pay the largest portion, be compelled, at a large expense, to litigate and obtain a judgment of court upon each item before it can enforce a tax upon its inhabitants for its payment ? We think not. They would clearly have the right to setjkle this as any other disputed claim against them, thus saving the cost, vexation and uncertainty necessarily attendant upon litigation; provided, of course, that it is done in good faith and in the exercise of sound discretion. This they have done, so far as appears, and it should be final.

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Bluebook (online)
64 Me. 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vose-v-inhabitants-of-frankfort-me-1875.