Hardcastle v. State
Hardcastle v. State
Opinion of the Court
This case came before the Supreme Court upon a certiorari, issued to remove the assessment of a tax upon the prosecutor, assessed under the provisions of the eleventh section of the supplement to the act to establish public schools, approved March 14th, 1851, {Nix. Dig. 739.) That courL set aside the assessment as illegal, upon the ground that (he certificate furnished by the trustees to the assessor was not in compliance with the statute. Of this decision the' plaintiff in error complains.
The decision -of the question cannot depend upon the rule of the common law requiring tribunals possessing a special limited jurisdiction to show, upon the face of their proceedings, everything necessary to the exei’cise of their authority. The true inquiry is, whether the certificate of the trustees is in compliance with the statute; and if it is not, then whether the validity of the assessment is thereby impaired.
The act authorizes the trustees of any incorporated school district to call a meeting of the taxable inhabitants of the district, iu the mode and for the purposes specified in the statute, and authorizes the inhabitants so met to raise, by taxation, any such sum of money as two-thirds of the inhabitants so assembled shall agree to. The act further directs, that in case any money shall be ordered by a vote of two-thirds of said meeting to be raised by taxation, two, at least, of said trustees shall make out and sign a certificate thereof, under oath or affirmation,' that the same is correct and true, and deliver the same to the assessor, &c., which said assessor shall assess * * * such sum of money as shall have been ordered to be raised by the said meeting in manner aforesaid.
It is clear that the assessment can only be made for money ordered to be raised by a meeting held pursuant to the statute, and iu the manner therein prescribed ; and
It is clear, however, that the court cannot enlarge the requirements of the statute, and it is insisted that the act requires only that the certificate should state the sum ordered to be raised, and that it was by a vote of two-thirds of the meeting. But the requirement of the act is more comprehensive. Its language is, “in case any money shall be ordered by a vote of two-thirds of said meeting to be raised by taxation, two, at least, of said trustees shall make out and sign a certificate thereof,” i. e., a certificate of the amount ordered to be raised by a vote of two-thirds of a meeting, convened in the manner and for the purpose authorized by the statute. This is the fair and obvious import of the language of the statute. This requirement the trustees have not complied with. They have stated the amount ordered to be raised, and the vote by which the resolution was adopted. They have also stated that the meeting was held within the district at the time specified in the notice, but they have not stated when or how that notice was given. The certificate simply states that notice was made in accordance with the act. But that is a conclusion of law, which the legislature could
It is proper not only that the assessor should be furnished with evidence that the order to raise the money emanates from the proper authority, but also that the tax-payer may know that lie is lawfully assessed ; and such may be presumed to have been the intention of the legislature in making the provision. It is true that the act does not require that the certificate should be recorded, or otherwise preserved by the assessor, or exhibited to the tax-payers. But the omission of such requirement is not of itself sufficient to vary the fair import, or to limit the obvious meaning, of the provisions of the statute.
In the absence of the certificate required by the act, the assessor could not be constrained to make the assessment, nor would he be guilty of a breach of duty by omitting or refusing so to do; and if the assessment be made without the certificate prescribed by the statute, the tax-payer may object that lie is assessed without lawful authority.
The judgment of the Supreme Court should be affirmed.
For affirmance—The Chancellor, the Chief Justice, and Judges Haines, Ryerson, Cornelison, Swain, Valentine and Wood.
For reversal—None,
Cited in State v. Donahay, 1 Vr. 405; State v. Gurrabrant; 3 Vr. 445; State v. Greenleaf, 5 Vr. 442; State v. Palmer, 10 Vr. 251,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John Hardcastle, Collector, etc. v. The State, James Hodge, prosecutor
- Status
- Published