Although there may be no difference, in substance, between the oath prescribed by the act of 1845 and that of 1849, yet we are not prepared to say that the taking of the former was a compliance with the latter law. When the Legislature changed the form of the oath, that change became a material although it may not have been a substantial one. But, notwithstanding the collector did not take the oath prescribed by the statute, we think as an officer de facto he could make an assessment which was binding, so far as the public and third persons were concerned. It is true, that the law of 1849 provides that “ a refusal or neglect of the treasurer to qualify and act as assessor, shall vacate his office as treasurer, and the County Court shall thereupon appoint some suitable person to fill such vacancy, who shall hold his office until his successor is elected and qualified; ” still, so long as he retained the office, and exercised the duties of it, he was an officer in fact. It was no part of the collector’s duty to inquire and determine whether the assessor was rightfully in office, and had duly qualified or not. So long as the County Court, the tribunal appointed by law for that purpose, did not treat the office as vacant, and fill it by appointment, it was not for the collector to refuse to perform his duty, because he might conceive that the assessor had not taken the proper official oath. It was enough for the collector to know, that the assessment was duly made, by an acting assessor, who was in the open and notorious exercise of the duties of the office. He was no more bound to inquire whether the assessor had been duly qualified, than he was to see that the clerk, who furnished him with the copy of the assessment, had taken his proper official oath. The case of The People vs. Collins, 7 John. R., 549, is in point. There, commissioners of highways, before they entered upon the duties of their office, were required to take an oath, which should be filed with the town clerk, and the law provided that a neglect to do so should be deemed a refusal to serve in the office, and that the town might proceed to choose others. The commissioners, without having taken and filed the oath, as required, laid out a road, but the town clerk refused to record the survey; insisting that their office was vacant, for the reason that they had not taken and filed the oath, and that they could not act. The Court, however, decided that they were officers de facto, and as such, their acts were good, and compelled the clerk to record the survey of the road.
Another question is raised by the defendant in error, and that is, admitting the assessment to have been valid, still the book offered showing the assessment was immaterial, as the collector could only justify himself under the warrant of authority by virtue of which he collected the tax, and behind which it was not necessary for him to go. The county clerk is required to deliver to the collector a copy of the list of taxable property returned by the assessor, and this constitutes his authority for collecting the tax. The jurisdiction of the clerk to issue this warrant of authority to the collector, is of a special and particular character, and the law is well settled, that he who would justify himself, when acting under such a warrant, must show that the officer issuing it acted within his jurisdiction, and was authorized to issue it in the particular case. This rule has been, often applied to the cases of warrants issued for the collection of taxes, by particular persons or officers, whose duty it was to issue such warrants when a proper assessment had been made. Suydam vs. Keys, 13 John. R., 444; Brewster vs. Hyde, 7 N. H. R., 209. Here the clerk had no authority to issue the copy of the assessment list, unless an assessment had been made. The hook, which was ruled out by the Court, was the original assessment list, and was of indispensable importance to the defendant below; for without it the copy under which he must have acted, was issued by the clerk without authority, and could not justify the collector. It is true, the collector did not show the copy of the assessment list, nor was he bound to do so, until he had been permitted to lay the foundation for it, by showing the original assessment.
The judgment is reversed, with costs, and the cause remanded.
Judgment reversed.