Smith v. State

Lipscomb, J.

The proceedings in this ease were intended to subject the appellant to a fine for failing to return to the assessor and collector some real estate for taxation supposed to belong to his intestate. The question of the liability of the appellant is believed iiot to have been presented in the mode authorized by law, and the course adopted, to say the least of it, is singularly awkward. A petition is filed in which the State of Texas complains of John W. Smith, a citizen of the said county and State, that lie is tiie administrator of the estate of F. Bowles, and alleges that there is real and personal property of the estate which the defendant, administrator of the estate, liad refused to return to (he assessor and collector for taxation, to the damage of the petitioner §10;); wherefore petitioner prays citation, and for judgment for said sum, for execution, and all just and equitable relief, &c. The, facts seem to have been agreed on and submitted to the judge. They aro the following:

" It is agreed that Bowles came, to Texas iu tho winter of 1845, aud settled iu Dallas county and made an improvement upon uncultivated land *150within the limits of Peters’s colony; that Bowles died in the spring of 1847; that the land upon which lie died and upon which his family lived at tlie time of tlie demand of the assessor and collector in 1847 is unsurveyed by the State; and that Bowles had not, nor lias the administrator, any certificate of title, neither from Peters and his associates nor from the State or Republic of Texas. And it is agreed that Smith’ did render a list of the personal property'of tlie said Bowles, but refused to render said laud, as required by the assessor. It is further agreed that the said Bowles settled on section thirty-five, in the fifteen-mile block surveyed by tlie direction of tlie agent of Peters’s colony, for a solid settlement by said colony contract; and that said Bowles resided upon it at his death, and his family afterwards until the bringing of this suit; section thirty-five being in township No. two north, range one west, as surveyed by the agent of Peters’s colony.”

On this statement of facts tlie case was submitted to the judge; and he seems to have thought the land subject to taxation, and that the administrator was in default; as, after having taken it under advisement, he on the next day ordered a jury to assess the fine, and it was accordingly assessed at $10, for which judgment was given ; and the. defendant appealed.

The sixtli section of the act in force at that time providing for assessing and collecting taxes (Acts 1840, p. 3-17) requires of the administrator that he should make a return of all taxable property, real and personal, which he owned or was possessed of as administrator. The words “possessed of ” were not intended to be a possession uncoupled with ownership in the intestate. Nothing can be clearer from the statement of facts than that, as administrator, he did not own or possess the land on which his intestate died ; because possession, with title of proprietorship, was not pretended to have been in Bowles; and it would be ai mockery of everything like justice and common'sense to suppose that because Bowles’s family remained as mere squatters where tlie poor man had pitched his camp and died, without claim of title, the estate should be lield liable to pay taxes on such land.

Tlie suit was not brought in conformity to law. Had there been a failure of the administrator to reinrn the land, if it bad really been subject to taxation, the assessor, instead of bringing suit, should have reported tlie failure lo tlie next term of the District Court, ..and then tlie district attorney ought to iiave proceeded to ascertain the fact whether the property was taxable or not by some proceeding in the nature of an information. This course would have been less expensive, and was no doubt the course intended by the act to liare been pursued under its provisions, (see 9th section of tlie act cited;) because tlie assessor is not only required by the law to report the default to tlie next court, but is also required t.o attend to prove tlie fact.

The statement of tlie facts shows so clearly that the land was not subject, to taxation as belonging to the óslate of Bowles, and that tlie administrator had nothing to do witli it, that it is exceedingly difficult to perceive any reasonable ground for the court below coming to a different conclusion. The administrator has, without tlie least fault on his iiart, been subjected to trouble and costs; and because it lias been imposed on liim through a judicial tribunal of bis country, lie is not allowed to be reimbursed bis costs expended. Tlie State, if successful, receives full costs; if unsuccessful, pays none. Hence tlie necessity imposed upon those representing the State to he cautions, and not capriciously or without due consideration to subject the citizen to the onerous consequences of a groundless prosecution. The judgment is reversed and cause dismissed.

Reversed and dismissed.