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sale of land for taxes, laid down the rule that "what the law requires to be done for the protection of the tax-payer is mandatory, and cannot be regarded as directory merely." A similar rule was recognized in a recent case in Illinois. Commissioners had been. appointed to ascertain and assess the damage and recompense due to the owners of land which might be taken, on the real estate of the persons benefited by a certain local improvement, in proportion as nearly as might be to the benefits resulting to each. By the statute, when the assessment was completed, the commissioners were to sign and return the same to the * city [* 76] council within forty days of their appointment. This provision was not complied with, but return was made afterwards, and the question was raised as to its validity when thus made. In the opinion of the court, this question was to be decided by ascertaining whether any advantage would be lost, or right destroyed, or benefit sacrificed, either to the public or to any individual, by holding the provision directory. After remarking that they had held an assessment under the general revenue law, returned after the time appointed by law, as void, because the person assessed would lose the benefit of an appeal from the assessment,2 they say of the statute before the court: "There are no negative words used declaring that the functions of the commissioners shall cease after the expiration of the forty days, or that they shall not make their return after that time; nor have we been able to discover the least right, benefit, or advantage which the property owner could derive from having the return made within that time, and not after. No time is limited and made dependent on that time, within which the owner of the property may apply to have the assessment reviewed or corrected. The next section requires the clerk to give ten days' notice that the assessment has been returned, specifying the day when objections may be made to the assessment before the common council by parties interested, which hearing may be adjourned from day to day; and the common council is empowered in its discretion to confirm or annul the assessment altogether, or to refer it back to

1 Clark v. Crane, 5 Mich. 154. See also Shawnee County v. Carter, 2 Kan. 115. In Life Association v. Board of Assessors, 49 Mo. 512, it is held that a constitutional provision that "all property subject to taxation

ought to be taxed in proportion to its value" is a prohibition against its being taxed in any other mode, and the word ought is mandatory.

2 Marsh v. Chestnut, 14 Ill. 223.

the same commissioners, or to others to be by them appointed. As the property owner has the same time and opportunity to prepare himself to object to the assessment and have it corrected, whether the return be made before or after the expiration of the forty days, the case differs from that of Chestnut v. Marsh,1 at the very point on which that case turned. Nor is there any other portion of the chapter which we have discovered, bringing it within the principle of that case, which is the well-recognized rule in all the books." 2

The rule is nowhere more clearly stated than by Chief Justice Shaw, in Torrey v. Milbury," which was also a tax case. [*77] "In considering the various statutes regulating the assessment of taxes, and the measures preliminary thereto, it is not always easy to distinguish which are conditions precedent to the legality and validity of the tax, and which are directory merely, and do not constitute conditions. One rule is very plain

and well settled, that all those measures that are intended for the security of the citizen, for insuring equality of taxation, and to enable every one to know with reasonable certainty for what polls and for what real estate he is taxed, and for what all those who are liable with him are taxed, are conditions precedent; and if they are not observed, he is not legally taxed; and he may resist it in any of the modes authorized by law for contesting the validity of the tax. But many regulations are made by statutes designed for the information of assessors and officers, and intended to promote

1 14 Ill. 223.

2 Wheeler v. Chicago, 24 Ill. 108. 8 21 Pick. 67. We commend in the same connection the views of Lewis, Ch. J., in Corbett v. Bradley, 7 Nev. 108: "When any requirement of a statute is held to be directory, and therefore not material to be followed, it is upon the assumption that the legislature itself so considered it, and did not make the right conferred dependent upon a compliance with the form prescribed for securing it. It is upon this principle that the courts often hold the time designated in a statute, where a thing is to be done, to be directory. No court certainly has the right to hold any requirement

of a law unnecessary to be complied with, unless it be manifest the legislature did not intend to impose the consequence which would naturally follow from a non-compliance, or which would result from holding the requirement mandatory or indispensable. If it be clear that no penalty was intended to be imposed for a non-compliance, then, as a matter of course, it is but carrying out the will of the legislature to declare the statute in that respect to be simply directory. But, if there be any thing to indicate the contrary, a full compliance with it must be enforced." See also Hartford v. Omaha, 4 Neb. 336.

method, system, and uniformity in the modes of proceeding, a compliance or non-compliance with which does in no respect affect the rights of tax-paying citizens. These may be considered directory. Officers may be liable to legal animadversion, perhaps to punishment, for not observing them; but yet their observance is not a condition precedent to the validity of the tax."

