Harlem Presbyterian Church v. Mayor of New York

12 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 442
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1875
StatusPublished

This text of 12 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 442 (Harlem Presbyterian Church v. Mayor of New York) 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
Harlem Presbyterian Church v. Mayor of New York, 12 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 442 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1875).

Opinion

Daniels, J.:

At the time when the improvement and the assessment were made, the petitioner was and still is a religions corporation existing under the laws of this State, and owned and used the assessed property for the sole purpose of public worship. Under the general law of the State, it was therefore expressly exempted from taxation. (1 R. S. [5th ed.], 906, § 5, sub. 3.) But that exemption extended no farther than to relieve it from the common obligation of property owners for the payment of taxes, properly so called, and they included only that yearly recompense which is paid for the support of the municipal, county, and State governments, for the security and protection afforded in the enactment and execution of the laws.

The exemption did not include assessments made for local improvements required for the public convenience, and which directly tend to enhance the value of the property in the vicinity of which they may be made. For the expenses of improvements of that nature, the law expressly required an estimate and assessment to be made among all the owners or occupants of all the houses and lots of ground intended to be, or by the commissioners deemed, benefited thereby. (Davies’ Laws of the City of New York, 419, § 16, 596, § 1.) These provisions are general, and without exception, and include real estate owned by religious corporations, as well as that owned by individuals. (People v. Mayor of Syracuse, 9 S. C. [2 Hun], 433.) They render all the property liable for the expenses, which may be benefited by the improvement for which the assessment shall be made.

The petitioner’s property was benefited by the improvement for which the assessment was designed to pay. But it is claimed, in favor of its exoneration from payment, that the assessment was irregularly imposed, and that was the view which was taken of it by the court at the Special Term. This irregularity consisted alone • [444]*444in the fact, that the petitioner’s property had not been valued in conformity with what it was contemplated should be done in order to determine the amount beyond which the assessment should not extend. (Section 7, of chap. 326, of the Laws of 1840.) • That required that the assessments for improvements, authorized by law to be assessed upon the owners or occupants of houses and lots, improved and unimproved lands, should in no ease exceed half the value, as valued by the assessors of the ward in which it might be situated. (Laws of 1840, 273, § 7.) The petitioner’s property was not valued by the deputy tax commissioners, nor by the tax commissioners themselves, who succeeded to the powers, and were required to discharge the duties, of the assessors of the ward. (Laws of 1857, vol. 2, 498, § 5; Laws of 1859, vol. 2, 679, § 2.) In making the roll as they were required to make it, they made no valuation whatever of it, but simply noted it as exempt; and that was all which lawfully could have been done with it. For it was only taxable property which could, either by the general laws of the State,, or those relating to the city of New York, be included in the assessment roll, or valued. (1 R. S. [5th ed.], 909, §§ 7-10; vol. 2, Laws of 1859, 680, § 7, 682, § 12.) Property of the description of that owned by the petitioner, could be neither included in the roll, nor valued by the officers making it, and it consequently could not be within section 7 of the act of 1840. That section made no change in the property which should lawfully be assessed for the expenses of local improvements. It exempted nothing from such assessments, which, by previous legislation, had been rendered liable to them, but simply prohibited the extension of the assessment beyond half the valuation fixed by the assessors. And it could only have the effect of controlling that action in cases where a valuation was by law required to be made. By necessary implication, therefore, it related to and included only the property which was taxable for the ordinary purposes of government, and for that reason could be inserted in the assessment roll. That was as far as the act of 1840, by its terms or reasonable construction, extended upon this subject. The prohibition made had no relation to exempt property, but must have been designed to exclude that, because it.could not lawfully be valued by the tax commissioners; and the act containing it, in no respect undertook to restrict the [445]*445provisions, previously enacted, rendering all property benefited liable to contribute to tbe expenses of local improvements. For these reasons, the omission of the valuation required to be-given to property not exempt from taxation for ordinary purposes, did not render the assessment of the petitioner’s property irregular. As it could not be valued, as the section contained in the act of 1840 contemplated, the property it applied to should be, and it had been rendered liable to assessment for the benefits secured to it by means of local improvements; it was the duty of the commissioners to assess it notwithstanding the omission to value it. In making such assessment, it was undoubtedly their duty to govern their action by the equity of the provision of the act of 1840, by not extending it beyond half the valuation given to taxable property, for the purpose of taxation. And that seems to have been observed in the assessment of the petitioner’s property, for it was not claimed that it had been made on any greater valuation than half that placed upon other taxable real estate in its immediate vicinity for the purpose of taxation. The board exercised its discretion equitably and in strict conformity to the powers which had been given to it. (Laws of 1859, 682, § 15 ; Matter of Church street, 49 Barb., 455; Matter of Anderson, 51 id., 411; Matter of Palmer, 31 How., 42.)

The resolution providing for the improvement was finally adopted on the 16th day of March, 1869, and for that reason it should legally have been published according to the provisions contained in the act of 1857. (Yol. 1, Laws of 1857, 886, § 37.) But as this was not a case of fraud, and the improvement was not a repavement, the omission to make the publication was insufficient to justify an order vacating or setting aside the assessment. For, at the time it was confirmed and the proceedings to set it aside were instituted, the act 1874 had taken effect, forbidding that to be done on account of such an omission. It was at first enacted that assessments should be vacated for fraud or substantial error. (Laws of 1874, chap. 312.) But this provision was so far limited and restrained by the next succeeding act, as to prevent the omission to publish, as well as other enumerated defects, from being held to be substantial errors. These acts were passed upon the same day, and each related to the same subject and should therefore be considered together. And when so considered, they clearly support [446]*446the conclusion that' it was designed to take away the remedy previously existing, so far as it was dependent upon the defects complained of in this case. That was within the power and control of the legislature, which has in effect provided that neither the omission to publish, previously required, or to value the petitioner’s property, should constitute a substantial error in these proceedings.

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Bluebook (online)
12 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harlem-presbyterian-church-v-mayor-of-new-york-nysupct-1875.