By the Court,
Savage, Ch. J.The statute prescribing the duties of trustees of school districts, directs them, among other things, “ to make out a tax list of every district tax voted by any such meeting, containing the names of all the taxable inhabitants residing in the district .at the time of making out the list, and the amount of tax payable by each inhabitant, set opposite to his name “ to make out a rate bill, containing the name of each person so liable,” &c. 1 R. S. 481, § 75, sub. 3 and 13, and to issue a warrant, which “shall command the collector to collect from every person in such tax list or rate bill named, the sum therein set opposite to his name,” page 484, § 88. The question now is, has this statute been complied with, so as to justify the collection of the tax ?
It is contended that the name of the person must he inserted, and not a description of him, and the case of Mead v. Hawes, 7 Cowen, 332, is referred to. There the plaintiff was arrested upon a warrant against “ John Doe, the person carrying off the cannon;” and we held, upon the authority of several English cases and that of Griswold v. Sedgwick, 6 Cowen, 456, that such process was no justification to the officer; that process, to justify an arrest, must contain the true name of the person arrested. Since that decision, the legislature have passed upon the subject, and have enacted, that “ when the name of any defendant shall not be known to the plaintifij a capias ad respondendum may be issued against such person by a fictitious name,” 2 R. S. 347, § 3; and the same provision is extended to a summons or warrant, Laws of 1830, p. 395, § 383. These provisions have relaxed the strictness which previously prevailed. A warrant to collect taxes is not process by which the person is to be arrested and deprived of *348his liberty. The tax is to be levied of the properly, not by atv res(jng the person. The name should however be stated cor-rectly>t0 enable the collector to levy upon the property which is justly chargeable with the tax; but the same strictness not pe required in such case as when the person named may be deprived of his liberty.
In the case of The People v. Ferguson, 8 Cowen, 102, one question was how the name of an individual might be shewn to be represented by abbreviations or initials, and it was held that either were sufficient to entitle a person to votes, provided it were shewn that they were intended for him. A name, it was said, is a discriminative appellation or designation of an individual. When property is owned or possessed by a single individual, it is proper and necessary that the name of such individual should be inserted in the tax bill; but when a farm is owned or possessed by a mercantile or other firm, the assessment to such firm would answer the same purpose as writing out the Christian and símame of each individual composing the firm; it designates the property taxed, and the persons whose property the collector may take to levy the tax. So too, the widow and heirs of a deceased person, when the property is possessed by the widow and family of the deceased, seems to be a designation with reasonable certainty of the property which the officer may take. It was in evidence before the court that the property taken belonged to the persons assessed, or the jury were not justified in their verdict. The court decided that there was sufficient naming of the plaintiff to authorize the defendant to levy the tax upon the property of the widow and heirs of Zopher S. Wheeler, deceased, living on that farm. To require the utmost strictness in such cases would lead to great embarrassment on the part of public officers ; they may not be able to obtain the true names, and if they become trespassers by a want of literal strictness, their situation would be truly hazardous. They should give the names as correctly as possible, and in such way as to direct the collector with certainty to the true property. The collector is justified, if he has taken the property of the persbns assessed. That he did so in this case is found by the jury.
*349I am inclined to the opinion that the name, as it should be understood in relation to the law in question, was sufficiently certain; and that the judgment of the common pleas should be affirmed, with double costs.