In Re Supplementary Proceedings for the Collection of a Tax From L. Adler Bros. & Co.

66 N.E. 929, 174 N.Y. 287, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 1331
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 7, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 66 N.E. 929 (In Re Supplementary Proceedings for the Collection of a Tax From L. Adler Bros. & Co.) 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
In Re Supplementary Proceedings for the Collection of a Tax From L. Adler Bros. & Co., 66 N.E. 929, 174 N.Y. 287, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 1331 (N.Y. 1903).

Opinion

Parker, Oh. J.

The board of supervisors of the county of Monroe, in the year 1900, levied upon the property of L. Adler Brothers and Company, a corporation, a tax amounting to $446.28. The appellant corporation has urged that the tax was not duly levied, but we agree with the argument and determination of the Appellate Division that this contention is not well founded, and rest our conclusion that the tax was duly levied upon the opinion of that court.

Upon this review the appellant strongly urges further that the warrant issued by the county treasurer for the collection of the tax was void, and that the collector’s return thereof uncollected furnished no basis for this proceeding, which is a supplemental proceeding for the collection of the tax, and is authorized by section 259 of the General Tax Law (Oh. 908, Laws 1896). In Matter of City of Rochester v. Bloss (77 App. Div. 28) it was held that the requirement of the statute that a warrant for the collection of the taxes shall be issued under the hand of the mayor and the seal of the city of ¡Rochester is mam datory; and hence that a warrant issued without the seal is void, *292 and payment of taxes thereunder cannot be enforced. That case was subsequently affirmed by this court. (173 N. Y. 646.) The learned counsel for appellant insists that that case is an authority for his contention that the warrant in this case is void, upon which premises he bases his further contention that there has been no proper return of the tax as uncollected to the county treasurer, and hence he was not in a position at the time of the commencement of these proceedings to institute them. But we have reached a contrary conclusion and will, as briefly as we may, assign the reasons inducing it.

As we have already stated, this tax was duly levied and the warrant for the collection of this and other assessments was issued to the county treasurer in the form required by statute. But L. Adler Brothers and Company did not pay the tax; and so the county treasurer made out a special warrant to collect the uncollected taxes in the fifth ward in Rochester, and delivered it to a collector requiring him to collect the taxes within 20 days from its date. He made the mistake, however, of requiring him to collect the tax with 6% additional, whereas he was only entitled to collect 5% and, in addition, interest thereafter at the rate of 12%' per annum, or 1% per month.

This error would have resulted, had the tax been collected, in taking from the delinquent taxpayer, according to the appellant’s counsel, a few dollars more than was due. The collector, however, did not collect the tax, for the corporation refused to pay it, basing its refusal, not upon the error of the county treasurer in demanding too much by way of interest, but upon the ground that the tax was excessive. If the objection had been put upon the ground now made the county treasurer could, and doubtless would, have issued a new warrant free from the fault of the first one. Instead, as we have seen, it rested' its objection upon the ground that the assessment was excessive in amount, a position which at the time the objection was made was' untenable, because the assessment had been legally made and all opportunity for reviewing it had been passed. The cor *293 poration had been presented with the opportunity of making the objection that it was excessive when it could have been made with effect and enforced, if true, but that time was allowed to pass by, and when the collector asked for the payment of the tax the objection was without force and the county treasurer was bound, the taxes having been returned uncollected, to proceed in supplementary proceedings, as authorized by section 259 of the General Tax Law. That section authorizes an application to the court for the institution of proceedings supplementary to execution — as upon a judgment docketed in the county — for the purpose of collecting such tax, with the fees and interest authorized by law, whenever a tax exceeding ten dollars in amount is returned uncollected for want of personal property out of which to collect the same. That is precisely this situation. A valid uncollected tax was returned on the ground that no personal property had been discovered out of which payment could be made.

The case presented, then, is not one where the property of the taxpayer has been sold in pursuance of a warrant exacting too much interest, but one where no harm whatever has resulted to the taxpayer, who refused payment; and it would seem to be unfortunate indeed if the error in the warrant barred a subsequent proceeding of a different nature taken for the purpose of enforcing the payment of a tax which it is not claimed was invalidated or in any wise affected by that error.

Appellant’s counsel cites several cases in this state which he urges support his contention.

In Clark v. Hallock (16 Wend. 607) the collector sold the property of the plaintiff, under a school district warrant commanding the collector to levy a tax in the same manner as on executions issued by a justice of the peace, after the statute had been so amended as to exclude that provision; and it was held that the process was void.

In Stroud v. Butler (18 Barb. 327) the collector sold property after the expiration of the time limit in the warrant issued to him by the trustees of a school district, which war *294 rant also authorized him to collect an amount of fees in excess of that authorized by the statute. The court said it was unable to distinguish the case in principle from Clark v. Hallock (supra), and then held that the judgment of the justice of the peace in favor of the plaintiff was right, because the warrant was not against the plaintiff, and, therefore, furnished no justification for taking the plaintiff’s property under the circumstances proved before the justice.

In Matter of Willis (30 Hun, 13) a motion was made to set aside a sale of land for the non-payment of an assessment vacated upon the ground that illegal interest was included in the amount for which the lot was sold, and the motion was granted on the ground that a sum for interest was charged without lawful authority and when no right existed.

In Lester v. Macdaniel (5 Misc. Rep. 190) the clerk of arrears was commanded by mandamus to accept the amount of an assessment, with the interest authorized by statute, in a case where the situation was analogous to that in Matter of Willis.

In People v. Hagadorn (104 N. Y. 516) the assessment was not legally made, inasmuch as the board of supervisors — instead of computing and entering in the roll, in a column opposite the valuation of the real and personal property, the amount of the tax levied thereon — signed the roll and attached the collector’s warrant thereto and delivered it to the supervisor of the town, without first extending the tax, and, instead, authorizing the supervisor to compute and enter the amount of the tax afterward, which he subsequently did and then delivered the roll to the collector.

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Bluebook (online)
66 N.E. 929, 174 N.Y. 287, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 1331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-supplementary-proceedings-for-the-collection-of-a-tax-from-l-adler-ny-1903.