McLanahan v. City of Syracuse

25 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 259
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1879
StatusPublished

This text of 25 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 259 (McLanahan v. City of Syracuse) 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
McLanahan v. City of Syracuse, 25 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 259 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1879).

Opinion

Talcott, P. J.:

This case, which was submitted without oral argument at the last term of this court, is a case in which the complaint is, ostensibly, for the purpose of having an accounting by and between Allen Munroe and the plaintiffs in regard to certain moneys received, and balances duo from said Munroe, as the agent of the plaintiffs, and incidentally to have certain city taxes levied on the property of the plaintiffs by the city authorities of Syracuse, in the year 1875, and also certain county and State taxes levied in the same year, by the supervisors of Onondaga county, declared to have been paid and satisfied, and to restrain the city and county authorities from taking any measures to collect the said taxes.

Without going into unnecessary details, the facts of the case may be summed up as follows : The plaintiffs are the owners of three stores on South Salina street, in the city of Syracuse. [260]*260Allen Munroe was, in the year 1875, and for some time before then, had been the agent of the plaintiffs (who are married women residing in the city of New York), to collect the rents, see to the necessary repairs, and pay the taxes on the said three stores, and had been accustomed, before any fees for the collection of such taxes became due, to give his checks on certain banks in Syracuse for the amount of taxes levied on said premises, together with other premises, for which he was the agent, and premises in said city, of which he was himself the owner, in order to avoid paying the fees for collection which, by law, would become duo, from time to time, if payment was delayed.

In the year 1875 the sum of $890 was assessed on the said premises, as, and for city taxes for that year, and a further tax of $723.14, as, and for the State and county taxes. The said city tax became due and payable to the treasurer and tax receiver of the said city on or about the 16th day of October, 1875, and was payable to the treasurer and tax receiver of said city, and the State and county taxes became due and payable to the samo officer on or about the 5th day of January, 1876.

On the 16th day of October, 1875, Allen Munroe made and delivered to the said treasurer and tax receiver three certain checks on the Third National Bank of Syracuse, bearing date on that day, and drawn by said Munroe to the order of the said treasurer and tax receiver, two for the sum of $2,500 each, and one for tho sum of $3,752.26, being the full amount of city taxes for that year upon property, of which said Munroe was owner or agent, including the said premises belonging to the plaintiffs.

The said treasurer and tax receiver, upon receiving said checks, made entries upon the city tax-rolls, indicating that the city tax, upon the property of which Munroe was owner, or for which he was agent, including the plaintiffs’ three stores, were paid, and on the evening of the same day sent to Munroe, by mail, a receipt for the same.

At the time said checks were delivered to the said treasurer and tax receiver they were not good, there being then no funds in the bank wherewith to pay the same, and it was then agreed between said Munroe and said treasurer and receiver that' the same were not immediately to be presented for payment, and [261]*261said Munroe, at the time, indicated by a pencil memorandum on-said checks the time when they were severally to be presented for payment, viz. : one chock for $2,500 on the tenth of November, the other on the tenth of December, and the larger check ou the 20th of December, 1875.

The said tax receiver thereupon retained the said checks, without presenting the same for payment, until the tenth of November, when Munroe requested him not to present the $2,500 check which, by the memorandum, was to have been presented on that day, as he, Munroe, was not yet prepared to meet the same, and Munroe promised to inform the said tax receiver when he would be prepared, to meet the same. The check for $2,500, which was by the memorandum to be presented on the tenth of December, was paid at some time during the month of December. Neither of the other checks were ever presented for payment, but were from time to time retained by the said tax receiver at the request of said Munroe, and upon his statement that the same were not then good, but that he would notify the said tax receiver when to present the same, but ho was never so notified.

On the 5th day of January, 1876, when the State and county tax became payable, Munroe made and delivered to the said treasurer and tax receiver his check, drawn to the order of said tax receiver on the same bank, for $6,802, that being the amount of the State and county taxes, payable on that day, for the year 1875, upon the property of which said Munroe was owner or agent, including the said premises belonging to the plaintiffs, and the said tax receiver then made an entry ou the tax-roll indicating that the said State and county taxes were paid, but no receipt was then or ever given to Munroe for the same. That when the last mentioned check was given it was understood that the same was not good for want of funds in the bank, but was to be held for the accommodation of Munroe until he could make the same good, when he would notify the tax receiver to present the same, but Munroe never gave such notice and said check was never presented.

On the 21st of February, 1876, said Allen Munroe failed, and made an assignment of all his property for the benefit of his creditors, and has ever since continued to be wholly insolvent.

[262]*262Ou or about January 6, 1876, Munroe, still acting as the agent of the plaintiffs, transmitted to them by mail his account as their agent, in which account he credited himself with the payment of the said city, State and county taxes on the said real estate of the plaintiffs for the year 1875, and the plaintiffs settled with him on the said statement of account, believing the same to be true. But the receipt for city taxes, which had been sent to Munroe, was not exhibited to the plaintiffs, nor did they know of the same till after his assignment, or that the tax receiver had taken and held the checks of Munroe for the said taxes on their property.

There was no agreement that the said checks should, be received or accepted at the risk of the city of Syracuse, or its said tax receiver, or that the same should be received and accepted in payment or discharge of any of the taxes for which they were given. Munroe had given his checks in a similar manner in previous years, and they had been retained by the tax receiver until they were actually paid. None of the checks given for the taxes of 1875 have been paid, except the check for $2,500, due, according to the memorandum, on the 10th of December, 1875, which sum of $2,500 was, after his failure, by arrangement with Munroe and his assignees, and the tax receiver, distributed and applied pro rata on all the city taxes for which the checks had been given, the amount credited to the plaintiffs on said city taxes under this arrangement being the sum of $254.22.

It did not appear that the plaintiffs had ever, previous to the settlement of their said account with Munroe, been cognizant of the entries made by the tax receiver on the rolls, indicating that the said taxes for the year 1875 had been paid. None of said city, State or county taxes on the plaintiffs property have, in fact, been paid, except by the application of the said $254.28, part of the said $2,500 which has been applied in satisfaction of that amount of city taxes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclanahan-v-city-of-syracuse-nysupct-1879.