The court are of opinion that the plaintiff has not assigned any valid reason why he should recover back the tax in question.
1. It is alleged that the record did not originally state that the assessors and treasurer were chosen by written ballots. This objection is removed by an amendment of the record, which was *595legally made by the town clerk. Welles v. Battelle, 11 Mass. 477. But without the amendment, the record, which was as follows : “ Chose George Gibbs, Sylvester F. Cobb, Nathaniel Sherman, assessors; sworn by town clerk,” was sufficient prima facie proof of a choice in a legal manner. Howard v. Proctor, 7 Gray, 131.
2. The town voted to raise various sums, amounting in all to $5900. But the assessment was only for $5700. It is contended that this vitiates the whole tax. A sufficient answer to this allegation is, that $200 was raised for bridges ; and one of the votes passed at the meeting was “ to repair the highways and bridges by a labor tax,” and, by another vote, the price of labor was fixed. Therefore this sum ought not to be included in the assessment.
3. The town voted “ to give the same discount on taxes as last year, and the same time, with no discount on poll taxes.” This discount was ten per cent, upon taxes paid within thirty days from the assessors’ notice to that effect. It is said that this discrimination between the poll tax and the other taxes, as to the discount, is illegal, and vitiates the tax. But if it be an illegal discrimination, it forms no part of the assessment, but is an independent act, and therefore does not vitiate the tax, any more than the omission to tax a certain piece of property, or the illegal abatement of a tax. Towns have authority to make discounts. Rev. Sts. c. 7, § 35. And if they abuse the authority, by making the discounts partial, the remedy is not by resisting payment of the tax, but should be of a more general character. An injunction would seem to be appropriate.
4. It is objected that the valuation list was not deposited with the chairman of the assessors till the day before the taxes were committed to the collector, ft is alleged that sufficient time should have been allowed to enable the inhabitants to examine their taxes before they were committed to the collector. But there was a compliance with the requirement of Rev. Sts. c. 7, § 29, and that is sufficient.
5. The assessors’ warrant to the collector contains a direction as to the discount, in substantial conformity with the vote-*596This, it is contended, vitiates the warrant. But as the vote itself did not vitiate the tax, the insertion of its substance in the warrant cannot have that effect.
6. It is objected that the valuation list does not sufficiently describe the plaintiff’s real estate. It appeared that the plaintiff owned about thirty dwelling houses and other buildings, constituting several separate parcels of real estate, about fifteen separate parcels of meadow land and woodland, and several distinct mills and mill privileges, and that these facts were known to the assessors. But the plaintiff failed to bring in to the assessors a list of his property; and “ an estimate thereof at its just value, according to their best information and belief,” is all that the statute requires of them. Rev. Sts. c. 7, § 23. The assessors made their estimate, as follows : “ House and other buildings, 8000. Meadow, 550. Improved land, 2100. Woodland, 2600. Rolling mills, mills and other privileges, 2500.” They thus complied with this provision. See Lincoln v. Worcester, 8 Cush. 57.
Plaintiff nonsuit.