Marsh v. Bowen

12 Abb. N. Cas. 1
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 12 Abb. N. Cas. 1 (Marsh v. Bowen) 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
Marsh v. Bowen, 12 Abb. N. Cas. 1 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1881).

Opinion

Follett, J.

Two questions are involved in this action: (1) Had the board of supervisors jurisdiction to make the assessment ? (2) If the board had not jurisdiction, is the defendant individually liable in trespass for the value of the property sold %

It is unnecessary to determine whether the adoption by the assessors of the lists of taxable inhabitants, [6]*6property and valuation made by each assessor amounted to a legal assessment before the lists were combined" into a single assessment roll, because, if such action amounted to a legal assessment, the assessors had power to strike the assessment from the roll at any time in July, and before making and depositing the statutory (1 R. S. 393, § 19) “one fair copy thereof.”

In People ex rel. Lorillard v. Supervisors of Westchester (15 Barb. 607), it was held that the power of the assessors in this respect, is not restricted by the statute to the third Tuesday in August, and that they may correct assessments, except to increas.e them, or to add new names to the roll, at any time before it is delivered to the supervisor (15 Barb. 615). In Clark v. Norton (49 N. Y. 243) it was said, that the assessment roll must be completed, and a fair copy made and deposited for examination on or before August 1, and that after this is done, additions cannot be made. In Overing v. Foote (65 N. Y. 263) it was said, at page 275:

“ Reference to reported cases, and extracts from the opinions of different judges, at least tend to show that exactly what can be properly done by assessors in making out and completing an assessment roll between the first day of July and the first day of August, has not been very clearly decided.” On the same page, it is said: “ This roll must be completed by the first day of August, but may be at any time between the first day of July and the first day of August; but when completed, whether before the first of August, or on that day, notice of the fact must be forthwith given as the statute prescribes, and after that, I am of opinion that no further names and no other property can be added to the roll by the assessors, unless, perhaps, it may be that where the roll is supposed to have been completed before the first of August, and notice given, an error in the roll should be discovered, the notice might be countermanded, the roll corrected and com-[7]*7pie ted before the first of August, and a new notice on that day given which would answer the requirements of the statute.” Under the statutes, as construed by the cases, assessors have power to add persons and property assessable on July 1 to the roll, or to deduct persons or property unassessable on that day from it, if done in July, and before making a fair copy thereof, depositing it with one of their number, and giving the statutory notice. No case has been cited, and none has been found holding that an assessment agreed to on the first, or an early day in July, cannot, during that month, and before notice given, be reduced or stricken from the roll.

The plaintiff’s assessment for personal property was not only stricken off in July, before the fair copy was made, but was left off the roll as verified on the third Tuesday in August and afterwards delivered to the supervisors.

It is insisted in behalf of (he defendant, that the board had jurisdiction to make the assessment under section 2, chapter 453, L. 1865, which provides that 6‘Under the petition of the assessors of any town, city or ward, that any land or property in any town, city or ward in the state has been omitted in the assessment roll of the current year, they (the board of supervisors) shall insert the same in the assessment roll of said town, city or ward at the valuation of the preceding year, and tax the same at thy rate per cent, of the current year.”

The jurisdiction of boards of supervisors to make assessments and levy taxes is derived solely from the statutes. Generally, they are confined to the correction of assessments made by the assessors of each town or ward, and are withoiTfc power to add property to the roll and make assessments thereon except in certain cases pointed ou hby the statutes. This is not one of those cases. The omitted assessments referred to in the [8]*8above quoted, and kindred statutes, are those which the assessors have by inadvertence neglected to place upon the roll. These statutes do not apply to such cases as are brought to the attention of the assessors, upon which they have deliberated and arrived at a conclusion that the person or property is not asséssable, and for that reason left off the roll. Were this not so, boards of supervisors could, upon the petition of assessors, add to the roll and assess all assessable bub unassessed property that might be discovered between the completion of the assessment by the assessors and the session of the boards of supervisors.

This was not the intention of the legislature. Again, the assessment made by the board is not at the valuation of the preceding year ($2,000.00), but at a valuation four times as great. This was clearly beyond their powers, and I think beyond their jurisdiction.

In People ex rel. Oswald v. Goff (52 N. Y. 434) the relators’ property was by mistake assessed to “B. P. Young, agent of Pultney estate,” and valued at $30,000. The next year, the assessors, upon the application of three tax-payers, assessed the property to the relators as property omitted from the assessment roll of the next preceding year, and valued the property at $40,000. This assessment was made pursuant to the first section of chapter 453 of the Laws of 1865, which makes it the duty of the assessors to enter property omitted from the roll of the next preceding year, upon the roll of the current year at the valuation of the year in which the tax was omitted, or, if not then valued, at the-value of the preceding year. The assessment ■was reviewed upon certiorari, and it was held, that the act which the assessors were authorized to do was ministerial, and that they were not authorized to enter tSe property at any other valuation than $30,000. This seems to be decisive of the illegality of the tax imposed on the plaintiff. If the act of the assessors [9]*9authorized by the first section is ministerial, it seems to me that the similar act which the board of supervisors is authorized to dó by the second section is also ministerial. If the assessors had notin the cases cited jurisdiction to place the property upon the roll at a valuation in excess of that of the preceding year, the boards of supervisors had pot jurisdiction to assess the plaintiff’s property in this case at a valuation in excess of that of the preceding year.

Again, if this is not an omitted assessment within the meaning of the statutes, the jurisdictional fact which must exist to authorize the board to act, did not exist, and the determination of the board that the fact did exist did not confer jurisdiction (Matter of Catholic Protectory, 77 N. Y. 342; National Bank of Chemung v. City of Elmira, 53 N. Y. 49). If the board was without jurisdiction to impose the tax, it was not simply an erroneous tax, but was an illegal one (People ex rel. Hermance v. Supervisors of Ulster, 10 Hun, 545, 547) and the two cases last cited.

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Town of Irondequoit v. County of Monroe
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44 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 615 (New York Supreme Court, 1885)

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Bluebook (online)
12 Abb. N. Cas. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marsh-v-bowen-nysupct-1881.