delivered the opinion of the court.
The charter of the Bardstown and Louisville Railroad Company was so amended as to authorize three of the justices’ districts in Nelson county, known as districts Nos. 1, 5, and 9, to take stock in the road, and issue bonds for the payment, &c.
*321The county court was empowered to provide for the payment of the interest on these bonds by the imposition of an ad valorem tax upon the real and personal estate within the districts, and by a further amendment was authorized to impose a tax on the property within the districts to pay the whole or any part of the principal of these bonds. An annual tax of fifty cents on the $100 was imposed for several years, but for the year 1878 no tax was imposed by the county court. It was made the duty of the sheriff, by virtue of his office, to collect this tax, and the sheriff although no levy had been made or tax imposed, proceeded to collect for the year 1878 a large amount of taxes to pay off these bonds, and failing to account for the money, his sureties on his bond for the collection of the county levy and public dues have in the present action been made responsible.
It is alleged in the petition that the county court levied an ad valorem tax for the year 1878, and this allegation is expressly denied by the answer. The burden was then upon the appellee to show that the sheriff, by virtue of his office or otherwise, had the authority to collect this tax. It is said that the property within these districts was regularly assessed, and the tax lists at fifty cents on each one hundred dollars’ worth of property made out and placed in the hands of the sheriff who collected it.
The failure of the county court to make the levy or impose the tax cannot be regarded as merely formal, or a mere-clerical omission that may be corrected at any time without regard to the rights of these sureties. Under such a ruling the sheriff would not only have a right to collect the tax, but must necessarily determine the amount each tax-payer must contribute. The county court, in its discretion, had *322the power to lessen the tax from fifty cents, or might have •declined to impose any burden for the year 1878, so far as the sheriff was interested, and the latter could make no complaint. It is true that appellants voluntarily executed the bond as the sureties of the sheriff, and by so doing made themselves liable for any of his official defalcations; but here they are proceeded against, not on account of the failure of the sheriff to do what the law required of him, but for failing to do what the law did not exact or require of him or his sureties. Suppose the sheriff had failed to collect any •of the tax, or to receive the list of persons and property .assessed for the payment of these bonds, could the county •or those interested have made him liable? We think not, for the reason that no tax had been imposed, and any .attempt on the part of the sheriff to enforce payment would have made him a trespasser. His. subsequent acts may •estop him from making any defense, but it is clear that his ■sureties are not liable for a failure on the part of the sheriff to do that which was not required of him. Before these .sureties can be made liable for this tax, it must appear that the sheriff has failed to discharge some duty imposed on him by law with reference to its collection. As the case is now presented, the sheriff was liable as a trespasser in every •instance where he attempted to collect this tax against the will or consent of the tax-payer.
The judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings.