O'Donnell v. McIntyre

44 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 615
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1885
StatusPublished

This text of 44 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 615 (O'Donnell v. McIntyre) 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
O'Donnell v. McIntyre, 44 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 615 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1885).

Opinion

BRADLEY, J.:

The premises consist of a house and lot in the Eleventh ward of the city of Rochester. The assessment was made and the tax levied in 1879, on which was founded the sale of the property. And the question is, whether the jwoceedings by which the tax was levied were a substantial compliance with the statute on the subject, and such as to support the sale and deed of conveyance under which the defendant claims title. The assessors of the city make the assessment of the property within it for the action of the board of supervisors of the county of Monroe in the levy of general taxes. (Laws 1861, chap. 143.) And the time and manner of making and certifying the assessments are prescribed by the city charter, by which it is provided that they be made by the second Tuesday of April in each year, and entered in a separate book for each ward; that immediately after completion the assessors shall determine the time and place of their first meeting to hear objections, etc., of persons interested, of which at least ten days’ notice shall be given by publica-, lion in the daily newspapers of the city; that they shall meet and continue their session for such purpose ten days; that when com■pleted, the assessment books shall be certified and sworn by the assessors, or a majority of them, and delivered to the clerk of the city on or before the fifteenth day of J une in each year, who shall report [617]*617tbe same to tbe common council at its next meeting, and that “ the. assessors shall malee and certify to a correct copy of said assessment hoolc, to be delivered to the supervisors of the several wards or ■election districts respectively, for the use of the board of supervisors ■of Monroe county, on or before the first day of October in each yearr, to be by them presented to the board of supervisors of Monroe county as the ward rolls of the city. * * * Tbe said assessors •are hereby directed to make sncli additional amendments and corrections in said assessment-rolls as to tbe names of tbe actual owners ■or occupants of real e'state therein assessed as they shall deem proper, at any time before the first day of October in each year.” (Laws 1861, chap. 143, § 87, as amended by Laws 1869, chap. 267, § 5.)

Tbe assessment was made, and afterwards and on tbe 25th day of •October, 1879, tbe assessors severally made and subscribed an oath in respect to tbe assessment for -the Eleventh ward, of tbe form prescribed by the statute (Laws 1851, chap. 176, § 8), before a commissioner of deeds by whom it was certified. No copy of tbe roll was delivered by tbe assessors to tbe supervisor of tbe ward, but tbe clerk of tbe board of supervisors’ obtained a copy, with tbe oath so made and certified, from tbe assessors office, at or prior to tbe time ■of meeting of tbe board, and it was there used as the basis of their action in levying tbe tax upon tbe property of the ward. Tbe assessment of tbe premises in question was to Mary Horrigan, at tbe value of $925, and the tax levied upon it was seven dollars and sixty-one cents. A warrant was issued, and for failure to collect and default in payment, tbe premises were sold August 18,1880, by tbe treasurer of tbe county, pursuant to Laws of 1877, chapter 104, and by him bid in for tbe supervisors of tbe county for tbe last mentioned sum. And afterwards, on the 11th day of March, 1882, be assigned tbe certificate of sale to tbe defendant in consideration of such amount and interest, as authorized by statute (Id., § 13), and on tbe 29th August, 1882, made to him a deed. And on the thirtieth of that month tbe defendant served a written notice on the occupant,'as required by tbe statute (Id., § 15), and filed in tbe office of tbe treasurer evidence of its service. Tbe attention of tbe plaintiff was called to tbe notice soon after it was served. The premises were not redeemed from tbe sale. Tbe treasurer made the requisite certificate, and tbe defend[618]*618ant claims that on the expiration of six months from the time of so filing such evidence of service the conveyance to him became absolute, a.nd that the plaintiff was barred of all right or title to the-property. That is the effect of the conveyance and proceedings if the provisions of the statute have been substantially observed in conducting the proceedings, of the regularity of which prior to,, and including the sale, the conveyance is presumptive evidence. (Id., 12.) The plaintiff’s counsel say that the conveyance is void,, because: 1. The assessors did not “make and certify to a correct copy ” of the assessment book for the eleventh ward for the board of supervisors as required by the statute. 2. The affidavit of the-assessors was made subsequently to the time they were required to-deliver the copy of their roll to the supervisor. 3. The oath of the assessors was not taken befoye, and certified by, a justice. 4. The assessment was made neither to the owner or occupant of the land; and 5. The notice to redeem was not sufficient.

The proceeding upon which the defendant’s alleged title depends-being one to divest title to property without the consent of the-owner is in derogation of the common law, and to make it effectual for that purpose the statute providing for the proceedings, and affording that effect as the result of them, must be substantially observed and pursued. This proposition has been repeatedly held. (Sharp v. Speir, 4 Hill, 76; Sharp v. Johnson, Id., 92; Newell v. Wheeler, 48 N. Y., 486; Thompson v. Burhams, 61 id., 65.)

The original assessment-rolls were to be delivered to the city clerk for the purposes of the levying the city taxes. And the same-assessment was to go before the board of supervisor's of the county for the purpose of the tax levy to be made by that body upon the-property so assessed. The dual purpose of the assessment and such deposit of the original, required the provision for some method to-place it before the board of supervisors in a properly authenticated manner. In that view the statute directed that the assessors should “make and certify to a correct copy” for that purpose to ¡redelivered to the supervisors of the respective wards and by them presented to the board of supervisors.

This certificate of the assessors was the only statutory evidence-provided for the board of supervisors, of the assessment made of city property. The propriety of this mode of authentication is not [619]*619a subject for consideration. The fact that sucb is the legislative-direction gives to it the character of materiality and requires compliance with that provision of the statute. And it will not do to-say that because the requisite fact is . .iar. the board of supervisors have a correct copy its correctness can be equally as well established by other than the statutory evidence. In a proceeding of the character of that in question the statutory prescribed evidence of an essential fact upon which action is to be taken is no less important for the purposes of the result than the existence of the fact itself, although such evidence may not be conclusive of the existence of such fact on a direct review. (People ex rel. Rogers v. Spencer, 55 N. Y., 1.)

The board of supervisors when they levied the tax upon this property had before them what purported to be a copy of an assessment-roll of the property in the eleventh ward, with only such evidence that it was such as appeared upon or with it. There was no certificate that it was a correct copy of the roll. (Laws-1869, chap. 267, § 5.)

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Bluebook (online)
44 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/odonnell-v-mcintyre-nysupct-1885.