Court Opinion

ID: 3866368
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:00:13.030217+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:23:44.719991
License: Public Domain

The questions submitted assume that the assessment was made on May 10, 1897, on which day the assessors signed the assessment roll and deposited it with the city clerk. We think, however, that the assessment must be deemed to have been made on February 27, 1897, the day following the last date on which the tax-payers were notified to bring in an account of their ratable estate. The property of a tax-payer and his financial condition are liable to change from day to day. For this reason it may well be doubted whether notice to tax-payers to bring in their accounts in February would give validity to an assessment made so long afterwards as May 10th. McTwiggan v. Hunter, 18 R.I. 776. Moreover, to require the assessors to follow all changes that might take place in the holdings of property while the preparation of the assessment roll was in progress would be exceedingly inconvenient, if not impracticable.
The assessment in legal contemplation having been made as of February 27, 1897, the subsequent conveyances referred to in the statement are subject to it. If the whole tax covering the several parcels taxed to the devisees of John S. Langley is paid by the holder of one of the parcels, to prevent the sale of his parcel, we think he would be entitled to *Page 352 
recover from those who have acquired the other parcels the proportions of the tax which equitably should be paid on account of those parcels.