City of Rochester v. Fourteenth Ward Co-Operative Building Lot Ass'n

75 N.E. 692, 183 N.Y. 23, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 592
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 24, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 75 N.E. 692 (City of Rochester v. Fourteenth Ward Co-Operative Building Lot Ass'n) 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
City of Rochester v. Fourteenth Ward Co-Operative Building Lot Ass'n, 75 N.E. 692, 183 N.Y. 23, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 592 (N.Y. 1905).

Opinion

Vann, J.

The object of this action was to foreclose a tax lien upon lands in the city of Rochester pursuant to the provisions of the charter and certain special acts relating to that city. As the facts found by the trial court received the unanimous approval of the Appellate Division, we must accept them as final. The material facts thus found are that in 1901 the lands in question were assessed in accordance with law for general city purposes to the amount of $4.60; that they were subsequently sold by the city treasurer for non-payment of said tax and struck off to the city; that no notice to redeem from the tax sale was ever served upon the respondent, the owner of the premises, but by mistake such notice was served upon one who was neither the owner" nor occupant. The complaint was dismissed because no notice of redemption had been served on the proper person and it was held that chapter 522 of the Laws of 1903 does not authorize the foreclosure of a tax lien until after the service of such a notice. That act is a curative statute which is relied upon by the *26 appellant to justify its attempt to foreclose without complying with the provisions of the charter relating to the sale of lands for unpaid taxes and the service upon the owner of a notice to redeem.

In order to properly construe the curative act it is necessary to look at the original statute so as to discover what its requirements are, for it was the failure to comply with some of those requirements that made the later act necessary. In thus learning the mischief to be remedied, we discover tlie object of the remedial statute and are led to the proper interpretation of its provisions.

The city of Rochester is a city of the second class and to some extent is governed by the White Charter, so called, which went into effect on the first of January, 1900, and to some extent by the old charter, passed in 1880 and frequently amended, as well as by certain special laws which, so far as they relate to the procedure governing the assessment and collection of taxes, are still in force. (L. 1880, ch. 14, as amended; L. 1898, ch. 182.) The old charter contains an elaborate system for the assessment and collection of taxes, nearly two hundred sections being devoted to the subject. It provides the method of assessment by the assessors, including the levy of taxes by the common council, and requires the assessment rolls to be delivered to the city treasurer with a warrant • annexed “ under the hand of the mayor and the seal of the city,” commanding him to collect the taxes. Public notice is given by the treasurer as to the time and place when taxes may be paid to him and the amounts to be added if payment is not made within .the periods specified. FTo fee is charged on taxes paid during the month of May, but on those paid after the last day of May an addition of one per cent each month for the next five months is made, and after the fifteenth of September interest is charged at the rate of twelve per cent per annum. The city treasurer is required to issue his warrant for the collection of all taxes remaining unpaid on the fifteenth of October b) distress and sale of the goods and chattels of the persons liable. As to all taxes returned unpaid the city *27 treasurer is directed to advertise and sell the lands covered thereby at public auction to the bidder who will take the premises for the shortest term and pay the tax, fees and ■expenses. If no one bids the amount called for, the land is struck off to the city. Two years are given within which the owner may redeem by paying the taxes, charges and interest. Within one year after the expiration of that period of redemption the purchaser may serve a notice upon the landowner requiring him to redeem within thirty days. If the lands bid in by the city are not redeemed pursuant to the notice, the mayor is required to execute a certificate of the fact of sale, the purchase by the city and the failure to redeem, and when such certificate is recorded in the Monroe county clerk’s office it becomes prima facie evidence as to the legality of the tax and the regularity of all proceedings to the date thereof.

It is the duty of the city treasurer to cause a list of all lands sold, “specifying when, to whom, for what time and the amount,” to be recorded by the county clerk of Monroe county, and thereupon “ the amount of such sale on each lot or parcel of land shall be a lien thereon and take precedence of all incumbrances whatever.” When the mayor’s certificate is recorded, the city or its assigns may take possession of the lands, but an equity of redemption is preserved which can be barred by the foreclosure of the equity of redemption after the manner of foreclosing mortgages upon real estate, by an action in the Supreme Court or the County Court of Monroe county.

While the old charter and certain special acts contain many other provisions relating to the subject, we have enumerated enough to show that there could be no foreclosure by the city until after the mayor and treasurer had performed their duties. As the seal of the city was not affixed to the warrant of the mayor attached to the assessment roll for the year 1901 when it was delivered to the city treasurer, there could be no valid sale by him or foreclosure by the city without further legislation. This irregularity could be cured by the legislature, for the seal of the city might have been dispensed *28 with in the first instance. “Whatever the legislature might have dispensed with, or- made immaterial hy a prior statute, may be cured by a subsequent statute.” (Smith v. City of Buffalo, 159 N. Y. 427, 433.) This was one of the objects of the act of 1903, which, so far as it is now material, is as follows: “ All taxes heretofore spread upon the assessment-rolls of the various wards in the city of Rochester are hereby validated, and rendered legal and binding upon the persons taxed and property assessed, notwithstanding any irregularity, omission or error in any of the proceedings relating to the same, or in the making, levying and assessment of the same, and all proceedings for the collection of such taxes are hereby declared valid and effectual, notwithstanding any irregularity, omission or error in any of such proceedings, and notwithstanding the omission from any tax warrant of the seal of the mayor of the city of Rochester.” (L. 1903, ch. 522, § 1.)

“ Section 3. All taxes heretofore spread upon the assessment rolls of the various wards in the city of Rochester, may be collected by the corporation counsel, either by action, or by supplementary proceedings, or by foreclosure of tax liens, without regard to the date when the said taxes were so spread, and the Statute of Limitations cannot be interposed as a defense thereto. The remedies herein provided shall be in addition to the other methods provided in the charter of the city of Rochester for the collection of- taxes in the said city of Rochester, and not dependent upon them, or any of them. No certificate of the mayor of the city of Rochester, made by said mayor under section 104 of the charter of said city, of failure to redeem lands sold for taxes, now or hereafter recorded in the office of the county clerk of Monroe county, shall be discharged until all city taxes which are a lien upon the premises described in the said certificate, shall have been paid. Notice to redeem from sale for taxes, may be served at any time after the expiration of two years from the date of said sale.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re the City of New York
199 Misc. 281 (New York Supreme Court, 1951)
Wylie v. Addoms
243 A.D. 744 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1935)
Curtis v. Corbin
107 A. 506 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1919)
City of New York v. Brooklyn, Queens County & Suburban Railroad
179 A.D. 198 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1917)
In re the Appraisal of the Estate of Jourdan
151 A.D. 8 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1912)
Linton v. Wanke
118 N.Y.S. 965 (New York Supreme Court, 1908)
City of Rochester v. Rochester Railway Co.
79 N.E. 1010 (New York Court of Appeals, 1907)
City of Rochester v. . Bloss
77 N.E. 794 (New York Court of Appeals, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 N.E. 692, 183 N.Y. 23, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-rochester-v-fourteenth-ward-co-operative-building-lot-assn-ny-1905.