Cook v. Leland

The opinion of the Court was drawn up by

Parker C. J.

We must suppose that the plaintiff in this action was a collector of taxes for the town of Pelham, though it is not one of the facts agreed in the case. Counsel should be more exact in drawing up their statements, as it may often happen to be unnecessary for the Court to recur to the declaration in order to decide the points in issue. Being collector, his only authority to sustain actions for taxes committed to him to collect is derived from the statute of 1789, «. 4, which provides, that “ where any person duly rated in any town, &c., hath died, or shall die before the payment of the same rates, and where any person, duly rated &c., hath removed or shall remove, &c., and where any unmarried woman, being duly rated &c., shall intermarry, &c., it shall he lawful for the constables or collectors, &c., to sue for such rates,” &c.

The being duly rated is the basis of this authority, and it is obvious that one who dies before the assessment does not come within this description. No one can be duly rated without having had opportunity to furnish a list of his taxable property, and it does not appear that any of the taxes, except the highway tax for 1822 and the county tax for 1823, were assessed until several months after the decease of the intestate. The money was raised before his death for the town tax of 1823, but was not assessed during bis life. It therefore never became a debt for which his administrator could be sued. And as to the taxes of 1825 and 1826, there can be no pretence for the action, within the statute before cited. The heirs, devisees, administrator,, or whoever else was m oossession of the property, were liable and should have been *238assessed; and the collector would then have had the power to collect the tax under his general power of distraining, &c.

The highway tax of 1822 having been assessed in the lifetime of the intestate and returned as not worked out according to the statute, became a debt for which the administrator is liable ; as did also the county tax of 1823, that having been duly assessed before the death of the intestate. For these sums judgment must be rendered for the plaintiff, with costs according to the agreement.1

See Revised Stat. c. 7, § 10.