Baldwin Union Free School District v. County of Nassau

9 N.E.3d 351, 22 N.Y.3d 606
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 18, 2014
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 9 N.E.3d 351 (Baldwin Union Free School District v. County of Nassau) 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
Baldwin Union Free School District v. County of Nassau, 9 N.E.3d 351, 22 N.Y.3d 606 (N.Y. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Abdus-Salaam, J.

In this case, we are presented with, essentially, the following question: may Nassau County pass a local law that shifts the obligation to pay real property tax refunds from the County to its individual taxing districts, thereby superseding a special state tax law? We answer this question in the negative. The State Constitution vests in the State and the counties only a definite and circumscribed set of powers. Beyond its constitutional authority, neither a county nor the State can act, regardless of the perceived wisdom of its conduct or the nobility of its aims. In the case before us, Nassau County ran afoul of these precepts by exceeding its statutory and constitutional authority in its attempt to supersede a special state tax law.

[612]*612I

These two hybrid CPLR article 78 proceedings/declaratory judgment actions and one declaratory judgment action arise from the intersection of the State’s constitutional taxation power, Nassau County’s long history of substantial home rule and the State’s passage, at the County’s request, of a law that designates real property tax refunds as a county charge.

A

To understand some of the County’s present claims regarding the scope and origin of its power to pass local legislation, we must look to the genesis of those powers in the early 20th century. In the late 1930s, Nassau County elected to adopt an alternative form of government established by state legislation, and the County acquired local legislative powers under a state-drafted Charter and Administrative Code pursuant to article IX, § 2 of the 1938 State Constitution (see L 1936, ch 879; L 1937, ch 618, § 2; L 1939, ch 700, §§ 1-2; Nassau County Charter §§ 150-153). Under the Charter as amended by the Administrative Code, the County could levy taxes and “provide by ordinance a plan, not inconsistent with the terms of this [charter], for the assessment of property for tax purposes . . . the levy of taxes, the collection of taxes, [and] the accrual of penalties” (Nassau County Charter § 2201 [L 1936, ch 879, § 2201]; see Nassau County Charter § 103 [6] [L 1936, ch 879, § 103 (6)]). As will be explained (see infra part III), section 151 of the Charter forms the crux of the County’s appellate argument in the instant case. That section, entitled “Effect of local law on acts of State Legislature,” stated that, “[i]n adopting a local law changing or superseding any provision of an act of the State Legislature which provision does not in terms and in effect apply alike to all counties” (Nassau County Charter § 151 [L 1937, ch 618, § 2]), otherwise known as a “[s]pecial law” of the State (NY Const, art IX, § 3 [d] [4]), “the County Legislature shall specify the chapter number, year of enactment, title of statute, section, subsection or subdivision, which it is intended to change or supersede, but the failure so to specify shall not affect the validity of such local law” (Nassau County Charter § 151 [L 1937, ch 618, § 2]).

In addition, at the time of the Charter’s adoption, the County’s Board of Assessors conducted real property tax assessments and maintained the tax rolls (see generally Nassau County Charter §§ 601-607 [L 1936, ch 879, §§ 601-607]). The [613]*613County Board of Supervisors would pay any real property tax refunds resulting from assessment errors to the taxpayers and then deduct the refunded amounts from the budgets of the taxing districts wherein the particular taxpayers resided (see Nassau County Charter § 122 [L 1936, ch 673, § 11]).

B

In 1948, the County Board of Supervisors sent a home rule message to the state legislature, requesting that the Administrative Code be amended to obligate the County, rather than the taxing districts, to pay any refunds resulting from the County’s erroneous assessment of real property taxes. In response, the legislature enacted chapter 851 of the Laws of 1948, which amended the County’s Administrative Code to provide as follows:

“Notwithstanding any provisions of this chapter, or any other general or special law to the contrary, any deficiency existing or hereafter arising from a decrease in an assessment or tax ... or by reason of exemptions or reductions of assessments shall be a county charge.” (Nassau County Administrative Code § 6-26.0 [b] [3] [c] [L 1948, ch 851, § 2]).

The amendment also stated that, in a proceeding to review such tax assessments or refunds (also called a tax certiorari proceeding), the party challenging the assessment had to serve any papers in connection with such a proceeding on the County’s Board of Assessors and not on “the clerk of any school district” (Nassau County Administrative Code § 6-17.3 [L 1948, ch 851, §3]). The newly amended section of the Administrative Code was commonly called the “County Guaranty.”

That same year, the legislature amended the Nassau County Charter to set forth a new procedure for tax extension, whereby the County’s assessors would project the taxes to be paid on a given property for the coming year (see Nassau County Charter § 607 [L 1948, ch 98, § 1]). The amended Charter also stated that “[a]ny surplus existing or hereafter arising from the extension of taxes in excess of amounts raised for the adopted budgets shall be credited to the county, and any deficiencies existing or hereafter arising from the extension of taxes for the adopted budgets shall be a county charge” (id.).

Explaining the purpose of the County Guaranty and the related amendments to the Charter, the County Attorney wrote to the Governor’s counsel that, in light of the fact that it was the county government

[614]*614“whose members [we]re charged with the duty of preparing the assessment roles and extending the taxes, it [wa]s deemed to be in the best interests of the County of Nassau that section 607 of the Nassau County Government Law be amended to provide that any surplus existing or [thereafter arising from taxes in excess of the amounts raised for the adopted budgets shall be credited to the county, and any deficiencies existing or [thereafter arising from the extension of taxes for the adopted budgets shall be a county charge.” (Letter from County Attorney, Feb. 25, 1948 at 2, Bill Jacket, L 1948, ch 98).

The County Attorney reiterated this point in a second letter to the Governor’s counsel (see Letter from County Attorney, Mar. 8, 1948 at 2, Bill Jacket, L 1948, ch 851). The legislation’s sponsor in the State Assembly wrote to the Governor’s counsel to express a similar intent to make the County responsible for the relevant refunds because the County had made the assessment errors which the refunds were meant to correct (see Assembly Sponsor’s Mem, Bill Jacket, L 1948, ch 851 at 7-10; see also Matter of Steel Los III/Goya Foods, Inc. v Board of Assessors of County of Nassau, 10 NY3d 445, 453-454 [2008] [summarizing legislative intent behind the Guaranty]).

After the passage of the County Guaranty, the legislature enacted the Real Property Tax Law, which remains in effect today and requires that, in counties other than Nassau County, real property tax refunds be charged to the individual taxing districts within each county (see RPTL 726 [1]). Regarding Nassau County, however, the RPTL leaves the County Guaranty and its tax certiorari notice provisions intact (see RPTL 712 [2-a]).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 N.E.3d 351, 22 N.Y.3d 606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-union-free-school-district-v-county-of-nassau-ny-2014.