The plaintiff assails the validity of the defendant’s proceedings on two grounds: 1. That the defendants were not trustees. 2. That the tax was unlawfully laid, and principally for the reason that a larger tax was collected than was authorized by a vote of the district. In Myer’s case a third ground is added, that the land on account of which the tax was imposed, was not taxable in the district in which the school house was situated.
1. It is claimed that the defendants were not legally trustees, because chosen at a meeting of the inhabitants of the district, held outside of the district, and in district No. 4. The law does not imperatively require the meeting to be held within the bounds, of the district, although it is eminently fitting that it should he so. There is no evidence of abuse, nor that it was an inconvenient or inaccessible place; nor that any objection was taken, at the time, on this account; nor that the inhabitants were not fully notified and represented at that.meeting; nor that any action was ever had to oust the trustees on that accourit. On the contrary it appears that *56they subsequently acted without objection as trustees, and I think sufficiently so to constitute them officers de facto. If so, the objection is unavailable. (Stevens v. Newcomb, 4 Denio, 438. Reynolds v. Moore, 9 Wend. 35.)
2. It is alleged that the tax was illegally imposed. 1st. Because voted at a meeting held in the district, adjourned from a previous meeting, (the same at which the trustees were appointed,) held outside of the district and in district No 4. As before stated, it does not appear that at the original meeting any single inhabitant was not notified, or complained, then or afterwards, of the irregularity; or that there was any absentee from the adjourned meeting held within the bounds of the district; and by the evidence it appears to have been a meeting of the freeholders and inhabitants of the district. Further, there is no evidence of any objection or complaint of the irregularity of the proceedings at the second meeting, and we may therefore presume a waiver of the irregularity (if it be one) and a unanimous assent to the regularity of the adjourned meeting. I think the objection should be treated as untenable. 2d. And principally, it is alleged that the tax was illegally imposed, because the vote of the inhabitants was “to raise by tax on the district a sum which together with the amount that shall arise from the sale of a school house in district No. 4, shall amount to the sum of $315whereas the sum actually raised by tax under the direction of the trustees was (without reference to the sale or value of the school house in district No. 4,) $315. The answer made to this on the part of the defendants is, that the school house in No. 4 was never in fact sold; that it was illegal to sell it, (1 R. S. 4th ed. 892, § 87,) and that the meeting in fact meant to authorize and did authorize the raising of the entire amount of $315 if no available means were realized from the sale of the school house in No. 4.
Section 2 of chap. 382 of the Laws of 1849, (1 R. S. 4th ed. 892, sec. 87) provides for only two cases: 1st. For that of two or more districts consolidated into one; and 2d. For *57that where a district is annulled. The present case is not embraced within either of those classes. It is the case of a new district, formed from parts of two others—the old districts still remaining and requiring of course for their use the school houses already built in them respectively. We have not been referred to any other provision of the school law meeting the case; and if there is none, I do not see that there was any power to make sale of the school house in Ho. 4. At any rate, either because doubt existed as to the power, or for some other reason, nothing was realized from that source. Ho amount, in the language of the resolution of the district meeting, did “arise from the sale of a school house in district Ho. 4.” I think therefore the fair construction of the resolution, in that contingency, is, that the trustees were authorized to raise the entire amount of three hundred and fifteen dollars by tax, and the amount to be raised was sufficiently definite to satisfy the law. A similar construction of the law has been given in several adjudicated cases nearly parallel to this. (Trumbull v. White, 5 Hill, 46. Ackerman v. Vail, 4 Denio, 298. See also Williams v. Larkin, 3 Denio, 115.) I lay no stress, in determining this question, upon a remark made at the meeting in response to an inquiry upon that subject, that if the school house in Ho. 4 could not be sold, the entire amount would be raised by tax upon the district. However much we may be convinced by such a circumstance that the meeting comprehended the practical effect of the resolution, we must nevertheless interpret it by its own terms.
3. The remaining objection applies only to the case of Myer. It is that the 37 acres for which he was taxed, though situated within the bounds of Ho. 6, formed part of his farm, the dwelling house upon which and in which he resided, being situated within and taxable in district Ho. 4.
The lot in question was occupied, improved and cultivated by the plaintiff in connection with his homestead farm in Ho. 6, but did not adjoin any part of said farm, nor was it directly opposite thereto, but was on the opposite side of the Esopus creek, *58and at its nearest approach to said farm was about 80 yards distant from a point directly opposite to the nearest point or corner thereof on the other side of the creek. It had no hóuse upon the same,.and had of course no actual resident thereon. Sec. 87 of chap. 480 of the laws of 1847 (1 R. S. 4th ed. p. 899,) provides that every person owning or holding real property in any school district who shall improve and occupy the same by his agent or servant shall be considered a taxable inhabitant of such district, in respect to the liability of such property to taxation, in the same manner as if he resided therein. Section 89 provides for the taxation.of real estate as non-resident lands, where it is not occupied and improved by the owner, Ms servant or agent, and shall not be possessed by any tenant. Sec. 85 directs the trustees to apportion the tax upon all the taxable inhabitants, and upon all real estate lying within the boundaries of such district, the owners of which shall be non-residents. I am of opinion that the plaintiff Meyer was a taxable inhabitant of district No. 6, within the meaning of the foregoing sections. He was, it is true, an actual resident of No. 4, and his farm lay iti that district; but he improved and occupied land'fthis lot) in district No, 6; not literally, so far as the case shows, by Ms agent or servant, but in the same way in substance and effect. I think the word “owner” was inadvertently'left out of section 87. It is contained in section 89, and if the plaintiff is not taxable in district No. 6 for this land, L think he is not taxable at all. He is not taxable in district No. 4, because the 37 acres are not, correctly speaking, a part of his farm—not attached to it, nor adjoining it; nor are the-two cut or intersected by the boundaries of the district. (1 R. S. 476, §§ 76, 82.) If land situated like this, improved or occupied by a servant or agent, would make the owner a taxable inhabitant for the purposes of the law, a fortiori would it seem to do so, if occupied or improved by the owner himself. Regarding the case as substantially within section 87j if not literally so, I think the 37 *59acres were properly taxed for school purposes in district No. 6, and therefore that this objection also fails.
[Albany General Term, September 6, 1858.Wright, Gould and Hogeboom, Justices.]
If it were a case of doubt, I do not know but we ought to solve the doubt in favor of public officers who perform an important public service at a trivial rate of compensation, wholly disproportioned to the risk and labor incurred.
The judgment of the county court should he affirmed.