New York & Queens Electric Light & Power Co. v. Delaney

128 N.E. 131, 229 N.Y. 184, 1920 N.Y. LEXIS 673
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 1, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 128 N.E. 131 (New York & Queens Electric Light & Power Co. v. Delaney) 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
New York & Queens Electric Light & Power Co. v. Delaney, 128 N.E. 131, 229 N.Y. 184, 1920 N.Y. LEXIS 673 (N.Y. 1920).

Opinion

*187 His cock, Ch. J.

As its name implies, the relator is engaged in the generation and distribution of electricity in the borough of Queens, city of New York. The Queensboro bridge was constructed at the expense of the city of New York across the East river between the boroughs of Manhattan and Queens. At various dates in the years 1913 and 1915 three several agreements were made by and between the proper city official then known as the commissioner of bridges and the relator, each one providing for the installation on said bridge within the borough of Queens by relator of a conduit in which might be laid one or more of its cables. These agreements, for the purposes of this case, are substantially identical and each one provided that- the relator might lay and install such conduit under certain conditions and restrictions and in consideration of its agreement to <e pay to the City of New York, through the Department of Bridges, as a rental, the sum of $500 per annum,” and that on sixty days’ notice in writing it would remove the cable, conduits and fastenings.

For the year 1918 the relator by the proper authorities was assessed upon the special franchises enjoyed and operated by it in the borough of Queens in the sum of $44,405,500 and upon which assessment a tax was levied amounting to the sum of $106,172.55. This assessment included the right to have and operate the conduits upon the Queensboro bridge above mentioned. During the year preceding the date when this tax became due, under the agreements above mentioned the relator paid to the city of New York the sum of $1,500 for the privilege secured by it of having and operating its conduits upon said bridge, and by this proceeding it has sought the right, thus far denied, to have such payment credited upon the tax above mentioned. The application involves the consideration of several questions all of which must be decided in favor of relator before it can secure the relief which it demands.

*188 The first query is whether the rights which relator secured under its agreements with the city are the ones which have been assessed and taxed as a special franchise, because if not, its payments to the city are clearly not deductible. It is suggested by respondents in this connection that the .relator may have secured under its general franchises and powers the right to lay and operate its conduits on the bridge and our attention is called to the evidence of one of relator’s officers who practically makes this claim. We think, however, that the city is precluded from taking the position that the relator already had the right to cross the bridge with its conduits and that, therefore, no rights were conferred or consideration given for the payments which it was exacting.

The second question is the one whether the permission to -relator to have and operate its cable upon the bridge constituted a right which in connection with its physical property could be assessed as a special franchise. If it could not be relator does not need the relief which it now seeks. We have no doubt that for the purposes of this proceeding it was such a right.

Subdivision 6, section 2, article 1 of the Tax Law (Cons. Laws, eh. 60) provides that “ The terms land,’ real estate,’ and ‘ real property,’ as used in this chapter include * * * all mains, pipes and tanks laid or placed in, upon, above or under any public or private street or place for conducting * * * electricity * * * including the value of all franchises, rights, authority or permission to construct, maintain* or operate, * * * any * * * conduits * * * for conducting * * * electricity * * *. A franchise, right, authority or permission specified in this subdivision shall for the purpose of taxation be known as a special franchise.’ ” The rights secured and enjoyed by the relator come within these definitions and the city having taken no steps to revoke them, but taking advantage of the assess *189 ment which has been made of them as a special franchise, is in no position to question the validity of the assessment. (People ex rel. Nassau Electric R. R. Co. v. Grout, 119 App. Div. 130; affd., on opinion below, 189 N. Y. 510.)

The remaining question which it is necessary to consider is the most important of those presented to us. It is the one- whether the payments made by relator to the city for permission to lay and operate its conduits and wires were of a character which the statute permits to be deducted from its special franchise tax.

The section covering this subject (Tax Law, section 48) provides that if a corporation has paid to a city for its exclusive use within the next preceding year, under any agreement therefor, or under any statute requiring the same, any sum based upon a 'percentage of gross earnings, or any other income, or any license fee, or any sum of money on account of such special franchise, granted to or possessed by such * * * corporation, which payment was in the nature of a tax, all amounts ■ so paid for the exclusive, use of such city, * * * shall be deducted from any tax based on the assessment made by the state tax commission for city, town or village purposes, but "not otherwise; and the remainder shall be the tax on such special franchise payable for city, town or village purposes.”

It is asserted that the sums paid by relator to the city were rent, that they were paid under an agreement and, therefore, were not a tax; that a tax implies and involves compulsion and that these sums were paid by consent. We think that this view involves a misconception of the true nature of the payments and an interpretation of the purpose and meaning of the statute which is too narrow.

While the sums which were paid to the city were denominated as rent in the agreements between it and the relator, they were more than rent in an ordinary *190 sense. The controlling object of the relator was not to secure mere physical space on the bridge where its conduits might be laid, but rather to secure the possibility and privilege of carrying on its business beyond the bridge and for that end to obtain permission to carry its conduits and wires across it. It was seeking to carry on business and not to rent space. It was intent on securing a franchise and not storage room. Taking this view we think that the payments which it made to the city were in the nature of a tax within the meaning of that statute. It-is true that they were made by agreement and not by the compulsion of ordinary assessment and tax proceedings. But the statute expressly embraces the two ideas of a sum paid by agreement and yet in the nature of a tax, and, therefore, we are not compelled for the purpose of its interpretation to regard these two features as antagonistic and inconsistent, but rather to adopt an interpretation which harmonizes them. While no tax official compelled relator to pay these sums, still they were an exaction which it consented to have levied upon it as a condition of the privilege which it secured. This exaction was a burden upon the rights which it enjoyed and in that way in a practical sense in the nature of a tax upon them.

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Bluebook (online)
128 N.E. 131, 229 N.Y. 184, 1920 N.Y. LEXIS 673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-queens-electric-light-power-co-v-delaney-ny-1920.