Mandel v. Weschler
This text of 128 A.D. 505 (Mandel v. Weschler) 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.
Opinion
On the 14th of August, 1906, plaintiff, pursuant to a contract, conveyed to certain parties five lots upon which tenement houses [506]*506had just been erected. On the same day . he deposited with the defendant $975, under an agreement that if the regular Croton -water rents for the year 1906 — that is, the period ending April 30, 1907 — were, on the 13th day of August, 1906, a lien against the premises conveyed, the defendant, should pay the said, rents out of ■ the money thus deposited and return the surplus, if any, to the plaintiff; but if the rents were not a' lien on that day, then the defendant should, on demand, return to the plaintiff the whole amount deposited. The plaintiff thereafter demanded that the whole' amount be returned to . him, which was refused, and thereupon this action was brought to recover the same. At the conclusion of the trial -both sides moved for the direction of a verdict. - The plaintiff’s motion was granted, and a verdict directed in his favor for the full amount,' with, interest,, and from the judgment entered thereon and from ah order denying a motion for á new trial, defendant appeals.
The sole question presented is whether the Croton water rents were a lien against the premises on the 13th of August, 1906. The record of the department of water supply, in so far as the same affects the premises, was put in evidence, and it shows that on the 17th of August, 190.6, charges for nine months, that is, from August 1, 1906, to May 1, 1907, were for the first time entered against the 'premises. These charges amounted in all to $625.50, and were paid oh the eighteenth of October following by" the defendant, who admits- that the balance of the amount deposited with him ($349.50) is due to the plaintiff.
The appellant'contends that the water rents were, at the-time the money was deposited-, a lien, basing his contention upon ah ordinance of the city of New York (§ 283) ;
Section 469 of the charter gives the commissioner of water supply, gas and electricity control over the collection of all revenues from the sale or use of water. But it nowhere gives him power to determine when the water charges made by him become a lien upon the property against which the same is charged. He has the right to make the charge and then collect, and, if the charge be a proper one under section 473 the same then becomes a lien, and under section 1017 so continues until the charge is paid.
The provisions of the Tenement House Act referred to have no application. Section 104 simply provides that every tenement house shall have Water furnished in sufficient quantity at one or more places on each floor occupied by or intended to be occupied by one or more families. And section 123, that if any building hereafter constructed as or altered into a tenement house be occupied in whole or in part for human habitation in violation of the previous section, then the department of water supply shall not permit water to be furnished in such tenement house. These provisions and others of the Tenement House Act are designed solely to regulate the construction, equipment and maintenance of tenement houses and have no relation to water rents, either what shall be charged or when the same become a lien.
As to when the houses were actually finished and whether the water had been turned on prior to the closing of title on the fourteenth of August the evidence is conflicting. The plaintiff testified that he had never made any application for water supply, but it is suggested that he must have done so, otherwise he could not have obtained the certificates from the tenement house department which were issued August tenth. The certificates were simply to the effect that the buildings conform “ to the requirements of the Tene[508]*508ment House Act; ” they do not overcome the plaintiffs testimony, nor are they in conflict with it if it be true that the buildings were then unoccupied, and that fact is hot disputed.
But irrespective of the question when the water was actually, turned on there, could be no lien until the amount- had been deter- ' mined and an actual entry made in the. proper book. It lias been uniformly held in cases involving the question as to when a tax becomes a lien that it is only when the amount thereof is ascertained and determined. (Harper v. Dowdney, 113 N. Y. 644; Lathers v. Keogh, 109 id. 583 ; Village of Upper Nyack v. Jewett, 86 App. Div. 254; affd., 181 N. Y. 514; Burr v. Palmer, 53 App. Div. 358.)
The same rule is here applicable. The lien did not exist until the charge had been determined and entered upon the books of the department, the seventeenth of August. The court, therefore, properly directed a verdict for the plaintiff for the full amount deposited, with interest.
The judgment and order appealed from .are affirmed, with costs.
Patterson, P. J., Clarke, Houghton and Scott, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.
See Revised Ord.. 1906, pt. 1, chap. 6, § 283; Cosby’s Code Ord. (Anno. 1907) 64, § 283; Revised Ord-. 1897, § 153; Brown’s Greater N. Y. Gen. Ord. (Anno. 1905) 20, § 153.— [Rep.
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128 A.D. 505, 112 N.Y.S. 813, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mandel-v-weschler-nyappdiv-1908.