People ex rel. DeJohn v. Lytle

116 Misc. 1
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 116 Misc. 1 (People ex rel. DeJohn v. Lytle) 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. DeJohn v. Lytle, 116 Misc. 1 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1921).

Opinion

Stephens, J.

At the election of officers for the village of Lyons, held March 8, 1921, the relator and the defendant were candidates for the office of trustee of the first district in said village; on the day following, the trustees, as it was their duty to do, met as a board of canvassers and canvassed the votes cast at the election; it was found that the relator had received 160 votes for said office and the defendant 44 votes; by resolution, however, the board declared that the relator was not the owner of any property assessed to him upon the last preceding assessment roll in the village and was, therefore, ineligible to hold the office of trustee and the defendant was declared elected.

This action was brought to try the title to the office; a jury trial was waived by the parties, and the facts being undisputed there remains to be determined only a question- of law that requires an interpretation of the charter of the village of Lyons relating to the eligibility of its officers.

The charter provision is identical with that relating to the same subject in the Village Law, both providing that a trustee u must, at the time of his election, be owner of property assessed to him on the last preceding assessment roll.” Laws of 1907, chap. 750, § 9; Village Law, § 42.

The relator at the time of the election was not the owner of property assessed to him upon the last preceding assessment roll; no property, either real or personal,1 was assessed to him; it is established, however, that in the years 1916,1917,1918, and 1919 there was assessed to him and his brother Philip, upon the assessment roll for those years, real estate, situated on Shuler street in said village, that had been conveyed to them and two other brothers, as tenants in common, by their father and mother, the grantors [3]*3reserving a life estate in said premises; in the assessment roll for 1920 the premises, so conveyed, were assessed to the father Frank DeJohn; it is argued by the defendant that the premises were properly assessed in the latter year, and that the relator was not prejudiced by the change. Deraismes v. Deraismes, 72 N. Y. 154; Matter of Corbin, 101 App. Div. 25; People ex rel. Gibson v. Assessors, 101 N. Y. Supp. 176.

Be this as it may, the relator’s eligibility does not depend exclusively upon the assessment of the Shuler street property, for in 1917 his father conveyed to him and his said three brothers, as tenants in common, certain real estate in the village, situated on William street; in the years 1918 and 1919 this property was assessed to the relator and his brother Philip; in the year 1920 it was assessed to the father, Frank DeJohn; it thus appears that upon the assessment rolls for the two years preceding 1920 the relator was the owner of property assessed to him upon said rolls and that in 1920 he was the owner of property assessed erroneously to his father.

Our inquiry, therefore, is whether the provisions of the statute, above quoted, require a construction so literal as to deny the relator an office which he had. been selected by the voters in his district to fill, though he was an owner of property assessed upon the last preceding assessment roll, but which through error was not assessed to him but to another.

In the construction of statutes the quest is primarily and always for the legislative intent and in seeking for it the history of the legislation under scrutiny and the conditions that it purposes to regulate or control may properly be resorted to for such aid as they may yield.

In the first general law, relating to the incorporation of villages, there was no provision as to quali[4]*4fications of trustees except that they he entitled to vote at the election at which they should he elected. Laws of 1847, chap. 426, § 21.

The Constitution of 1821 prescribed one of the necessary qualifications of an elector to be, that he should have paid a tax, except in certain cases of exemption; the property qualification was eliminated by an amendment in 1826 in the case of white citizens, but it was retained as to men of color until the amendment of 1874; it may be remarked in passing that an amendment of the Constitution was ratified in November, 1845, providing No property qualification shall be required to render a person eligible to, or capable of, holding any public office or public trust in this state. ’ ’ This prohibitory provision was not continued in the Constitution of 1846 or in its successor..

In 1870 the legislature enacted a new general Village Law which provided that no person shall be eligible as a president or trustee of a village unless owning property liable to be assessed for the expenditures of the village. Laws of 1870, chap. 291, tit. II, § 9.

In the statutory revision of 1897 it was provided A president or trustee * * * must, at the time of his election and during his term, be the owner of property assessed upon the last preceding assessment roll of the village * * Laws of 1897, chap. 414, § 42.

By a later amendment, chapter 452 of the Laws of 1906, section 42, the further element of qualification was added, that the property owned by the candidate and assessed upon the last preceding assessment roll must have been assessed to him upon said roll; this enactment emerged without change from the process of statutory consolidation in 1909.

It will be observed that under the General Village Law from 1847 to 1870 any person was eligible to the [5]*5office of trustee who was an elector and, except in the case of men of color, the ownership of property was not necessary; from 1870 to 1897 one must have owned property, liable to assessment; from 1897 to 1906 he must have owned property assessed upon the last preceding assessment roll and from the latter year to the present, the owner of property assessed to him upon said roll, with one exception later to be noticed.

The village of Lyons was first incorporated by a special act of the legislature in 1831 (chap. 135); the qualifications of a trustee, as prescribed by that act, were that he should be a resident and free holder in the village; this charter was superseded by that of 1854 (chap. 388) and the qualifications of candidates for office were that they should be residents of the village and entitled to vote at any general" election for a member of the assembly; this charter in turn was succeeded by that of 1907 (chap. 750) in which the eligibility of officers was made the same as in the General Village Law as above stated.

From 1831 to 1854 only free holders were eligible to the office of trustee in the village of Lyons; from 1854 to 1907 any elector was entitled to hold the office and from the latter date to the present time only one who owns property, either real or personal, assessed to him upon the last preceding assessment roll.

The obvious purpose of the legislature-in requiring a property qualification of village officers and of voters iu villages upon "propositions to raise and expend moneys is to secure the administration of village finances by those who have a direct and intimate interest in the tax rate; this purpose is reflected in all of the legislation, both general and special, that prescribes a property qualification and the variant phrases in which this purpose is expressed, that an [6]

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Related

People ex rel. DeJohn v. Lytle
199 A.D. 908 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1921)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 Misc. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-dejohn-v-lytle-nysupct-1921.