People ex rel. Brooklyn Heights Railroad v. State Board of Tax Commissioners

69 Misc. 646, 127 N.Y.S. 825
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 69 Misc. 646 (People ex rel. Brooklyn Heights Railroad v. State Board of Tax Commissioners) 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
People ex rel. Brooklyn Heights Railroad v. State Board of Tax Commissioners, 69 Misc. 646, 127 N.Y.S. 825 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

La Boeuf, J.

Relator is a Eew York corporation. During 1904 and 19i0'5 it operated as lessee six separate surface electric railroad lines owned by the Brooklyn City Railroad Company, three of which were operated exclusively in the borough of Queens, and three operated partly in Queens and partly in Brooklyn borough.-

The percentage of track of the three lines not wholly operated in Queens was fifty-six and nine-tenths track miles in Queens, and forty-three and one-tenth track miles in Brooklyn.

As to the last three lines, cars starting from some point in Brooklyn ran to the end of the line in Queens and returned.

The relator in -addition owned and operated many other railroads in Brooklyn; and, although an independent eorpo[648]*648ration, its stock was controlled by a holding company known as the Brooklyn Eapid Transit Company. That company was not an operating company, but owned or controlled the stock of various other corporations; and all of these corporations so controlled were known as the Brooklyn Eapid Transit system.

The State Board of Tax Commissioners assessed the Brooklyn franchises of the relator, which included the Brooklyn section of the three leased lines in question and many other lines, at $12,460',000. They assessed the relator’s franchisee in Queens, consisting exclusively of these six lines, at $1,520,000.

The relator sued out a writ of certiorari to review these assessments. The proceedings on the assessment as to Brooklyn borough were by order discontinued. Those brought to review the Queens assessment were continued and, upon the return to the writ, lion. Martin Saxe was appointed referee to take testimony and report his findings as provided in the State Tax Law. The referee in his findings has increased the full value of these franchises, as found by the State Board, to $1,707,303.01. He has then equalized the assessment with the assessment upon other real property in Queens, and for that reason only has reduced the assessment from $1,520,000 to $1,365,848.

Ho dispute existed upon the hearing as to the value of the tangible property employed by relator in connection with these special franchises during the year 1904. This value was, therefore, fixed as of the date of the assessment at $418,172.51.

The sole question in dispute before the referee was the value of the intangible property which relator claimed had no value, for the purpose of a special franchise tax. On this theory relator’s assessment' should not exceed $334,-538.01 after equalization.

This proceeding is brought on before me upon a motion to vacate the report of the referee, and to fix and determine the relator’s assessment at a sum not to exceed the conceded value of the relator’s tangible property after agreed deductions for equalization. The findings and report of the referee are, [649]*649under the circumstances, purely advisory and not binding upon this court.

It appears that the relator has sustained the burden imposed upon it of showing that the assessment, as made by the State Board, is erroneous and excessive.

The parties to this proceeding and the referee have assumed' that the net earnings rule should apply. Bo proof was given nor suggestion made that this is the case of a corporation enjoying a special franchise which, by reason of mismanagement or other canse, has yielded no earnings which may be capitalized into a franchise tax assessment. Indeed, the record discloses a corporation which, as a part of a system, has made efforts to reduce its operating expenses and produce maximum earnings for each of its component parts. Bo proof was offered upon a stock or bond theory, nor does that theory appear to be applicable in view of the peculiar relations of relator. The controversy between the parties arises rather over differing theories as to how net earnings shall actually he ascertained.

The relator, though its stock is controlled by the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company, is a separate and independent corporation. It keeps an accurate record of the earnings of each of fhe lines in question. It shows by uncontradieted proof that three of its lines operated exclusively in the borough of Queens. These lines in 19'04 produced gross income from passenger traffic of $169,961.57. The other three lines, which operated in Queens and Brooklyn boroughs, together produced $407,2-5.5.2-5 gross earnings.

The greater percentage of track mileage of these three lines, was in Queens, fifty-six and nine-tenths track miles, while forty-three and one-tenth track miles were in Brooklyn. The great density of population was- in Brooklyn. The source of passenger attraction was Brooklyn and Manhattan, where was located the business center to wbicb people would naturally go aud from which return.

■Cars were -operated from a terminus in Brooklyn to a terminus iu Queens and then returned to the starting point. The three lines being run by a single corporation in both bo-roughs, no exact- account was kept of the fares collected in Queens as against Brooklyn.

[650]*650So fat as transfers were given on the lines of the relator it would appear that this in no way interfered with the profits of the Queens borough lines under the circumstances. Queens borough passengers carried into Brooklyn and receiving a transfer permitting them- to ride on lines in Brooklyn, under the circumstances., neither increased nor reduced- the earnings in either Brooklyn or Queens. On the return of such passengers they would get transfers to their homes, so that each line really got its own fare and honored the transfer of the other line.

It appears that, so far as transfers of the Brooklyn Eapid Transit system were concerned, the giving of such transfers was not necessarily the rule.

These being the conditions the relator fairly claimed that the $40'7,2'5'5.25 earned by the two- groups of lines should be divided on the basis of track mileage between the two boroughs. This method may indeed giv-e an advantage to Queens over Brooklyn. On that basis $231,128.21 was apportioned to Queens, making -a grand total of $101,689.81.

If this theory of division of actual earnings failed to give the proper proportion of earnings to Queens it would easily have been tbe -subject of criticism by experts who. could have shown its impropriety. No such testimony was given by tbe defendant.

To these actual earnings there was necessarily added a small amount of net earnings for advertising, mail and express business, $3,021.18. This account was not accurately kept.by relator, but was its proportion of the like earnings for the -whole system upon the basis of its own ear mileage.

The referee, however, refused to be bound by these actual earnings. He followed a theory which inereasd the gross earnings by almost $100,000'. He followed that theory solely because of the method of keeping the relator’s accounts, not as to earnings, but as to some of its operating expenses. Because some of these operating expenses were not actual, but were an apportionment to these lines of like expenses of the entire Brooklyn Bapid Transit system on a car mileage basis, he contends that the theory so employed shall be applied to earnings as well, even though it largely in[651]*651ci eased the amount which these lines and the relator have actually earned.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 Misc. 646, 127 N.Y.S. 825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-brooklyn-heights-railroad-v-state-board-of-tax-nysupct-1910.