We shall quote further only from a single other case upon this point. The Supreme Court of Wisconsin, in considering the validity of a statute not published within the time required by law, "understand the doctrine concerning directory statutes to be this: that where there is no substantial reason why the thing to be done might not as well be done after the time prescribed as before, no presumption that by allowing it to be so done it may work an injury or wrong, nothing in the act itself, or in other acts relating to the same subject-matter, indicating that the legislature did not intend that it should rather be done after the time prescribed than not to be done at all, there the courts assume that the intent was, that if not done within the time prescribed it might be done afterwards. But when any of these reasons intervene, then the limit is established." 1

These cases perhaps sufficiently indicate the rules, so far as any of general application can be declared, which are to be made use of in determining whether the provisions of a statute are mandatory or directory. Those directions which are not of the essence of the thing to be done, but which are given with a view merely *to the proper, orderly, and prompt conduct of the busi- [* 78] ness, and by a failure to obey which the rights of those interested will not be prejudiced, are not commonly to be regarded as mandatory; and if the act is performed, but not in the time or in the precise mode indicated, it may still be sufficient, if that which is done accomplishes the substantial purpose of the statute.2

1 State v. Lean, 9 Wis. 292. See further, for the views of this court on the subject here discussed, Wendel v. Durbin, 26 Wis. 390. The general doctrine of the cases above quoted is approved and followed in French v. Edwards, 13 Wall. 506. In Low v. Dunham, 61 Me. 566, a statute is said to be mandatory where public interests

or rights are concerned, and the public or third persons have a claim de jure that the power shall be exercised. And see Wiley v. Flournoy, 30 Ark. 609.

2 The following, in addition to those cited, are some of the cases in this country in which statutes have been declared directory only: Pond v.

But this rule presupposes that no negative words are employed in the statute which expressly or by necessary implication forbid the doing of the act at any other time or in any other manner than as directed. Even as thus laid down and restricted, the doctrine is one to be applied with much circumspection; for it is not to be denied that the courts have sometimes, in their anxiety to sustain the proceedings of careless or incompetent officers, gone very far in substituting a judicial view of what was essential for that declared by the legislature.'

But the courts tread upon very dangerous ground when they venture to apply the rules which distinguish directory and mandatory statutes to the provisions of a constitution. Constitutions do not usually undertake to prescribe mere rules of proceeding, except when such rules are looked upon as essential to the thing to be done; and they must then be regarded in the light of limitations upon the power to be exercised. It is the province of an instrument of this solemn and permanent character to establish

those fundamental maxims, and fix those unvarying rules, [* 79] by which all * departments of the government must at all times shape their conduct; and if it descends to prescrib

Negus, 3 Mass. 230; Williams v. School District, 21 Pick. 75; City of Lowell v. Hadley, 8 Met. 180; Holland v. Osgood, 8 Vt. 280; Corliss v. Corliss, 8 Vt. 373; People v. Allen, 6 Wend. 486; Marchant v. Langworthy, 6 Hill, 646; Ex parte Heath, 3 Hill, 43; People v. Holley, 12 Wend. 481; Jackson v. Young, 5 Cow. 269; Striker v. Kelley, 7 Hill, 9; People v. Peck, 11 Wend. 604; Matter of Mohawk and Hudson Railroad Co., 19 Wend. 143; People v. Runkel, 9 Johns. 147; Gale v. Mead, 2 Denio, 160; Doughty v. Hope, 3 Denio, 252; Elmendorf v. Mayor, &c. of New York, 25 Wend. 696; Thames Manufacturing Co. v. Lathrop, 7 Conn. 550; Colt v. Eves, 12 Conn. 243; People v. Doe, 1 Mich. 451; Parks v. Goodwin, 1 Doug. (Mich.) 56; Hickey v. Hinsdale, 8 Mich. 267; People v. Hartwell, 12 Mich. 508; State v. McGinley, 4 Ind. 7; Slayton v. Hulings, 7 Ind.

