Mars Realty Corp. v. Sexton

141 Misc. 622, 253 N.Y.S. 15, 1931 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1751
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 141 Misc. 622 (Mars Realty Corp. v. Sexton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mars Realty Corp. v. Sexton, 141 Misc. 622, 253 N.Y.S. 15, 1931 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1751 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1931).

Opinion

McGeehan, J.

The plaintiffs, as taxpayers, commenced this action against the commissioners of taxes of the city of New York to enjoin them from granting exemptions of taxation under Local Law No. 9 enacted by the municipal assembly on June 22, 1927, which provides that buildings and improvements in New York city erected before January 1, 1937, by a limited dividend housing company formed under the State Housing Law (Laws of 1926, chap. 823) in connection with a project or projects authorized by article 2 of the State Housing Law shall not be subject to taxation for local purposes, other than assessments for local improvements, for a period of twenty years after the completion of such buildings or improvements.

By order of this court the Board of Housing of the State of New York have been permitted to intervene and have been made parties defendant. Pursuant to section 68 of the Executive Law the Attorney-General applied for permission to appear at any trial or hearing in this action and an order to that effect has been entered.

The plaintiffs allege that this legislation is unconstitutional. They challenge the laws in their entirety and make specific complaint against the tax exemption features thereof. The complaint fails to state facts showing in what respects they are alleged to be invalid. It appears from the briefs that the plaintiffs contend the legislation violates section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States (popularly known as the equal protection clause) and article 3, section 18, of the Constitution of the State of New York, which provides that the Legislature shall not pass a private or local b 11 granting to any person, association, firm or corporation an exemption from taxation on real or personal property.

The defendants and the Attorney-General respectively move to dismiss the complaint on the ground that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. They uphold the laws as proper exercises of legislative power and call attention to the historical background as outlined in the message of Governor Smith which transmitted to the Legislature of 1926 a report of the Commission of Housing and Regional Planning for Permanent Housing Relief (Legislative Document No. 66). That message and that report led to the enactment of the State Housing Law. It is entitled: An Act to promote the public health and safety by providing for the elimination of unsanitary and dangerous housing conditions, to relieve congested areas, and the construction and supervision of dwellings and for the letting of apartments at reasonable rentals.”

The legislative finding as contained in the law (§ 2) is: “It is [624]*624hereby declared that congested and unsanitary housing conditions which exist in certain areas of the state in low priced dwellings are a menace to the health, safety, morals, welfare and reasonable comfort of the citizens of the state. The correction of these conditions in such areas being now otherwise impossible, it is essential that provision be made for the investment of private funds at low interest rates, the acquisition at fair prices of adequate parcels of land, the gradual demolition of existing unsanitary and unsafe housing and the construction of new housing facilities under public supervision in accord with proper standards of sanitation and safety and at a cost which will permit monthly rentals which wage earners can afford to pay and not in excess of the rates hereinafter provided.”

The Commission’s report and the legislative declaration must be given “ very great respect ” by the courts. (Levy Leasing Company v. Siegel, 258 TJ. S. 242, 246.)

Two clauses are italicized by the court for the reason that the plaintiffs argue that the law is designed to ehminate congested and unsanitary housing conditions in the city of New York alone and that while it is in form general, its application is local. There are congested districts in other parts of the State outside the Greater City of New York. The Legislature declared that these conditions exist in certain areas of the State and are a menace to the citizens of the State.

The defendants, the Board of Housing of the State of New York, are charged with certain duties, among which are the following:

§ 13. Duties of board with respect to projects for providing housing accommodations. Whenever the board shall find that there exist in any locality throughout the state conditions described in section two of this chapter which cannot be remedied through the ordinary operation of private enterprise so as to insure the construction of housing facilities in conformity with reasonable standards of health, sanitation and safety within the maximum rental rates herein prescribed, the board shall select and approve an area or areas within or adjacent to such localities for the construction of buildings by limited dividend corporations formed ■under this act.”

The complaint alleges that among the buildings and projects which the defendants, the commissioners of taxes of New York, have already exempted from taxation for the year 1931, pursuant to the local law, are those erected in blocks 3252 A, B and C of the land map of the county of Bronx, and are near Van Cortlandt Park.

The argument that these projects are not within the purview of the law, not being in an area adjacent to a locality of congested [625]*625and unsanitary housing conditions, is not pertinent to the question of constitutionality, which is the only one now to be decided.

In Hobart v. City of Minneapolis (139 Minn. 368) the board of park commissioners, under the authority of law, condemned for park purposes a tract of land outside of and beyond the city limits and not contiguous to the boundary line thereof. The appellant contended that the land so taken was not adjacent ” within the meaning of the statute. The court said (p. 370): The word ‘ adjacent ’ used in such statutes as descriptive of what lands may be so added to a municipality is given substantial and broad construction, and is not limited to its primary meaning as defined by the lexicographers.”

But the court is not now concerned with a question of statutory construction or with the administration of the law as contemplated by its framers and by those who urged its adoption. Much of the argument of the plaintiffs is devoted to subjects which the court may not consider hereon. The Board of Housing is the agent of the State designated to carry out the law. The purposes of the law are to be noted: (1) To promote the public health and safety; (2) to relieve congested areas; and (3) the construction and supervision of dwellings and the letting of apartments at reasonable rentals.

In the performance of their duties the Board may decide to select an area in a part of the city not fully built up and approve a building project there instead of razing and building anew in an area considered undesirable and may also prescribe the type of building to be erected for the general public welfare. These are purely administrative functions with which the court will at no time interfere unless abuse of power is clearly shown. Not only corrective but constructive means are provided to attain the desired objects.

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Related

Matter of N.Y. City H. Authority v. Muller
1 N.E.2d 153 (New York Court of Appeals, 1936)
New York City Housing Authority v. Muller
155 Misc. 681 (New York Supreme Court, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
141 Misc. 622, 253 N.Y.S. 15, 1931 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mars-realty-corp-v-sexton-nysupct-1931.