In re Wood

35 A.D. 363
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 35 A.D. 363 (In re Wood) 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
In re Wood, 35 A.D. 363 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Woodward, J.:

This proceeding was brought under the provisions of chapter 656 of the Laws of 1886, a local statute applicable to Long Island City only, which provides that “ Where the invalidity or irregularity of any tax or assessment, or water rates or rents appears upon the face of the proceedings, any party in interest may apply by petition to [364]*364any court of competent jurisdiction for an order canceling the same; said court shall require a reasonable notice to be given to said city of such petition, and shall hear the proofs and allegations of the parties, and shall, in case such irregularity or invalidity is established, order such tax or assessment, water rates or rents to be canceled; and thereupon the same shall be canceled by the said treasurer.”

It was alleged on the part of the petitioners that they were the owners and holders of certain mortgages upon the property involved in this proceeding, and that they were parties in interest within the meaning of the statute, and this being denied only upon information and belief, the court held that they were properly in court for the purposes of this proceeding. The grounds on which the petitioners asked to have the taxes canceled were stated to be: “ (1) That no valid assessment of said- property was made by the board of assessors, in consequence of their failure to state, in the assessment roll, the quantity of the land assessed; (2) that the assessment roll, in which said alleged taxes are contained, was never filed in the office of the said receiver, in pursuance of any action on the part of the common council had or taken after such taxes had been calculated and extended in the office of the said clerk of Long Island City; (3) that said assessment roll was never confirmed by the common council of Long Island City; (4) that the rate of taxation adopted by the board of assessors was neither fixed nor confirmed by the said common council; (5) that no warrant to the said receiver to collect said taxes was authorized by said common council, after the assessment roll had been filed in the office of the city clerk.”

The learned court below granted the petition on the first ground stated, and as this is the only one of the alleged irregularities which appears upon the face of the proceedings, or as to which there is evidence sufficient to overcome the presumption which the statute declares shall exist in favor of the regularity of “ every tax levied and assessments and all water rates and rents made ” (§ 10, chap. 656, Laws of 1886), we shall confine our discussion to this question.

It appears from the evidence that the assessors of Long Island City, instead of stating the quantity of land in the second column of the assessment roll, as provided by section 21 of article 2 of chapter 908, [365]*365Laws of 1896 (the Tax Law) adopted a form of their own, following a custom reaching back to the organization of the city, and which began with the name of the owner of the property, followed in the second column by the block number, and in the third by the number of the lot; fourth, valuation; fifth, amount of city tax; sixth, ward tax. There is no direct provision in the charter of Long Island City, as it existed prior to the merger of that municipality into the Greater Hew York, for making up the assessment roll. In the amendment to the original act of incorporation (Chap. 461, Laws of 1871) it is provided (§ 6, tit. 6), that “ In preparing said assessment rolls, and in reviewing the same, the said assessors shall have all the powers and be subject to all the duties of assessors of towns in this State, except as herein otherwise provided, and except that lands of non-residents shall not be separated from the other assessments.” This act was amended in 1889 (Chap. 548), and the words, “ and be subject to all the duties,” were dropped out; so that the provision in force at the time of the assessment complained of read: “ In preparing said assessment rolls add in reviewing the same, the said assessors shall have all the powers of assessors of towns in this State, except as herein otherwise provided, and except that lands of nonresidents shall not be separated from the other assessments, and that the assessed valuation of all personal property shall be entered by said assessors in separate books or rolls,” etc.

It is urged by the petitioners that, under the provisions of this law, it was necessary that the assessors of Long Island City should have followed the form prescribed by the Tax Law, and that in failing to designate the quantity of land assessed, in the second column, the assessment is vitiated, and comes within the provision of the law under which this proceeding is taken. This view of the question is accepted by the learned court at Special Term, and in a written opinion we are told that“ In the case at bar, we find that the assessors have omitted to place in the assessment roll the quantity of land opposite the number of each lot, and there is nothing to be gathered therefrom by way of dimensions or description which may be regarded as a substantial equivalent therefor. This omission by the assessors to follow a positive requirement of the statute, one as essential to constitute a valid assessment as either of the other specifications of duty on their part, renders the assessment invalid [366]*366and the tax non-enforcible against either the owner or the real property, upon the principles enunciated and applied in the cases above cited.”

We are unable to agree with the court below in this conclusion. The assessment by blocks and numbers of lots meets all of the requirements of accuracy of description, which is the essential point; and it was provided by law, prior to the enactment of the Tax Law in 1896, that “ if such quantity be a full lot, it shall be designated by the number alone; if it be a part of a lot, the part must be designated by boundaries, or in some other way, by which it may be known.” (R. S. subd. 5, § 12, art. 2, tit. 2, chap. 13, pt. 1 [9th ed.]) This is in reference to non-resident lands, and follows the provision that, “ In a second column, and opposite to the number of each lot, they shall set down the quantity of land therein liable to taxation.” (Subd. 3.) We are not to be understood as holding that boards of assessors, acting under the provisions of the Tax Law, would be complying with the provisions of that statute in making an assessment after the manner of the assessments of Long Island City; but we are persuaded that the assessors who made that assessment were not acting under the authority of the General Tax Law of the State, but that they were governed by special laws, and that the provision found in chapter 548 of the Laws of 1889, that, “In preparing said assessment rolls and in reviewing the same, the said assessors shall have all the powers of assessors of towns in this State,” did not impose upon them the duty or the necessity of following the form of assessment provided by the Tax Law. The fact that the Legislature, in amending the charter of the municipality of Long Island City, dropped from the act the words, “ and be subject to all the duties,” indicates clearly that it was not the intention of the statute to bring the assessors of this city under all the provisions of law relative to assessors of towns, but simply that, in “ preparing said assessment rolls and in reviewing the same,” they were to have “ all the powers of assessors of towns.”

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Bluebook (online)
35 A.D. 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-wood-nyappdiv-1898.