
    Benjamin and others vs. Hull.
    The site of a district school house must he designated hy the inhabitants in district meeting,; they have no power to delegate the authority to the trustees; and where they do so and vote a tax to be levied for the building of a school house on a site to be designated by the trustees, the proceeding is illegal, and the trustees become trespassers for the taking of property under a warrant issued for the collection of such tax.
    
      It seems that a tax for building a school house may be levied and collected before any designation by lhe inhabitants of a site for its erection.
    Whether a warrant for the collection of such a tax can properly be renewed more than once, quere.
    
    Whore a tax has been levied, and the trustees have been sued in trespass and the money received by them recovered back, they have no power to renew the warrant and direct the levy of the same tax, or any part thereof.
    Hull sued Benjamin, Griffin and Seamans, before a justice in an action of trespass for taking a horse. The defendants were trustees of a school district. After the organization of the district the first district meeting was appointed to be holden on the 5th June, 1833. Although the notice was insufficient, a meeting was held, trustees elected, a site designated for building a school house, and a tax of $200 voted for building the house. The proceedings being void, the commissioners of common schools renewed the notice and a second meeting was held on the 7t.h October, 1833, at which the district was duly organized by the choice of proper officers; and it was “ Resolved, that the site of the school house shall be established where the trustees of the said district shall think proper, it may be, for the most convenient accommodation of said district. It was further resolved, that the trustees procure a title to the land “ on which said school house shall be located,” and that a tax of $300 be levied “ for the building of said school house and procuring a title to the land on which said school house shall [438] stand.” On the 28th October, 1833, the trustees issued a warrant for the collection of the tax; the tax of the plaintiff Hull, as set down in the tax list, being upwards of $26. The warrant was renewed by the trustees nine several times, the last renewal being on the 10th January, 1835. In March, 1834, the collector levied and sold a, cart- and harrow belonging to the plaintiff, and in that way collected the whole amount of his tax. The plaintiff sued the trustees in an action of trespass for taking the cart and harrow, and recovered judgment for $27’14, besides costs. The trustees afterwards altered and renewed the warrant in the hands of the collector, and required him to levy a tax of $16-01 of the plaintiff. In October, 1834, the collector proceeded to collect the last mentioned tax, and for that purpose took the horse of the plaintiff; and for that taking this action was brought. There was a trial by jury before the justice, and judgment for the defendants. On certiorari to the common pleas judgment was reversed, and the trustees now bring error.
    
      C. Johnston, for plaintiffs in error.
    
      S. Barculo, for defendant in error.
   By the Court,

Bronson, J.

It is agreed that the first district meeting was irregular, and the commissioners for that cause renewed the notice for a meeting in October (1 R. S. 477, §57). The proceedings of the first meet ing were utterly nugatory; and we can no more regard them as valid in relation to the site for a school house, than we can in relation to the choice of trustees or the voting of a tax.

The inhabitants when duly assembled in a district meeting, have power among other things to designate a site for the district school house. § 61. The trustees have power to purchase or lease a site for the school house, as designated by a meeting of the district, and to build the house. § 75. The inhabitants could not delegate their power to the trustees (Robinson [439] v. Dodge, 18 Johns. R. 351). In this case the resolution to levy a tax, stands directly connected with that authorizing the trustees to fix the site of the house. The inhabitants first resolved that “ the site of the school house shall be established where the trustees of said district shall think proper; and then, that the trustees procure a title to the land on which said school house should be located,” and that a tax of $300 be levied “ for the building of said school house and procuring a title to the land.” The case falls within the principle of Baker v. Freeman (9 Wendell, 36). It may be conceded that a tax for building a school house can be levied and collected before the inhabitants have designated a site for the building; but here the tax was voted for an illegal purpose; to build a school house “ where the trustees of said district shall think proper; ” and there was, I think, no authority to issue the warrant.

But there is another and a fatal objection to this proceeding. Without noticing the questionable power to renew the warrant more than once, § 89, the whole amount of the plaintiff’s tax was levied and collected by a sale of his property, and the power of the trustees was then clearly at an end. They went afterwards to the collector and altered the tax list, so as to require the collection of a different sum from the plaintiff, and on that altered process the property in question was taken. For what purpose this alteration was made, has not been explained. It seems probable, however, that the trustees, after they had been sued and judgment had been recovered against them for the first levy, thought themselves authorized to.collect the whole or some portion of the tax over again. In this they were mistaken. If the judgment against them was erroneous, their remedy was by appeal to the common pleas. They had no right to reverse the judgment themselves, as they virtually did, by ordering a part of the tax to be levied a second time. Such a doctrine can never be tolerated. This warrant has been kept on foot by various renewals, from October, 1833, to January, 1835; and I know not but it may yet be alive, if the trustees have power to continue its vitality. Should we sanction the principle on which they acted in altering the tax list, they may, as often as they are adjudged trespassers for collecting [440] the tax, order the whole or some portion of it collected again; and there would never be an end of the strife. If, under any possible circumstances, the trustees would be authorized to collect the tax a second time, the burden rests on them of showing the right. The common pleas decided correctly.

Judgment affirmed.  