State v. Mellick
State v. Mellick
Opinion of the Court
The oertiorari in this case has been wrongly directed to the assessor, and could not bo sustained, had not the counsel for the town, to prevent delay and to obtain the opinion of the court on the questions involved, consented to waive the objection.
The prosecutors object to the tax assessed upon them in the town of Belvidere for school purposes, by virtue of a vote of the inhabitants at a regular town meeting and of votes of two7tbirds of the inhabitants of the school districts into which the town has been divided, insisting that the said taxes have been illegally imposed. It appears that the town of Belvidere was incorporated in the year 1845, Pamph. L. 108, the second section of the charter enacting, that the said corporation, in addition to the rights, privileges, and immunities granted, and the duties and obligations imposed by this act, shall be entitled to all tbe rights, privileges, and immunities conferred, and subject to all the duties, restrictions, and liabilities imposed by tbe laws of this state upon the inhabitants of the several townships thereof, so far as the same are consintent with the provisions of this act. By the fourth section, provision is made for the election of a mayor and six eouncilmen, each inhabitant voting for only three of
At the time this charter was granted, thé act to establish common schools, passed March 1, 1838, was in force. "In ’ 1846 that act was repealed, and the existing law enacted ’-.-in its place,' afterwards modified by the. act of 1851. Mix. Dig. 133. After the repeal of the act of 1838, a town superintendent, of public schools was elected by the town meeting of Belvidere, agreeably to the provisions of the fifth section of the act of 1846, who divided the town into two school' districts. After the act of 1851, these districts . were incorporated,, and the. inhabitants ordered taxes to be raised for the public schools of. said districts, pursuant to the eleventh section of that act. The tax ordered to be '. raised by the'town meeting', instead of being confined, as the school -law of 1838 directed, to double the.amount ’ '-apportioned from the state fund, was enlarged to the extent of three-dollars for each child, as authorized by 'the " act of ’18'51. , It. is now .insisted, by. the prosecutors, that these acts of 1846 and 1851 are not in force in the town , of Belvidere, and that the taxes for school purposes are il- '.. legal.. Some objection was also made to' the poll fax, which the fact's do not sustain.
It was held by this court,, in the, cases of The State v. Branin, 3 Zab. 485, and of The State v. Minton, Ib. 529, that the provisions of a special charter will not be repealed or modified'by a general act, unless it clearly appears that
The act of 1851, not being in force in that place, it
Justices Potts and Vredenburgh, concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- The State (Robeson and others, Prosecutors,) v. George Mellick, Assessor of the Town of Belvidere
- Status
- Published