delivered the opinion of the coubt.
When the assessor called at the appellee’s house to take her list, she was not at home, and he returned her list the same as the year before. On notice to her, the board of supervisors raised .her list $30,000. She appealed from this decision to the county judge, who held that the burden of proof was on her to show that the assessment was wrong. She declined to introduce any proof, and, her appeal having been dismissed, she appealed to the circuit court, which sustained her contention. Several points have been argued by counsel, but we deem it necessary to notice only two.
Section 4128 of ■ the Kentucky Statutes provides: “Any informality or irregularity in the execution of their duties as supervisors, and any failure of duty on their part, shall not render any assessment invalid. But any tax-payer feeling himself aggrieved by the action of said board of supervisors, may appeal to the judge of the cpunty court within ten days after the final adjournment of said board. It shall be the duty of the county attorney to appear and defend for the board.” Appellee proceeded under this section on her appeal to the judge of the county court from the action of the board of supervisors. The section allows an appeal *304to “any tax-payer feeling himself aggrieved by the action of the said board of supervisors,” and it would seem incumbent on the appellant in such cases to manifest to che county judge his grievance. It should be presumed, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, that the board of supervisors acted correctly. This presumption is universally made in favor of official acts, and there are peculiar reasons why it should be indulged in favor of the action of a board taken, upon notice to the party affected, on evidence heard before the board. Our whole assessment system rests on the fact that it lays hold of the conscience of the tax-payer. He is required to make a minute list, under oath, of his property; and, when he complains of the action of the assessor or the board of supervisors, the same appeal to his conscience should be required. Any other rule would allow great abuses. The county judge properly dismissed appellee’s appeal. The only other question that need be noticed is, does any appeal lie from a decision of the county judge, under the section quoted?
In Ward v. Beale, 91 Ky. 60, [14 S. W., 967,] it was held that the action of the board of supervisors, under the law in force before the adoption of the Kentucky Statutes, was final, and that no appeal lay from their decisions to the courts. The assessment of property for taxation lies at the very basis of civil government, because without the assessment there can be no taxation, and the government will be without means of subsistence. If appeals may be taken to the courts by all tax-payers aggrieved in the assessment of their property, the public revenues may be seriously affected, and a great increase of litigation placed upon the courts. The Legislature of this State has, for these reasons, manifested for many *305years a disposition to confine the decision of these questions to other agencies, and to keep 'them away from the judiciary. The statute in question allows an appeal within ten days to the judge of the county court. No further appeal is provided for, and we do not think it was contemplated that the propriety of an assessment should be carried by appeals from the board of supervisors to the county judge, and from his decision to the circuit court and to this court. It is the duty of the county attorney to appear and defend for the board .on the hearing before the county judge, but nothing is provided as to any other proceeding, as to how it shall be taken, or when; and no provision is made for a defense by the board, except on the hearing before the county judge. It is not the character of question upon which an appeal ought to be taken to the courts, and we are disinclined to allow one by inference, contrary to the entire legislative policy of this State, where the consequences would so imperil the public interest. The object in creating the board of supervisors was to get a local board well acquainted with the people and property of the county, and so to secure a fair assessment of the property of the tax-payers. It seems to us that, when the judgment of this board has been ap-. proved by the county judge, Who is also necessarily well acquainted throughout his county, justice will more likely be done all parties interested than by a trial before a court that, of necessity, is not so well qualified to decide these questions. The public interest requires that these questions should not be drawn into extended litigation, and for this reason the time for an appeal from the board of supervisors to the county judge is limited to ten days after the adjournment of the board. Soon after the action of the board is taken, the clerk is required to copy *306the lists, and furnish them to the collecting officers. It was evidently contemplated that all questions relating to the propriety of the action of the board of supervisors should be settled before this was done, and we do not think that it was contemplated that an appeal should be taken to the courts from the ruling of the county judge on these matters. The judgment of the court below is therefore reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to it to discharge the injunction granted herein and dismiss the proceeding.