Chamberlain v. Sherman

53 Misc. 474, 103 N.Y.S. 239
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 53 Misc. 474 (Chamberlain v. Sherman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chamberlain v. Sherman, 53 Misc. 474, 103 N.Y.S. 239 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

Foote, J.

The evidence in this cause was taken at the Wayne Equity Term, and the case has since been argued and submitted upon briefs of counsel.

It involves the right of the assessors of the town of Sodus in Wayne county to subject about 575 acres of land, belonging to the plaintiff in the town of Huron, to taxation in the adjoining town of Sodus, and to collect and appropriate the tax to the use of the latter town. The plaintiff is the owner of upward of 1,300 acres of land through which the division line between the towns of Sodus and Huron runs, so that about 575 acres lie in the town of Huron and the remainder in the town of Sodus. This division line runs north and south, and plaintiff’s lands adjoin it on either side for a distance of upward of one mile. By reason of certain bonded indebtedness the tax rate in Huron is greater than in Sodus.

Plaintiff’s contention is that these lands constitute a farm within the intent and meaning of section 10 of the Tax Law (Laws of 1890, chap. 908), which is as follows: “If a farm or lot is divided by a line between two or more tax districts, it shall be assessed in the tax district in which the dwelling house or • other principal buildings are located, in the manner provided by section nine of this chapter, the same as though such farm or lot was wholly in such tax district.”

The plaintiff derived title to all these lands by inheritance from her father in 1880. Her father purchased the portion lying in the town of Sodus in 1868 from Alexander Duncan, and within a few years thereafter he acquired title to the adjoining lands in the town of Huron by purchasing from several different owners. At the time of his purchase there were several dwelling-houses and sets of farm buildings upon the tract in each of the towns. At the time of the assessments in question there were twelve dwelling-houses upon the whole tract, seven of which were situate in the town of Huron and five in the town of Sodus. The cleared land in the town of Huron is between four and five hundred acres, and in the town of Sodus about 325 acres. The rest is forest and there is also considerable marsh land and highways not [476]*476included in the estimate of about 1,335 acres for the whole tract. Neither the plaintiff nor her father ever resided upon this tract. The plaintiff resides in the village of Lyons. In the years 1903 and 1904 and for some years prior the plaintiff’s son, Frederick W. Chamberlain, managed the plaintiff’s business upon this tract, and resided in one of the dwelling-houses upon the tract situate in the town of Sodus, which is the largest and most valuable of the twelve dwellings. He was employed upon a salary and had the use of this dwelling as a part of his compensation. All the other dwellings are occupied by the employees upon the tract and their families. Near the principal dwelling-house, occupied by plaintiff’s son and in the town of Sodus, arc bams and a' warehouse, and many of the crops, after they are harvested, are drawn to and stored in these buildings from both sides of the tract. Farming operations are carried on on all the tillable land, and horses and cattle and farm implements are kept at the various barns, but at all times they are used indiscriminately upon all parts of the tract. There are orchards near most of the dwelling-houses and most of the cultivated fields are fenced, but there is no division fence separating that part of the tract in Huron from the part in Sodus. ' A considerable part of this division line runs through timber lands and is not in any way marked on the ground.

Prior to the year 1903, that part of the tract located in Huron had always been assessed separately in that town, and that part located in Sodus in that town,' but in the year 1903, and prior to the assessment for that year, section 10 of the Tax Law was amended so as to require a farm divided by a line between two tax districts to be assessed in the district in which “ the dwelling-house or' other principal buildings are located.” Thereupon the assessors of the town of Sodus, deeming the statute applicable, assessed the whole tract for that year and the following year, and plaintiff has paid the tax upon the whole tract to the tax collector of the town of Sodus. Nevertheless, the assessors of the town of Huron continued to assess the portion located in that town, and the tax in that town for the year 1903 not having been [477]*477paid, it was reassessed by the-board of supervisors in the year 1904 and, together with the tax for that year, included in a warrant issued to the collector for the town of Huron, who levied upon and sold certain of the plaintiffs personal property located upon this tract in that town, which was bid in for the plaintiff by her son; and, for the amount so bid, being the full amount of the tax for both years, namely, $331.'30, this action is brought against the defendants, the assessors of the town of Huron.

Except for a brief period between 1872 and 1886, the statutes of this State from an early day have provided for the assessment of a farm or lot divided by a line between two tax districts as a whole in the district where the owner resides; yet few cases have arisen in the whole history of the State calling for an interpretation by the courts of the precise meaning to be given to the words “farm or lot” in these statutes, and none of the cases, either in this or other States where similar statutes exist, to which my attention has been called, are so similar as to afford a guide for the determination of this case.

The plaintiff’s lands have been commonly designated in the locality as the “ Shaker Tract.” They are not generally referred to as a farm. ¡Nevertheless, they are largely devoted to farm purposes and increasingly so as the timber is removed. That part located in the town of Huron is sometimes called the “Hunter Tract,” a considerable part of it having been owned and in part cleared and cultivated by a man named Hunter, who built and occupied the principal dwelling on that part of the tract. It would not, perhaps, be improper to designate this whole Shaker Tract as a farm, and yet, with equal accuracy, each section of the tract on which is located a separate dwelling-house and farm buildings and orchard may be called a separate farm. It is clear that the number of acres contained in the whole tract is not controlling upon the question as to whether it constitutes one or more farms; and, so long as it is all held in one ownership and operated together by the owner, I think it may be fairly said to constitute a farm within the intent and meaning of the statute.

[478]*478The general intent of the statutes for taxation is that all lands shall be assessed in the tax district in which they are located; but section 10 undertakes to create an exception to this rule as regards a farm or lot divided by a line between two or more tax districts by requiring the same to be assessed in the district “ in which the dwelling house or other principal buildings are located;” To bring the plaintiff’s farm within this exception, it must appear that “the dwelling house or other principal buildings” for the whole tract are located in one of these two tax districts; otherwise, section 10 does not apply, and the general rule must prevail that the lands are to be assessed in the district where they are located.

The plaintiff’s contention is that, because the larger and more valuable dwelling-house is located in Sodus and is occupied by the plaintiff’s son, who is her agent to manage the whole tract, therefore it must be held to be “ the ” dwelling-house within the meaning of the statute.

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Related

People ex rel. Fleischmann Manufacturing Co. v. Marens
62 Misc. 317 (New York Supreme Court, 1908)

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Bluebook (online)
53 Misc. 474, 103 N.Y.S. 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chamberlain-v-sherman-nysupct-1907.