144; New Orleans v. St Rowes, 9 La. An. 573; Edwards v. James, 13 Tex. 52; State v. Click, 2 Ala. 26; Savage v. Walshe, 26 Ala. 620; Sorchan v. Brooklyn, 62 N. Y. 339; People v. Tompkins, 64 N. Y. 53; Limestone Co. v. Rather, 48 Ala. 433; Webster v. French, 12 Ill. 302; McKim v. Weller, 11 Cal. 47; State v. Co. Commissioners of Baltimore, 29 Md. 516; Fry v. Booth, 19 Ohio, N. s. 25; Whalin v. Macomb, 76 Ill. 49; Hurford v. Omaha, 4 Neb. 336; Lackawana Iron Co. v. Little Wolf, 38 Wis. 152; Green v. Warren Co., 10 Bush, 711; Grant v. Spencer, 1 Montana, 136. The list might easily be largely increased.

See upon this subject the remarks of Mr. Sedgwick in his work on Statutory and Constitutional Law, p. 375, and those of Hubbard, J., in Briggs v. Georgia, 15 Vt. 72. Also see Dryfuss r. Dridges, 45 Miss. 247.

ing mere rules of order in unessential matters, it is lowering the proper dignity of such an instrument, and usurping the proper province of ordinary legislation. We are not therefore to expect to find in a constitution provisions which the people, in adopting it, have not regarded as of high importance, and worthy to be embraced in an instrument which, for a time at least, is to control alike the government and the governed, and to form a standard by which is to be measured the power which can be exercised as well by the delegate as by the sovereign people themselves. If directions are given respecting the times or modes of proceeding in which a power should be exercised, there is at least a strong presumption that the people designed it should be exercised in that time and mode only; 1 and we impute to the people a want of due appreciation of the purpose and proper province of such an instrument, when we infer that such directions are given to any other end. Especially when, as has been already said, it is but fair to presume that the people in their constitution have expressed themselves in careful and measured terms, corresponding with the immense importance of the powers delegated, and with a view to leave as little as possible to implication.2

There are some cases, however, where the doctrine of directory statutes has been applied to constitutional provisions; but they are so plainly at variance with the weight of authority upon the precise points considered that we feel warranted in saying that the judicial decisions as they now stand do not sanction the application. In delivering the opinion of the New York Court of Appeals in one case, Mr. Justice Willard had occasion to consider the constitutional provision, that on the final passage of a bill the question shall be taken by ayes and noes, which shall be duly entered upon the journals; and he expressed the opinion that it was only directory to the legislature. The remark was obiter

281.

1 See State v. Johnson, 26 Ark. law being restrictive upon the powers

2 Wolcott v. Wigton, 7 Ind. 49; per Bronson, J., in People v. Purdy, 2 Hill, 36; Greencastle Township v. Black, 5 Ind. 566; Opinions of Judges, 6 Shep. 458. See People v. Lawrence, 36 Barb. 177; State v. Johnson, 26 Ark. 281. "The essential nature and object of constitutional

of the several departments of government, it is difficult to comprehend how its provisions can be regarded as merely directory." Nicholson, Ch. J., in Cannon v. Mathes, 8 Heisk. 504, 517.

People v. Supervisors of Chenango, 8 N. Y. 328.

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