Mandelbaum v. The People, 75 U.S. 310 (1868)
U.S. Supreme Court
Mandelbaum v. The People, 75 U.S. 8 Wall. 310 310 (1868)Mandelbaum v. The People
75 U.S. (8 Wall.) 310
Syllabus
It is error entitling the aggrieved party to a reversal for a court, on motion of a plaintiff, to strike out of an answer that which constitutes a good defense and on which the defendant may chiefly rely.
The suit was brought by the territory against Mandelbaum and Klauber, in a district court, to recover from them the amount of certain taxes, which the county assessor had assessed upon property alleged to be theirs, to-wit, upon goods in a store in Carson City, of the assessed value of $70,000; upon twenty tons of hay, at $800; upon goods in store at Kinkead & Harrington's, at $6,500; upon timber for a barn, at $600; and upon one hundred tons of hay in Mr. Ormsby's storehouse, at $4,000, the property of the defendants -- the whole amounting to $81,900. The different kinds of tax and the amount of the assessment were specified.
In an amended complaint, it was declared that the tax was assessed between the first Monday of August, 1862, and the last Saturday in October of the same year, that the property had not been assessed in the regular list of assessments, and that it was entered in the tax list of the county under the head of subsequent assessments.
The answer of the defendants set forth that the property described in the complaint was fraudulently and wrongfully assessed and was not subject to taxation for the year 1862 because, as they say, the hay so described was a part of a growing crop for the year, produced from their ranch in
Douglass County, and was not cut or removed from this county until after the first Monday in August of that year, and long after they had been duly assessed for all their taxable property in this county, including said ranch, which was taxed at a valuation of between nine and ten thousand dollars, and taxes upon which had been fully paid.
The answer further set forth that of the said extra amount of goods, some seven or eight thousand dollars in value constituted their stock of goods at Genoa, in Douglass County, and was included in the assessment and payment of taxes in that county, and had been brought and added to their stock in their store in Ormsby County; that the remainder of said extra amount of goods mentioned in the complaint was not the property of the defendants, nor was the same within the County of Ormsby until long after they were assessed and taxed and the taxes paid in said county; that said extra goods were purchased from the proceeds of their business houses in the Counties of Ormsby and Douglas, the sale of their goods and other property, and proceeds of their business generally, all of which had been assessed in said counties and the taxes paid for the year 1862, long before the making of the pretended assessment in the complaint; that the timbers and lumber for a barn were not the property of the defendants until after the assessment and taxes paid for the year 1862, and were obtained in the course of their business after this assessment.
This answer was verified under oath.
The next step in the cause, as appeared from the record, was that on the motion of the plaintiff, the court struck out so much of the answer as had no relation to the payment of the taxes on the seven or eight thousand dollars of property described in the complaint and which was alleged in the answer to have been taxed in Douglass County. This in effect struck out the defense set up to all the property assessed and taxed as charged in the complaint except the item above specified. The issue left was then tried by the court, which held that the defendants had proved payment of a tax on $5,800 worth of property, and gave judgment in favor of
the tax to the amount of $1,522 and costs of suit. To all which the defendant's counsel excepted.
The court found the following facts:
"That the allegations in the complaint are true; also that as to the property assessed, as set forth in the complaint, the defendants were assessed in Douglass County for the sum of $5,800 on property in the year 1862, and paid taxes on the same, for which they are entitled to a credit."
The case was then carried to the supreme court of the territory, where the judgment was affirmed.
By the statutes of the territory of 29 November, 1861, the regular or annual assessment of taxes is made between the first Monday of March and the first Monday of August in each year, and the tax list is to be completed on or before the last-named day. Then the assessor annexes his warrant to it, and delivers the same with a may of the tax to the clerk of the board of commissioners.
It is also provided in the same act that the assessor, at any time subsequent to the first Monday of August and prior to the last Saturday in October, may assess any property which shall not be on the regular list, and he shall enter such assessment in a separate portion of the tax list, under the head of "subsequent assessments."