People Ex Rel. Eckerson v. . Zundel

52 N.E. 570, 157 N.Y. 513, 11 E.H. Smith 513, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 873
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 10, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 52 N.E. 570 (People Ex Rel. Eckerson v. . Zundel) 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. Eckerson v. . Zundel, 52 N.E. 570, 157 N.Y. 513, 11 E.H. Smith 513, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 873 (N.Y. 1899).

Opinion

Martin, J.

In 1888 this proceeding was commenced by certiorari to review the assessment for that year of a piece of the relators’ real property, which contained about twenty-eight acres of land situated in the town of Haverstraw, ET. Y. It was instituted under the provisions of chapter 269 of the Laws of 1880. The appellants were the assessors of the town for the year 1888. In 1886 and 1887 the land in question was assessed by the appellants’ predecessors in office at one hundred and forty thousand dollars. In each of those years the relators sued out a writ of certiorari to review the assessment, and it was adjudged in each proceeding that it should be reduced to the sum of $45,650.

This case involves the assessment for the year 1888 only. Upon the day fixed by law' for reviewing assessments, the relators applied to the assessors for a reduction of their assessment to the amount established as the value of the property by the judgments in the proceedings for the years 1886 and 1887. This application was based wholly upon the claimed effect of those judgments, the relators insisting that they were binding and conclusive upon the assessors as to the amount of the assessment for the year 1888. The appellants, however, declined to make the reduction. This proceeding was then instituted, and subsequently upon the writ and return the court appointed a referee to take evidence pertinent to the issues and to report such testimony with his findings of fact *516 and conclusions of law. The referee took proof and made and filed the required findings and conclusions. The judgments which bad been entered in the former proceedings were received in evidence over the objection of the appellants. The Special Term held that the former judgments were binding and conclusive upon the assessors, and that it was their duty to have made the assessment for 1888 conform to those judgments as to the value of the property assessed. To that conclusion and to the reception of the judgments in evidence, the appellants excepted. The court overruled the appellants’ exceptions and confirmed the findings and conclusions of the referee. It made his findings and conclusions those of the court to the same effect as though they had been fully set forth in separate findings by it. Thereupon it adjudged that the assessment for the year 1888 was unequal, that the petitioners were thereby injured, that the valuation of sixty-five thousand dollars should be reduced to $45,650, awarded costs against the appellants personally, and ordered the assessment to be corrected in accordance with its determination. The respondents rely upon the case of. People ex rel. Warren v. Carter (119 N. Y. 557) to defeat this appeal. In that case where, in proceedings to reduce an assessment, it appeared that the assessments for the two preceding years had been made at the same sum and in similar proceedings there had been a deteimination fixing the actual value of the property assessed, it was held that in the absence of evidence of an increase of value, or of some change affecting its assessable value, the former adjudications were binding upon the parties to them upon a review of their assessment for the third year. The doctrine of that case is not applicable to this. There the parties were the same. The assessors were the same persons who made the preceding assessments, and it was under those circumstances that it was held that upon a review of the assessment for the third year the prior adjudications -tfere binding upon them unless there had been some change. But in the case at bar, of the three persons who were assessors in 1888 but one was an assessor in either 1886 or 1887, and he did not verify the roll. So that *517 two of the appellants were not parties to the former proceeding at all, and the one who was took no part in making the assessment in question. Moreover, the court found that in 1888 the amount of the assessments upon the real estate in the town was increased more than one hundred and fifty thousand dollars over those of the two preceding years, that there were numerous changes in the assessed values of the property therein, that the relators’ assessment was seventy-five thousand dollars less than in the previous years, and that changes had been made in the condition of the property in the town between the years 1887 and 1888. Thus the distinction between the Wcvrren case and the case at bar is manifest, and the former does not sustain the decision in this case.

This leads us to consider, independently of that case, whether the judgments in the former proceedings were binding upon the appellants. We think the facts that a majority of the appellants were not parties to the former proceedings, that changes in the situation of the property of the town had occurred, and that the assessment of the relators’ property had been reduced, disclosed a situation where the former adjudications were in no way binding upon the appellants in making the assessments for the year 1888.

By statute the appellants were required to assess all the real and personal property liable to taxation in their town at its full and true value, as they would appraise the same in payment of a just debt due from a solvent debtor, to make oath that they had so estimated the value of the property assessed, and were made guilty of perjury if they swore falsely as to the assessment made by them. (1 R. S. pt. 1, ch. 13, tit. 2, § 17; am. by ch. 176, Laws 1851; Laws 1851, ch. 176; am. ch. 57, Laws 1884, and ch. 210, Laws 1885.) They were bound to assess the property of the relators at its full and true value, and to verify their assessment. There was imposed upon them the duty of exercising their own judgment in appraising it, after employing all the tests ordinarily adopted for that purpose, including a personal survey or examination of the property. When they had exercised their judgment, their *518 determination was subject only to such review or correction as the law prescribes. (People ex rel. v. Coleman, 107 N. Y. 541.)

The contention of the respondents, that the judgments in the proceedings for the years 1886 and 1887, were binding upon the town of Havevstraw, and, hence, controlling in this action, cannot be sustained. Assessors are independent public officers whose duties are prescribed by law. (Mechem on Public Officers, § 28.) They are in no legal sense the agents or representatives of the town, and the town is not responsible for their acts or omissions. (Lorillard v. Town of Monroe, 11 N. Y. 392.) Thus the appellants in assessing the relators for the year 1888, in no just sense acted for the town or in any way bound it. What they did was to discharge the public duties imposed upon them by statute for which the town was in no way responsible. hTor was the town liable for the acts of the assessors for the years 1886 and 1887. Those were independent acts of the persons who were assessors during those years, and neither their acts nor any adjudication against them as such assessors were binding upon the town or the persons succeeding to the office. There was no privity between the persons who were assessors for 1886 and 1887, and those who were assessors during the year 1888, except so far as the same persons were assessors in those years.

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Bluebook (online)
52 N.E. 570, 157 N.Y. 513, 11 E.H. Smith 513, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 873, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-eckerson-v-zundel-ny-1899.