Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1859

Grantham v. Canaan

Grantham v. Canaan
Supreme Court of New Hampshire · Decided July 15, 1859 · Fowler
38 N.H. 268

Grantham v. Canaan

Opinion of the Court

Fowler, J.

It was a legal presumption of fact, after the lapse of twenty years, that the pauper’s tax for 1822 had been paid. Hopkinton v. Springfield, 12 N. H. 328; Colebrook v. Stewartstown, 28 N. H. (8 Fost.) 75.

*270The presumption in such a case has been said to stand upon clear principle, built upon reason, the nature and character of man, and the result of human experience. It resolves itself into this, that every person, individual and corporate, will naturally possess and enjoy what belongs to him. It is because there are presumed to be no means of determining belief or disbelief, that such presumptions are raised. "When those means are shown, they take the place of the presumption. Hillary v. Waller, 12 Vesey, Jr. 264.

The presumption in the present case was liable to be rebutted and overcome by proof of facts and circumstances, going to satisfy the jury that payment had not in fact been made. Any evidence, the legitimate tendency of which was to render it more probable than otherwise, in the judgment of the jury, that the pauper’s tax for 1822 had not been paid, was competent and admissible for the purpose of resisting and repelling the presumption of payment, arising from the lapse of time. It was proper for the defendant to show the pecuniary ability, or rather the poverty, of the pauper at the time, and any other circumstances tending to induce the jury to conclude that the tax had not actually been paid. 1 Greenl. Ev., sec. 39; 2 Cowen and Hill’s Notes to Phillipps’ Ev. (n.) 207 ; 1 Edwards’ Phillipps Ev. 676 (n.) 193 ; Mathews on Presumptive Evidence, ch. 19, 20; Fladong v. Winter, 19 Vesey, Jr. 106, (note a;) Hillary v. Waller, 12 Vesey, Jr. 239, and authorities cited in each.

Nor is it material to the competency of the evidence to which exception was taken, whether or not the action of two of the selectmen of Canaan, in agreeing to abate the tax of the pauper, was in law an abatement thereof. Notwithstanding the legal presumption arising from the lapse of time, it was a pure question of fact for the jury to pass upon, whether or not the tax had been actually paid; and it was only a difference in the degree and not in the char*271acter of the evidence on that point, whether the tax were actually abated, or circumstances existed rendering it proper, in the judgment of the tribunal authorized by law to abate it, that it should be abated, especially as the decision of this majority was communicated to the collector, and the evidence showed that he never accounted for the tax as having been paid to him.

There does not seem to be any room for doubt that the testimony to which objection was taken had a legitimate bearing on the issue before the jury, as to the presumed payment of the pauper’s tax for 1822. It went very strongly to show that, at that time, the pecuniary condition of the pauper was such that a majority of the board of selectmen who made the assessment deemed it proper that he should be relieved from its payment; that, in consequence thereof, the collector was instructed not to enforce the payment, and that he never did account for it as having been paid, as it is to be presumed that, as a public officer, he would have done had he collected it.

The extracts from the town records, showing the allowance to the collector, on two different occasions, of a certain amount of abated or uncollectable taxes, seem to have been clearly admissible, in connection with the other testimony in the case, as secondary evidence tending to render it more probable than otherwise that the pauper’s tax had not been paid. The other evidence showed that some taxes were abated, that no record of the particular abatements was made, that a majority of the selectmen were of the opinion that the pauper’s tax ought not to be collected, and so notified the collector; while the extracts from the records went to confirm the other testimony, by showing that a certain amount of taxes had been allowed to the collector as abated, or uncollected and uncollectable, on two different occasions, among which might have been the tax of the pauper. The weight and importance of this evidence was a question for the jury. It seems to us to have been properly received.

*272All the evidence to which objection was taken having, therefore, in our judgment, been properly admitted, the exceptions to the ruling of the court below must be overruled, and the judgment affirmed.

Exceptions overruledl.

Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.