Lancaster Sea Beach Improvement Co. v. City of New York

108 N.E. 90, 214 N.Y. 1, 1915 N.Y. LEXIS 1203
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 26, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 108 N.E. 90 (Lancaster Sea Beach Improvement Co. v. City of New York) 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
Lancaster Sea Beach Improvement Co. v. City of New York, 108 N.E. 90, 214 N.Y. 1, 1915 N.Y. LEXIS 1203 (N.Y. 1915).

Opinion

Collin, J.

The action is to recover from the city of New York the sum paid by the plaintiff corporation in 1912 to it as a tax upon real estate for the year 1899, and the interest thereon. The payment was under the duress of an advertised sale of the property for the tax. The plaintiff seeks a recovery upon the ground that the tax was void because the property was not assessed, for the purpose of taxation, as the law required. The Appellate Division unanimously affirmed the facts as found by the trial court with the exception of one finding which received a modification having support in the evidence. We must, therefore, deem the facts as thus established conclusive.

The real estate was within the city of New York and the system through which it could have been validly assessed in 1899 for the purpose of taxation was prescribed, primarily, by the relevant provisions of the charter *5 of the city (Laws of 1897, ch. 378) and, secondarily, by the enactments of the Tax Law then in force (Laws of 1896, ch. 908, as amended) not in conflict with those provisions and essential to the completeness of the system. Under the provisions of the charter, in 1899 the hoard of taxes and assessments, consisting of five persons, were the assessing officers. Through the five years last preceding the creation in 1897 of “ Greater New York ” city, a statute (Laws of 1892, ch. 512) had required the preparation, under the direction of the assessing officers, of a land map of the city to be known as “ ‘ the block map of taxes and assessments of the city of New York, ’ upon which shall be exhibited under sections, and section numbers and block and block numbers the separate lots or parcels of land owned or taxed within each of the city blocks; each lot or parcel of land shown on such map to he designated thereon by lot numbers, and which lot numbers shall correspond as far as may he with the present ward numbers of said lots or parcels, and shall commence in each block with number one, and continue numerically upwards, for as many of such lots or parcels as shall b¿ comprised within each block ” (Section 1), the certification and filing as prescribed of the map, and that thereafter no change be made in the sections, blocks, section numbers or block numbers, but new sections and blocks and their numbers shall be mapped as necessity required and the officers might number the lots therein and from time to time change upon the map the form and numbers of the lots, “and the annual record of the assessed valuation of real and personal estate in said city shall thereafter be prepared under the direction and supervision of the said commissioners, so that the entries therein of all taxes and assessments laid or levied on land in said city shall be under sections and block headings as may be most convenient and suitable for use in connection with said block map; and the said annual record ’ shall otherwise be of such general form and plan as the said commission *6 ers may direct.” (Section 4.) The statute contemplated that each assessed parcel of land should be described for assessment and taxing purposes in the annual Tecord of-the assessed valuation of real and personal estate by a designation consisting of a certain number of a certain section or of a certain block of a certain section as delineated and definitely located by “the block map.” The owner of property subject to assessment might ascertain from the map the section and block therein in which the property was and the lot number and, having such knowledge, could ascertain from the annual record containing the corresponding description the amount of the tentative assessment there made. The charter of 1897 extended this statute to the city it created (§§ 889, 891, 1608, 1610) and provided further that the maps and assessment rolls of the municipalities or parts of municipalities consolidated by it should be delivered to the board of taxes and assessment as public records open to public inspection and that the necessary surveys and corrections of the ward maps and all new maps which might be required for the more accurate assessment of real estate within the territory consolidated with the then existing city should be made. (§§ 890, 891.). These, sections clearly contemplated that the assessing board might adopt existing maps which were consistent with and might be made apart of the section, block and lot system or cause, as necessary, interim or permanent block maps to be made and filed. The system was extended throughout the consolidated city. It effected the identification of each parcel of real estate assessed beyond any reasonable possibility of doubt or mistake and was adequate and lawful.

Under the charter of 1897 (L. 1897, ch. 378) deputy tax commissioners, appointed by the board of taxes and assessment, were charged with the duty under the direction of the board “ to assess all the taxable property in the several' districts that may be assigned to them for that purpose by- *7 said board, and they shall furnish to the said board, under oath, a detailed statement of all such property, showing that said deputies have personally examined each and every house, building, lot, pier, or other assessable property, giving the street, lot, ward, town and map number of such real estate embraced within said districts, together with the name of the owner or occupant * * * (also, in their judgment, the sum for which said property under ordinary circumstances would sell), with such other information in detail relative to personal property or otherwise, as the said board may, from time to time require.” (§§ 884-889.) The detailed statement of a deputy tax commissioner or the deputy tax commissioners for any district constituted the “annual record” already mentioned of the asséssed valuations of real and personal estate within that district. Provision was made by the charter for a grievance period, at the termination of which “ the board of taxes and assessments shall cause to be prepared from the books of annual record of assessed valuations of real and personal estate in the several offices of the department of taxes and assessments in the several boroughs, assessment rolls for each of said several boroughs ” (section 907), to be completed as prescribed for delivery to the municipal assembly.

The appellant asserts that the annual record of the assessed valuation of its real estate in question did not describe it as required by the statute, and the assessment in, its origination was void. Therein it errs. The findings of fact disclose that the real estate was in that part of the town of Hempstead of the county of Queens included within the consolidated city. As a part of the city, it was in that part of the fifth ward of the borough of Queens, known as Edgemere, and was bounded on the north by Spray View avenue, on the west by Beach avenue on the east by Grand View avenue, and on the south by the Atlantic ocean, and comprised a block in area. Upon a land map of “ Edgemere,” in a volume of maps entitled *8 “Department of Taxes and Assessments. Maps of the Borough of Queens, 5th Ward, formerly town of Hemp-stead, Volume 1, January 1899,” and authenticated and filed, as required by the statute already referred to, this block was delineated as lot 1, block 10, ward 5, Edge-mere, borough of Queens, and as bounded as above stated. No other lot was identically delineated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 N.E. 90, 214 N.Y. 1, 1915 N.Y. LEXIS 1203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lancaster-sea-beach-improvement-co-v-city-of-new-york-ny-1915.