People Ex Rel. Buffalo Burial Park Ass'n v. Stilwell

83 N.E. 56, 190 N.Y. 284, 28 Bedell 284, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 1379
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 20, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 83 N.E. 56 (People Ex Rel. Buffalo Burial Park Ass'n v. Stilwell) 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
People Ex Rel. Buffalo Burial Park Ass'n v. Stilwell, 83 N.E. 56, 190 N.Y. 284, 28 Bedell 284, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 1379 (N.Y. 1907).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

This was a proceeding by certiorari under the statute to review an assessment of the relator’s real estate made by the assessors of the town of Tonawanda. On griev anee day the relator, a cemetery association, appeared by attorney before the assessors and requested that the tax assessed against it be canceled on various grounds, among others that the property taxed was by law exempt from taxation and not properly described; that the assessment was made against the Elmlawn Cemetery as the owner, when in fact the land assessed was owned by the relator. After hearing these objections the assessors oil a subsequent day cor rected the assessment by substituting the relator as the owner of the land, and changing the form of the assessment by transferring it to that part of the roll prepared for assessments against non-resident owners of land, the relator’s principal office not being situated within the district over which the assessors had jurisdiction, but they refused to cancel the assessment.

Thereupon the relator presented to the court at Special Term a petition praying that a writ of certiorari issue to review the action of the assessors. The assessors made return to the writ, in which there is not to be found any general or specific denial of the material facts stated in the petition, but it contains affirmative allegations that, if true, are inconsistent with and contradictory in some respect of material facts stated in the petition. The learned judge at Special Term, assuming that the facts stated in the return were conclusive, or at least *288 the true facts, dismissed the writ without taking .any proof in regard to the matters alleged in the petition and return. The Appellate Division unanimously affirmed the order, and from this affirmance the case comes here. The relator’s real estate consisted of one hundred and sixty-three acres in one body, and the assessment was of one hundred and twenty-seven acrés. This action is based upon the fact as claimed that the balance of the one hundred and sixty-three acres was actually plotted and occupied by graves and monuments such as are usually found in cemeteries. In other words, it was held that the one hundred and twenty-seven acres were not used or occupied by the cemetery and, therefore, were taxable.

The petition alleges “ that all of the said land is actually used and occupied for cemetery purposes and is exempt from taxation under the laws of the state of New York.” It was further alleged by the assessors in their return to the writ that only about thirty acres of the tract had been inclosed as a cemetery and only that number of acres were being improved, graded, developed, embellished or used for cemetery and burial purposes. It was further alleged that the assessors had been informed that the one hundred and twenty-seven acres were occupied at one time by a man named Gordon, who was then paying to the owners a rental for the use of the land, and was using the same for farming and other domestic purposes and not as a cemetery or place of burial; that the assessors and supervisor of the town referred the question to the state board of tax commissioners for instructions as to whether said one hundred and twenty-seven acres not used for burial or cemetery purposes, and from which rent was received and income derived, should be classed as exempt from taxes, or whether the same was subject to taxation; and that said board instructed the assessors and supervisor that the land in question not used for burial or cemetery purposes, and from which rent was received and income derived, was subject to taxation and should be taxed upon their rolls ; that these instructions were entirely verbal, no part of which had been reduced to writing so far as *289 defendants had any knowledge. It was further alleged that one Brennan was then and for some time past had been the occupant and in possession of the one hundred and twenty-seven acres, and that he had stated to two of the assessors that he paid rent for the use of the same, and thereupon the assessors entered the land upon the assessment roll as taxable real estate. The return further states that on grievance day the attorney who appeared for the relator before the assessors had filed with the board a statement in writing making objections to the assessment, and that the assessors understood from him that the one hundred and twenty-seven acres were rented for one hundred and twenty-five dollars, and that the attorney then and there admitted that such was the fact; that none of the proceedings of the assessors was reduced to writing, and the questions raised by the attorney for the relator were thereupon postponed until the next grievance day, which was August 22nd, 1906. On that day the attorney appeared before the assessors and filed with them a verified statement in support of his contention, and that on that occasion he also admitted that the one hundred and twenty-seven acres were rented for the sum of one hundred and twenty-five dollars; and that thereupon the roll was corrected by striking out the former-assessment of the property and the same was assessed to the relator. There were no other allegations in the return that are material to the decision of the question involved in the appeal.

The assessors had no power to make a new assessment on grievance day. They had power to reduce assessments already made. I assume that they had some power with respect to the correction of names and perhaps other matters, and if the assessment in question is to be deemed a new assessment and not the correction of an old one, the assessors exceeded their powers. I do not think it is necessary to pass upon that part of the relator’s contention. T shall assume, without deciding, that the changes which the assessors made in the form of the assessment on tho last grievance day can be defended, and if there were no other questions in the case *290 the court would be disposed to uphold the action of the assessors if fairly possible; but the appeal presents other questions that seem to me to be of more importance.

There can be no doubt that the lands of a cemetery association actually used and occupied for cemetery purposes are exempt from taxation under chapter 310 of the Laws of 1879, and also under section 4 of the Tax Law. The difficulty in this case is that no facts have been found by the learned court below, and we cannot know whether in fact the relator has leased a part of the land for farming purposes, or other purposes foreign to its use as a burial place or cemetery. If it is true, as the relator has alleged in its petition, that the whole tract, including that part embraced in the assessment, is devoted to cemetery purposes, then the assessment was not authorized. The first difficulty that the respondents have to overcome is a question of pleading. This proceeding is under the statute and is substantially a new trial of the things decided by the assessors. The petition is the complaint and the return is the answer, and the general rules of pleading are applicable to such a case.

One of these rules has been stated in a recent case in this court: “ It is a settled rule in the construction of pleadings that a material fact distinctly alleged in the complaint is not controverted, by stating the same fact in the answer in some other way or by giving a version of the transaction inconsistent with the allegation in the complaint. The allegations of the complaint are controverted or put in issue only by a general or specific denial.

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Bluebook (online)
83 N.E. 56, 190 N.Y. 284, 28 Bedell 284, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 1379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-buffalo-burial-park-assn-v-stilwell-ny-1907.