Common School District No. 3 v. County of Chemung

160 Misc. 477, 290 N.Y.S. 56, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1268
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 17, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 160 Misc. 477 (Common School District No. 3 v. County of Chemung) 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
Common School District No. 3 v. County of Chemung, 160 Misc. 477, 290 N.Y.S. 56, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1268 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1936).

Opinion

Personius, J.

In May, 1933, the plaintiff regularly determined its budget for the 1933-1934 school year, levied its tax, and about October 19, 1933, delivered the warrant to the collector. In April, 1934, the district trustees made return to the county treasurer of the unpaid taxes. Pursuant to section 435 of the Education Law, the county treasurer paid said school district $8,420.56 of the taxes so returned. He failed to pay a balance of $2,152.90, which plaintiff here seeks to recover. It represents taxes on properties bid in by the county at its tax sales in October of 1934, 1933 and 1932 and prior thereto, and not redeemed.

The defendants say the plaintiff had no right to assess these properties as they had been excluded from the town tax roll pursuant to subdivision 2 of section 50 of the Tax Law. The plaintiff says the properties were legally assessed under section 411 of the Education Law.

It is troublesome, to say the least, to reconcile these and related sections of the Education and Tax Laws. They might well be clarified by the Legislature.

Clearly, the county treasurer cannot be compelled to make the payment. No money was raised by the supervisors for contingent expenses, nor for the purpose of paying this item, and “if no such fund has been raised, or if it has been exhausted, there is no authority, and consequently, no duty to pay them.” (People ex rel. Burbank v. Robinson, 76 N. Y. 422, 424.) Can the board of supervisors be compelled to raise and pay the item?

[479]*479The question seems to narrow down to this: May a school district assess and levy a tax upon real property which has been bid in by the county on a tax sale and excluded from the town tax roll under subdivision 2 of section 50 of the Tax Law?

By section 411 of the Education Law, School district taxes shall be apportioned by the trustees upon all real estate within the boundaries of the district which shall not be by law exempt from taxation.” (Italics ours.) The only property of a municipal corporation which is exempt from taxation is that held for a public use.” (Tax Law, §§ 3, 4.) Property bid in by a county on a tax sale is not so held by it. (Village of Watkins Glen v. Hager, 140 Misc. 816; affd., 234 App. Div. 904.) The very able consideration of the question there given makes further discussion unnecessary. The plaintiff, therefore, insists that its levy upon property bid in by the county was proper.

But the defendants say that subdivision 2 of section 50 of the Tax Law precludes the assessment of such property by a school district. That section provides in part: “ The board of supervisors * * * shall when examining the assessment-rolls of the several tax districts of the county * * * exclude from the tax rolls of said districts * * * such parcels of real property as have been struck down to the county at a tax sale and not redeemed.” (Italics ours.) They may be excluded if “ struck down,” whether or not deeded, and if “ not redeemed,” whether or not still redeemable. But “ tax districts ” as here used means cities and towns. (Tax Law, § 2.) School districts are not included. Their trustees in the first instance ascertain valuations from the last town assessment roll. As to properties to be assessed, however, they may apparently revise the town roll when an omission on the part of the town assessors has been made. (Education Law, § 413, subd. 3.)

Subdivision 2 of section 50 of the Tax Law was first enacted, with limited application, by chapter 447 of the Laws of 1905, and so continued in chapter 801 of the Laws of 1911. It was enacted in its present form, with unlimited application, by chapter 397 of the Laws of 1914. In Wells v. Johnson (171 N. Y. 324 [1902]) it appeared that lands were sold to the State for taxes in 1877, and a deed given in 1881, and recorded in 1882. From 1878 to 1880, inclusive, the lands were assessed, apparently to the original owner, and sold for the 1880 tax. The court said (p. 327): “ We think that the lands were properly assessed for these years, for the title of the State did not become perfect until the deed was executed

* * * but after the title of the State had become fully vested through the deed of the Comptroller the lands were no longer assessable and no sale could be made thereof except in accordance [480]*480with the express provisions of the statute.” In other words, it held that no deed under the first tax sale having been given, the assessment was proper bub the sale to one other than the State was void. In Armstrong v. County of Nassau (101 App. Div. 116 [1905]) the court said (p. 118): “ Owners and persons interested still have the right to redeem, and at least until such time as the title to said lands is perfected and fully vested in the county by a proper deed, and all rights of redemption extinguished, the premises should be assessed.” (See, also, opinion of Department of Taxation May 15, 1935, 52 State Dept. Rep. 8.) Whether the sLatute then in force applied to the counties in which these two cases arose does not appear. It is not referred to. It would appear, under those cases, that between the time the State or county bids in a property on a tax sale and the time a deed is given and the title perfected, it is properly assessed to the original owner. This rule is not changed as to a school district by subdivision 2 of section 50 of the Tax Law.

Section 153 of the Tax Law provides that real property struck down to a county and omitted from the tax roll under subdivision 2 of section 50 shall not be subject to further sale after having been once sold for taxes. This does not preclude it from being further assessed for unpaid school taxes.

As to the aggregate of the unpaid taxes on properties sold by the county in October, 1933, and October, 1934, and excluded by the supervisors at the annual session in December of each year, the plaintiff is entitled to recover. Those sales occurred after the plaintiff had assessed its tax in 1933, at which time the properties had not been struck from the town rolls. Clearly a school district could not omit these.

As to the aggregate of the unpaid taxes on properties which had been sold by the county in 1932 and prior, and excluded from the town tax rolls in December, 1932, and prior, we think these properties were properly assessed and taxed under section 411 of the Education Law and that the plaintiff is, therefore, entitled to be paid the amount thereof.

We are to give effect to every part of every statute if possible. Admitting the difficulty, we think a school district is entitled to assess to the original owners all property in its district bid in by the county on tax sales, until the county has become the owner by taking a deed and perfecting its title. Then it may assess it to the county. (Village of Watkins Glen v. Hager, supra; Clark v. Sprague, 113 App. Div. 645; People ex rel. Palmer v. Travis, 223 N. Y. 150, 165.)

The tax on properties bid in by the county being unpaid, the school district trustees return the same, (Education Law, §§ 433, [481]*481434.) The properties having been excluded from the town roll under Tax Law, section 50, subdivision 2, the defendants say the county cannot cause the amount of such unpaid taxes * * * to be levied upon the lands ” as required by section 436 of the Education Law.

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Related

Union Free School District No. 11 v. County of Steuben
178 Misc. 415 (New York Supreme Court, 1942)
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251 A.D. 126 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1937)

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160 Misc. 477, 290 N.Y.S. 56, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/common-school-district-no-3-v-county-of-chemung-nysupct-1936.