Brevoort v. . the City of Brooklyn

89 N.Y. 128, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 198
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 2, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 89 N.Y. 128 (Brevoort v. . the City of Brooklyn) 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
Brevoort v. . the City of Brooklyn, 89 N.Y. 128, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 198 (N.Y. 1882).

Opinion

Earl, J.

The complaint alleges that at a tax sale held in the city of Brooklyn in June, 1864, for unpaid taxes assessed in 3 862, the plaintiff purchased several lots of land and paid therefor in the aggregate $342.66 and that it was “ then and there expressly agreed by the defendant with the plaintiff that if there was any irregularity in the proceedings prior to said sale the said purchase-money should be repaid to the plaintiff, provided the certificates which were then and there delivered to the plaintiff and numbered be surrendered to the collector; ” that the taxes assessed, on the lots so purchased, for the year 1862 were void because the assessment-roll was not at the time it was delivered to the board of supervisors, or at any other time, sworn to or verified as required by law; that the plaintiff, on the 11th day of April, 1878, tendered such certificates to the registrar of arrears, to the collector of taxes ■ and assessments, and to the comptroller of the city, and offered to surrender the same to each of them; and the complaint also alleges that in *131 October, 1875, at a public auction held by the registrar of arrears in the city of Brooklyn for the sale of property for unpaid taxes pursuant to law, the city of Brooklyn purchased a lot of land assessed for the taxes of 1872, and a certificate of the sale was made to it,which certificate contained a provision that if any irregularity should be discovered in the proceedings prior to the sale, the purchase-money should be repaid to the purchaser or his assigns, provided the certificate should be surrendered to the registrar of arrears; that in March, 1878, the plaintiff paid to the registrar at his request the sum of $623.80, being an amount equal to an amount which would be required to redeem the lot sold on the day last mentioned, whereupon the registrar, for and in consideration of such payment, assigned-to him all the right, title and interest of the city in the certificate and delivered the same to him, and that he has ever since been the holder and owner thereof; that the tax for which the sale was made was void because the assessment-roll for the year 1872, in which the tax was laid, was not sworn to or verified as required by law; that in April, 1878, he tendered the certificate to the registrar of arrears and to the comptroller of the city and offered to surrender the same to each of them ; that on the 11th day of April, 1878, he presented a claim for the repayment to him of the two sums of money before mentioned, with interest, to the chief fiscal officer of the defendant; and j udgment was demanded for the two sums with interest. The defendant demurred to the complaint upon the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The demurrer was overruled at Special Term, and upon appeal to the General Term it was sustained and judgment given thereon to the defendant.

Section 31 of title 4 of chapter 384 of the Laws of 1854, as amended by section 21 of chapter 63 of the Laws of 1862, requires that the corrected assessment-roll of each ward in the city should be sworn to by at least two of the assessors, according to the oath provided by law in regard to assessment-rolls in the different towns in this State,” and further to the effect that “ they have together personally examined, within the year past, *132 each and every lot or parcel of land, house, building or other assessable property within the ward.” The plaintiff alleges that the only verification of the assessment-roll was by an affidavit containing the statements provided by law for assessment-rolls in the different-towns in this State, and a copy of the oath attached to each of the assessment-rolls is annexed to the complaint ; but the further oath as to the personal examination of each and every lot or parcel of land within the year was wholly omitted. The claim of the plaintiff is that this defect in the assessment-rolls rendered them wholly void, and that the tax sales made under them were absolutely void, and we are of that opinion.

It was the duty of the assessors to make a fair, just and intelligent assessment of property liable to taxation, so that the burden of taxes could be equally and ratably distributed among the tax payers ; and to secure a faithful performance of that duty the law required a prescribed oath to be taken. The purpose of the oath was to require, not only a valuation of the real estate to be assessed, but also a personal examination of all the parcels of real estate within the preceding year, so that the valuation might be intelligently and properly made.

Before the property of one can be compulsorily taken for the payment of taxes or assessments, the substantial requirements of the statute intended for his benefit or protection must be strictly followed. In Van Rensselaer v. Witbeck (7 N. Y. 517), the certificate, which the assessors of the town were then required to annex to the assessment-roll, was defective, and it was held that where a statute prescribes the form of the certificate to be signed by the assessors and attached to their roll, a substantial compliance with its terms is necessary to give jurisdiction to the board of supervisors to impose a tax and issue their warrant to the collector thereon, and that without such a certificate the assessment-roll is fatally defective. The broad doctrine of that case is now the well-settled law of this State. In Westfall v. Preston (49 N. Y. 349), Allen, J., speaking of that case, said: The salutary doctrines of that *133 case cannot be disregarded without encouraging a laxity in the discharge of official duty and endangei'ing the rights of the citizen.” He also said: “A substantial compliance with the statute in the measures preliminary to the taxation of persons and property in all matters which are of the substance of the procedure and designed for the protection of the tax payer and the preservation of his rights is a condition precedent to the legality and validity of the tax,” and that a substantial compliance with the- terms of the statute prescribing the verification of the assessment-roll is necessary to give the board of supervisors jurisdiction to impose a tax and issue their warrant to the collector for its collection. In that case the verification of the assessment-roll was made before the time for its final completion, to-wit, the third Tuesday of August, and it was held to be an absolute nullity, and that the supervisors had no jurisdiction to impose a tax upon the persons or property named in the assessment-roll. In Bellinger v. Gray (51 N. Y. 610), Mr. Commissioner Reynolds held that an assessment-roll not verified by one of the assessors, and not accompanied by a certificate of the other assessors, stating the cause of such omission (1 R. S. 394, § 30), was defective, and that the omission to properly verify it was fatal to its validity. In Bradley v. Ward (58 N. Y. 401), Oh lech, Ch.

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Bluebook (online)
89 N.Y. 128, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brevoort-v-the-city-of-brooklyn-ny-1882.