Apgar v. . Hayward

18 N.E. 85, 110 N.Y. 225, 18 N.Y. St. Rep. 169, 65 Sickels 225, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 872
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 2, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 18 N.E. 85 (Apgar v. . Hayward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Apgar v. . Hayward, 18 N.E. 85, 110 N.Y. 225, 18 N.Y. St. Rep. 169, 65 Sickels 225, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 872 (N.Y. 1888).

Opinion

Danforth, J.

The action is against the defendants, as commissioners of taxes and assessments in the city of New York, for acts done by them in the year 1881, in consequence of which the plaintiff charges that his property and that of other persons, his assignors, was taken and applied to the payment of taxes illegally imposed. Upon trial in the Superior Court of the city of New York, it appeared that the plaintiff and his assignors were residents of New York city, and owners respectively of certain shares in the North River Bank, an institution located in the Third ward of that city, with a capital of $240,000, divided into 8,000 shares; that in January, 1881, the annual record of assessed valuations of real and personal estate was filed in the office of the commissioners of taxes, and *228 upon that record the real estate of the bank was valued at $96,000, of which $94,800 was the assessed value of its banking house. Upon the same record the names of the plaintiff and his assignors appear as holders of shares with an “ assessed valuation” at the rate of $23 per share. This sum was reached by allowing each shareholder in the assessed valuation of their shares the benefit of a reduction from their real value in the same proportion as the assessed value of the real estate of the bank bore to the whole amount of its capital stock. In that respect the commissioners are sustained by the act of 1866 (Laws of 1866, chap. 161). This act prohibits any assessment upon bank capital, but leaves its real estate subject to the same taxation as is that of other owners, and makes the stockholders in the bank liable to assessment on the value of their shares after deducting therefrom the assessed value of the real estate of the bank. The commissioners, therefore, in the course of their official duty, first spread that assessed value, viz., $96,000, over 8,000 shares, making $12 to be applied on each share, and then fixed the assessed value of such share at $23. This shows the actual value of the share, according to the estimate of the commissioners, to have been $35. Up to this point no-complaint is made of the action of the commissioners. They, however, subsequently changed the assessed value from $23 to $28, thus adding $5 per share, making in gross an 'addition upon the 8,000 shares of $40,000, and the real question in the case is, whether the change was within the authority of the defendants. The court below held that it was not, and as it appeared that the tax was collected, judgment was awarded against the defendants for the entire tax upon the valuation of $28 per share of the stock held by the plaintiff and his assignors.

In any view of the case we think there is error in the judgment. It is not denied that the shares were liable to taxation to-some extent. Indeed, the plaintiff’s claim concedes that the assessed valuation was correctly made. His contention is that the increase, by the corrected valuation, was illegal. It is not claimed, however, that the commissioners acted in bad *229 faith, or from an ill motive, or with any other purpose than the performance of official duty, and from these circumstances it would, at least, follow that their liability could not exceed the actual damages sustained by the taxpayer. Those damages, if any, are represented by the difference between the sum due under the assessed valuation, and the sum called for by the corrected valuation, viz., $5 per share. But another objection is taken by the appellants, which goes to the foundation of the action, and the conclusion to which we have come on that makes it unnecessary to discuss the former. This objection is based upon the provisions of the statute which confers jurisdiction upon the defendants as “tax commissioners of the city of New York.” As such they constitute a board which superseded the offices of ward assessors and commissioners of taxes theretofore existing in that city. (Laws of 1859, chap. 302.) Their jurisdiction extends throughout the city, and under their direction all the taxable property therein is to be assessed (§ T), and its “ assessed valuation ” entered in books to be kept by them and called “ the annual record of the assessed valuation of real and personal estate.” These books are required to be. open for examination and correction from the second Monday of January to the first day of May in each year, with notice by advertisement of that fact, in such manner as they may deem advisable, and are to be then closed to enable the commissioners to prepare assessment-rolls of the several wards for delivery to the aldermen.

The statute also provides (§ 10) that during the time above mentioned application may be made by any person considering himself aggrieved by the assessed valuation of his real or personal estate, to have the same corrected, requires the commissioners to examine the complaint, and declares that “ if, in their judgment, the assessment is erroneous, they shall cause the same to be corrected.”

The plaintiff in this case was the president of the North ¡River Bank, and on the 30th day of April, 1881, and, therefore, within the time prescribed for such application, he caused to be presented to the commissioners the petition of the bank, *230 signed by himself as its president, alleging that the assessed value of the banking-house, viz., $94,800, was too high by at least two-thirds, and prayed that it be reduced accordingly. Upon hearing and examination the petition was to some extent granted, and on the thirtieth day of April the assessed valuation of the property was fixed at $54,800, a reduction of $40,000. Uo complaint was made as to the gross valuation of the shares, and it seems obvious, in view of the act of 1866 (supra), that the diminution in the assessed value of the real estate required a change in the assessed value of the shares, otherwise the value of the shares would not be assessed, and a portion of the property of the bank would escape taxation. Upon the assumption that the real estate of the bank was worth $94,800, so much was credited to the stockholder and the balance only of the share assessed. If the original assessment of the real estate was erroneous, it is clear that its correction made necessary some correction or alteration in the assessment to the shareholder, and the making of such correction or alteration was within the jurisdiction of the commissioners and within the scope of their authority, unless restrained by a provision of the act, that of 1859, already referred to. It is provided by section 11 of that act that the commissioners may, at any time before the second day of April in each year, increase the assessed valuation of any real or personal estate, as in their judgment may be necessary for the equalization of taxation^ “ but”—and upon the construction given to this clause the plaintiff has so far succeeded in the action — “ but they shall not increase such valuation after said books are open for examination and review, except upon notice being given to the party affected by such increase, twenty days before the closing of the books.” There is an incongruity in these statutes which renders it impossible to adapt this provision to that embodied in section 10 of the act of 1859, and at the same time give proper effect to chapter '161 of the Laws of 1866 (supra). By the latter the assessed valuation of the shares of stock, personal property, depends upon the assessed valuation of the real estate of the bank.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 N.E. 85, 110 N.Y. 225, 18 N.Y. St. Rep. 169, 65 Sickels 225, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 872, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/apgar-v-hayward-ny-1888.