Hagner v. Hall

10 A.D. 581, 42 N.Y.S. 63
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 10 A.D. 581 (Hagner v. Hall) 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.

Bluebook
Hagner v. Hall, 10 A.D. 581, 42 N.Y.S. 63 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Cullen, J.:

This is an action to have two deeds, executed on two tax sales of a lot of land in the twenty-sixth ward of the city of Brooklyn, and subsequent deeds by which the title of the tax purchasers became vested in the defendants, adjudged void as a cloud upon the plaintiff’s title. The sales were made for unpaid taxes for the years 1872 [582]*582to 1883 inclusive. During this period, the twenty-sixth -ward in the city of Brooklyn was the town of Hew Lots in the county of Kings. The title of the plaintiff, except as affected by the tax sales, is conceded. During the same period, the lot was wholly unoccupied, and the plaintiff and h'er predecessors in title were non-residents of the town. During these years, the property was assessed as resident land to one Theodore W. Burthbridge or Bnrbridge. It is admitted that Burbridge was never the owner or occupant of the premises sold, and in fact that such a person did not exist. The lot was returned to the Comptroller of the State on account of the unpaid taxes, and subsequently sold by that officer, the State becoming the purchaser on the first sale, the defendant Hall on the second sale. The title of the State was subsequently acquired by Hall, who conveyed to the defendant Smith. The Special Term held the tax sales and deeds made thereunder void, and rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff. From that judgment this appeal is taken.

That the original levy of these taxes was void is not disputed by the appellants, but it is contended that they were validated and rendered effective by a subsequent act of the Legislature, known as chapter 411, Laws of 1885. The 1st section of that act is as follows:

“ All taxes heretofore admitted by the Comptroller, and which have not been paid or canceled on lands of non-residents in towns within counties containing upwards of 300,000 inhabitants, and all unpaid general and school taxes heretofore assessed on lands of nonresidents in said towns, which shall hereafter be returned to and admitted by the Comptroller, whether said lands were entered in the several assessment rolls separately as the lands of non-residents or otherwise, shall be, and the same are in all respects hereby legalized and confirmed.”

The unpaid taxes on plaintiff’s lot fall within the provisions of this section. If the statute is constitutional and operative, then the plaintiff’s land was properly sold. The first question before ns is the constitutionality of the statute. The act went into effect on June 6, 1885. The first sale made by the Comptroller was in December, 1885. Therefore, there is no question here of the ratification or legalizing of a void tax sale, and the case does not fall within the condemnation of the decision in Cromwell v. MacLean (123 N. Y. 474). The question is simply the narrow one of the power of the [583]*583Legislature by this statute to legalize the tax. The power of the Legislature to pass retrospective statutes, curing defects in the levy of taxes in certain classes of cases, is unquestioned. As said by Judge Finch in Ensign v. Barse (107 N. Y. 329): “ Where they are in their nature irregularities only, and do not extend to matters of jurisdiction,” the statute “is not void on constitutional grounds; that if the thing wanting or omitted, which constitutes the defect is something, the necessity for which the Legislature might have dispensed with by prior statutes, or if something has been done or done in a particular way wdiieh the Legislature might have made immaterial, the omission or irregular act may be cured by a subsequent statute.” The same principle was recognized in Cromwell v. MacLean (supra), where Judge Pecicham said: “The Legislature undoubtedly has large powers in the way of curing certain defects in proceedings to tax the citizen. In cases where the proceedings have been such that the citizen has had his chance to be heard before the tax was finally imposed, but, nevertheless, defects have been discovered in such proceedings, if the thing omitted, -and which constitutes the defect be of such a nature that* the Legislature might, by prior statute, have dispensed with, or if something has been done or done in a particular way which the Legislature might have made immaterial, the omission or irregular act may be cured by a subsequent statute. This was so stated, and in substantially identical language, in Ensign v. BarseL Other cases are to the same effect. (See Tifft v. City of Buffalo, 82 N. Y. 204; Terrel v. Wheeler, 123 id. 76.) But it does not follow that all defects of every character in levying a tax may be cured by subsequent legislation. In Matter of Lamb (51 Hun, 633; affd. without opinion, 121 N. Y. 703) we said: “ The respondent contends that it (the statute) is unconstitutional, and that the Legislature cannot relevy or validate a tax without providing for notice to the taxpayer and for a hearing. We are of opinion that this contention is not universally true, and that its soundness or unsoundness depends on the character of the defect for which the original tax was invalid. If there was no statute authorizing the imposition of the tax in the first instance, or if the statute purporting to confer authority was Aoid for lack of provision for notice and hearing, or any other

[584]*584reason, the doctrine contended for would apply.” When, in Ensign v. Barse {supra), the opinion reached the discussion of two defects urged against the validity of the tax, the first that no law authorized the imposition of a highway tax on non-resident lands in the year 1849, and the second that no law authorized a sale for such a tax (assuming that there was law for the tax itself), Judge Finch said of such defects: “These are jurisdictional, and go so directly to the authority of the assessors to levy the tax at all that they must he considered on their merits without aid from the statute of 1882.” In Matter of Trustees of Union College (129 N. Y. 308) the charter of Long Island City authorized the imposition of water rates, which were made liens on the premises. The charter gave no hearing to the taxpayers as to the amount or apportionment of such rates. The court held, in accordance with its previous decision in Remsen v. Wheeler (105 N. Y. 513), that the rates were void for the violation of the constitutional right of the ratepayers to a notice and hearing. By subsequent statutes it was enacted that those water taxes previously imposed should be charged and assessed as originally made, and that the same should in all respects be confirmed and levied. It was held, reversing the decision of the General Term, that these statutes were void. Judge Finch there wrote: “'The Act of 1886 (Chap. 656) again attempts to ratify and confirm the unconstitutional assessments without curing their inherent defect, and both acts are now sought to be sustained upon the doctrine of Spencer v. Merchant (100 N. Y. 585 and 125 U. S. 345) as a direct assessment by the legislative authority. * * * But when the public questions are settled and the tax comes to be apportioned, a personal liability of the individual and a lien upon his property are initiated, and he has a right then to be heard upon all the questions which affect and determine that liability.

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Bluebook (online)
10 A.D. 581, 42 N.Y.S. 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hagner-v-hall-nyappdiv-1896.