City of New York v. State
This text of 175 A.D. 252 (City of New York v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The city of New York makes a claim against the State of New York for interest received by the latter on excise moneys deposited, after collection during September and October, 1914, by the special deputy commissioners of excise of the city in [253]*253various city banks which excise moneys belong to the city but were not paid over to it by said special deputy commissioners within the statutory time.
Section 10 of the Liquor Tax Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 34; Laws of 1909, chap. 39)
By subdivision 17 of section 12 of the Liquor Tax Law (as amd. by Laws of 1909, chaps. 240, 281) it is provided as follows: “ Said special deputy commissioner or county treasurer must keep a separate and distinct account of all excise moneys received and paid over by him; and such moneys must be deposited without delay in a bank or other depository, and kept in a separate account, in the official name of such officer, entitled (liquor tax moneys.’ * * * All interest accruing on undivided excise moneys deposited by any [254]*254county treasurer or special deputy commissioner of excise, and all interest accruing on the part thereof apportioned to the State shall belong to the State of New York, and shall be remitted by such county treasurer or special deputy commissioner to the State Treasurer. All interest moneys accruing on the part thereof belonging to the localities, until the same shall be actually withdrawn from the bank of deposit, upon the check of the comity treasurer or special deputy commissioner, by the fiscal officer of the locality entitled thereto, shall belong to the county or city represented by such treasurer or special deputy commissioner, and shall be placed to the credit of the general fund thereof as often as once in each three months.”
Under the foregoing statutory provisions the special deputy conmissioners of excise for the various boroughs of New York city collected taxes, fines and penalties imposed under the provisions of said law upon the traffic of liquor in said city and deposited the same in various designated banks of the city as they were required to do. The banks paid interest on the deposits. The special deputy commissioners‘did not, however, within the statutory period of ten days, divide the moneys so deposited and pay one-half thereof to the State and the other half to the city as the statute requires. Such division and payment was made after the expiration of ten days from the time such moneys were received by the special deputy commissioners, and all interest accumulated thereon in the banks to the time of such payments was paid by the banks to the State. The city now claims all interest so received by the State on the one-half of the moneys belonging to the city from the time the money was first deposited in the bank and interest began to accrue thereon until such interest was paid to the State. This claim has been disallowed by the Court of Claims except as to a small amount where a division of the funds had actually been made.
The scheme of the statute is quite apparent. The taxes, fines and penalties are to be divided equally between the State and the city. They are to be collected by the special deputy commissioners of excise and'paid to them. • They have ten days in which to divide the same and pay one-half thereof each to the State and the city. In the meantime the statute provides that [255]*255all such moneys shall be deposited in designated banks and kept separately in a separate account in the official name of the officer receiving the same, entitled “ liquor tax moneys.” And the statute then specifically provides that all interest accruing on such “ undivided excise moneys * * * and all interest accruing on the part thereof' apportioned to the State shall belong to the State of New York.” Until the division is made the State is entitled to interest on all the deposits. But such division must be made within ten days, and if' the special deputy commissioners fail in this statutory duty they cannot thereby deprive the city of interest earned on.moneys which legally and equitably belong to it. The city loses nothing and the State gains nothing by the failure of these officers to perform their plain duty. The most that the State can claim is interest on the full deposits for ten days after they were received by the deputy commissioners. The law regards that as done which ought to have been done. It was the duty of the special deputy commissioners to make payments within ten days, one-half each to the State and to the city. Had they done so the city would have received the interest on such payments. Failure to perform their statutory duty does not give the State a legal claim to the interest which the statute does not contemplate the State shall receive and which it would not have received except for the fact that the deputy commissioners failed in the performance of their- duty.
The statute recognizes that one-half of these moneys belonged to the city from the time they were received by the special deputy commissioners. The language is: “The remaining one-half thereof, less the amount allowed for collecting the same, shall belong to the town or city in which the traffic was carried on from which revenues were received.” And again: “ All interest moneys accruing on the part thereof belonging to the localities, until the same shall be actually withdrawn from the bank of deposit, upon the check of the county treasurer or special deputy commissioner, by the fiscal officer of the locality entitled thereto, shall belong to the county or city represented by such treasurer or special deputy commissioner, and shall be placed to the credit of the general fund thereof as often as once in each three months.” The intent of the Legislature can[256]*256not well be misunderstood. It contemplates one-half the money as belonging to the city. All interest on such one-half goes to the city except as provided by the statute that until an actual payment thereof by the special deputy commissioners within ten days such interest by virtue of the statute goes to the State.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
175 A.D. 252, 161 N.Y.S. 554, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-new-york-v-state-nyappdiv-1916.