Hennessey v. Volkening

30 Abb. N. Cas. 100
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedJanuary 15, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 30 Abb. N. Cas. 100 (Hennessey v. Volkening) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hennessey v. Volkening, 30 Abb. N. Cas. 100 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1893).

Opinion

McAdam, J.

The action is for ejectment and mesne profits, founded on a tax lease made by the tax officials of the City and County of New York on a sale had December 28, 1886, for the taxes of 1882, amounting to $405, and for $10.35 water rent of the previous year.

The land not having been redeemed within the statutory period according to the requirement of the notice published, and written notice served on the occupants, a lease in due form was executed to the purchaser, who subsequently, and before suit brought, transferred it to the plaintiff. The sale has been challenged for several reasons; among others, that the unpaid water rent of 1881 - formed no basis for it, and that the entire sale was invalidated as a consequence of including this item in it (People v. Hagadorn, 104 N. Y. 516). The rule is fundamental that, under our laws for the taxation of property, the person to be affected must have some notice of the proceeding to be had against his property, that in some form he maybe heard before any portion of his estate is seized for the support of the Government, and that all laws which permit of the taxation of property without these safeguards are unconstitutional and void. In this regard “ due process of law ” always proceeds upon inquiry and renders judgment only after trial. It applies to all cases where property is sought to be taken or interfered with (3 Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law, 714).

These principles are elementary, and the question is how far they affect the case at bar. They underlie the whole system of taxation and were enforced as to an assessment for a local improvement in Kings County (Stuart v. Palmer, 74 N. Y. 183) ; and in two cases of water rates, one in Brooklyn, and the other in Long Island City (Remsen v. Wheeler, 105 N. Y. 573 ; in the Matter of Union College, 129 Id. 308), all of which were declared unconstitutional, for violation of the doctrine stated. In the case of Remsen v. Wheeler (supra), at page 578, the court said : “ We are of opinion that the assessments for water [103]*103rents were invalid, and that the sales under the same were wholly unauthorized and illegal. In the city of Brooklyn there was a system of water-works and a board of water commissioners, and section 24, chapter 396, of the Laws of 1859, provides as follows:

“The said water-board shall, in every year, by resolution, fix the price which shall be assessed . . . upon every vacant lot situated upon any street, lane, alley or court' through or into which distributing pipes shall have been laid, until the bonds issued for the construction of the said works, with the interest thereon, shall have been paid. And thereafter they shall be adjusted so as to, with other provisions of this act for income from said works, meet the expense of repairs, maintenance and extention of .said works. . . . Such sums so assessed, together with percentages for defaults, . . . shall be a lien upon the said premises respectively, and the same may be collected and enforced in the same manner as taxes are collected and enforced against land in said .city.” The lots of the plaintiffs were vacant, and hence were assessed and assessable for water rates under this section. As no use of the water could be made upon vacant lots, it must have been intended that whatever assessment was made upon them under this section was to be apportioned according to the value of the lots, or the benefits to them, or the cost of bringing the water to the mrespectively. . . . Therefore, in regard to the imposition of these assessments, as in reference to the imposition of other assessments and taxes, the lot owners were entitled at some stage of the proceeding to a notice and an opportunity .to be heard ; and, unless the law gives them the right to notice and an opportunity of being heard, before the board which was authorized to impose the assessment, it was unconstitutional and void for the reason given in Stuart v. Palmer, sufra.”

The reason for requiring notice to the taxpayer before levying a tax or assessment on his property, is that such a charge once regularly confirmed is final and conclusive [104]*104against him. That reason does not apply to water rents in the City of New York, against improved property on which water is used, because, as will be seen presently, the property owner supplied with water knows beforehand what it is to cost, and if any error or overcharge is made in his bill it may be corrected. The charge upon persons and their property for supplying them with water, and commonly known as “water rent,” is not in its inception either a tax or assessment. For the early statutes in regard to the department, see Valentine’s laws relating to the city, and Davies and Hoffman’s laws relating thereto.

Prior to the year 1842, the sources of water supply to the City of New York were wells, the old Tea Pump and the Manhattan Water Works, in Reade street.

By a popular vote in 1835 (under Laws 1834, chapter 256), it was determined to supply, at the expense of the municipality, the City of New York with water from the Croton River, and on July 4, 1842, the plans adopted to that end had so far matured that water from the Croton R iver was used in the city. The work as not completed until 1845. The money to execute this work was raised by the issue of bonds and was a city debt (Laws 1841, chapter 306). Chief among the objects of introducing the water into the city were to easier extinguish fires (a want emphasized by the fire of 1835) and the supplying water to the citizens for domestic use.

In 1849 a law was passed (Laws 1849, ch. 3§3) creating the Croton Aqueduct Department, which amongst other things, provided (sec. 18) that the common council should by ordinance establish a scale of annual rents for supply of water, to be called “ regular rents,’’ and apportioned to the different classes of buildings in said city in reference to their dimensions, values, exposure to fires, ordinary use for dwellings, stores, shops, private stables and other purposes, number of families, etc., etc. Such regular fents to be collected “ from the owners or occupants of all such buildings ” as should be situated upon lots adjoining any [105]*105street or avenue in which distributing pipes should be laid and from which they could be supplied with water, and said regular rents should become a charge and lien upon such houses and lots.

Section 26. Rents in arrear were to be collected by ■sale of the property.

Section 28. This law took effect for collecting rents on the 1st of May in the year after the common council •determined to carry its provisions into effect, and for the transmutation of unpaid rents into a direct tax on the buildings.

This has been substantially the law ever since, and it •seems worthy of remark, that its provisions have been submitted to for a period of nearly half a century, and now for the first time the. court is asked to declare the law •unconstitutional.

Courts will hesitate to do this, and will do it only upon reasons the most palpable and unanswerable (see 3 Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law, 674; Laws 1851, ch. 298; Laws 1853, ch. 579 ; Laws 1854, ch. 335 ; the Consolidation Act, § 350, as amended 1887, ch. 559; by this amendment the regulation of water rents, is under the supervision of the commissioner of public works).

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Bluebook (online)
30 Abb. N. Cas. 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hennessey-v-volkening-nysuperctnyc-1893.