Collector of Taxes of West Bridgewater v. Dunster

Rugo, C. J.

This is an action by the collector of taxes of the town of West Bridgewater in this Commonwealth, to recover taxes assessed for the years 1913, 1914 and 1915 upon the personal estate of Horace W. Howard, who died a resident of that town in January, 1913. There was a contest over the allowance of his will, so that it was not established until January, 1916, when the defendants were appointed his executors. At the time of his death there were several articles of furniture and personal effects and a carriage and a few tools in West Bridgewater, and, as we interpret the agreed facts, they have since remained there. Therefore manifestly some personal estate of the testator was subject to taxation in that town. The assessors of West Bridgewater had jurisdiction to levy a tax. Scarcely any proposition in the law of taxation is more firihly settled than that the sole remedy for over-taxation, arising either from excessive valuation or from the inclusion with property subject to taxation of other property not so subject, is by abatement. Sears v. Nahant, 221 Mass. 435, and cases collected. Sullivan v. Ashfield, 227 Mass. 24, 26.

The chief contention of the defendants is that they have a right to try the amount for which they ought to have been taxed by way of defence to this action, because they could not put themselves in position to secure an abatement for the reason that they could not file a list within the time required by St. 1909, c. 490, Part I, §§ 42, 72, 73, not then having been appointed executors. That fact is not of consequence under the circumstances shown by this record, because there was as matter of law sufficient excuse for delay in filing a list and asking for an abatement until after the lapse of such time subsequent to their appointment as reasonably would enable them to ascertain the nature and amount of their estate. See § 73 and Parsons v. Lenox, 228 Mass. 231. Although there is some plausibility in the argument of the defendants, it does not appear sound. The general principle that relief *293against excessive taxation must be had by abatement, and that it is only when the tax is wholly without validity that it can be disputed by way of defence to an action to recover the tax, is well established. It is simple and easily understood, a characteristic of signal value in the administration of tax laws. There are no features in the case'at bar of such significance as to make an exception to that salutary general rule.

It is not necessary to inquire whether the time limitations as to the list and petition for abatement are applicable at all to a case like the present, because" no list has been filed and no petition for abatement presented. It also need not be determined whether the circumstances that a considerable part of the estate of the testator, consisting of corporation stocks and bonds, was in a safe deposit box in Providence, in the State of Rhode Island, at the death of the testator, and that a custodian appointed under the laws of that State took possession of that property and paid taxes thereon in the city of Providence, would have been sufficient cause for abatement of the taxes now sought to be recovered provided they had been seasonably presented to the assessors of the taxing town by appropriate "means. See, in that connection, Welch v. Boston, 221 Mass. 155; Putnam v. Middleborough, 209 Mass. 456; and Gray v. Lenox, 215 Mass. 598.

Judgment for the plaintiff affirmed.