Duntley v. Davis

Landon, J.:

The warrant for the collection of the school taxes was placed in the hands of the defendant December 11, 1882. He had been *230duly elected collector of taxes for the school district in October previous. He was, therefore, collector de jure. (Foot v. Stiles, 57 N. Y., 399; Williamson v. McKinney, 52 id., 382.) He had not, at the time he received the syan-ant, been notified to give a bond, nor had the amount thereof been fixed by the school meeting or the trustee, as the statute requires. (Laws 1875, chap. 567, § 24.) The defendant, as collector, was not, therefore, so in default, because of such omission to give the bond, as to avoid his title to the office, or to make it defeasible. (Woodhull v. Bohenblost, 4 Hun, 399.)

The section of the statute cited, however, provides that “ within such time, not less than ten days, as the trustee shall allow him for the purpose, the collector, before receiving the first warrant for the collection of money, shall execute a bond to the trustee with one or more sureties, to be approved by a majority of the trustees, in such amount as the district meeting shall have fixed, or, if such meeting shall not have fixed the amount therein, such amount as the trustees shall deem reasonable, conditioned for the due and faithful execution of the duties of his office.” (Laws 1875, chap. 567, § 24, p. 644; Laws 1864, chap. 555, § 83, p. 1263.)

The defendant, as collector, notwithstanding he had given no bond, proceeded under the warrant. He posted the statutory notices to the taxpayers to make voluntary payment within two weeks, and he personally made demand of payment of them within the life of the warrant. The tax against the plaintiff was one dollar and twelve cents, which he refused to pay. The warrant expired and was duly renewed by the trustee January 24, 1883. On the next day the defendant gave his bond to the trustee, and then again demanded payment of the plaintiff; this was refused, whereupon the defendant levied upon his wagon and thereafter sold it. The defendant, after giving his bond, did not again post the statutory notice giving the taxpayers time for voluntary payment. It is a condition precedent to the right of the,,collector to levy and sell that such notices be posted. (Bedell v. Barnes, 15 Hun, 353.) If the notices posted before the bond was given were a compliance with the statute, or, if the statute requiring the bond to be given is merely directory, and when given related back to the receipt of the warrant, then the plaintiff cannot complain.

*231It was held in Woodhull v. Bohenblost (4 Hun, 399) that it was the intention of the legislature that the collector should have no power to execute the warrant until the bond should have been given. That was a ease between the trustee and collector. No doubt the people for whose benefit the bond is required may rightfully object to his collecting any taxes until he has given the bond guaranteeing his fidelity. It will be seen that the section of the statute quoted above authorizes the trustees to fix the time in which the collector shall give the bond, and makes the time end before the collector receives his first warrant.

Here the time fixed by the trustee ended later. But time, so far as the validity of’the bond is concerned, is merely directory, since the statute does not negative its validity, if filed after the warrant is delivered. (Gale v. Mead, 2 Den., 160; Dawson v. People, 25 N. Y., 399.) The giving of the bond is mandatory; the time when, directory. When, therefore, the defendant had delivered the bond, his competency to execute the warrant was complete. He had posted the preliminary notices when his competency was only partial. The case is not without difficulty, and, so far as we know, is without precedent, but we think that public policy, in the absence of any evidence that the taxpayer or the public were prejudiced thereby, and inasmuch as abuses do not seem likely to arise or be favored, requires the holding that, upon the filing of his bond, all his acts under the warrant, before levy and sale, were validated.

In the ease of Rounds v. Mansfield (38 Me., 586), to which we are cited, the statute required the pound-keeper, before acting as such, to give a bond. The bond was the condition precedent to his right to act. Here the statute does not say the giving the bond is a condition precedent to the right of the collector to act or to receive the warrant. But we quite agree that he cannot enforce the warrant until he shall have given his bond. Here he had given it before he enforced the warrant.

'The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.

Learned, P. L, and Bockes, J., concurred.

Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.