People Ex Rel. Frost v. . Woodbury

106 N.E. 932, 213 N.Y. 51, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 728
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 10, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 106 N.E. 932 (People Ex Rel. Frost v. . Woodbury) 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. Frost v. . Woodbury, 106 N.E. 932, 213 N.Y. 51, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 728 (N.Y. 1914).

Opinion

Hogan, J.

The Appellate Division held that the expenses of the defense of the action brought by the corporation against John Franey as county clerk of Albany county was one of the “necessary expenses for the purposes of this article ” as provided in section 262 of the Tax Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 60), and that the.county clerk was authorized to employ an attorney in the defense *55 of the action and properly charge the fund in his possession with the expenses attendant thereon; that the county clerk in the collection of the tax does not act for the county, but as the agent of the state.

The correctness of the conclusion of the Appellate Division involves an examination of the provisions of the Tax Law relative to the imposition of taxes upon the recording of mortgages, as well as the duty to be performed by the county clerk.

By article 11 of the Tax Law a tax was imposed upon the principal debt or obligation secured by mortgage upon real property situate within this state, payable to the recording officer of the county in which the property mortgaged was situate. The recording officer is required to indorse upon each mortgage a receipt for the amount of tax paid, and is inhibited from recording any mortgage unless the tax imposed thereon shall be paid.

It is made the duty of recording officers in counties outside of Greater New York to pay over to the county treasurer on the first day of each month the moneys received by him during the preceding month on account of taxes paid to him, after deducting the necessary expenses of his office as prescribed in section 262 of the law, except taxes paid upon a mortgage which under the provision of section 260 was to be apportioned by the state board of tax commissioners between several counties. When such determination has been made it is made the duty of the recording officer to file in the office of the recording officers of such other counties a • brief description of the mortgage on which such tax is paid sufficient to identify the same, together with a statement of the payment of such tax and the amount thereof.

The state board of tax commissioners are empowered to adopt rules to govern their procedure, and may require certified statements to be furnished by recording officers of the respective counties in relation thereto, and upon making determination file a certificate with the recording *56 officer of each county within which a portion of the mortgaged property is situate, and thereupon a minute of such determination shall he entered in the margin of the record of the mortgage, and likewise a certificate shall be made when the state board of tax commissioners apportion between respective counties the amount on which the tax is to he computed.

It is further a duty of the recording officer prior to the first day of November in each year to cause to be prepared a list containing a description of all mortgages upon which taxes have been paid by reference to the date of each mortgage, the name of the mortgagor and mortgagee, the amount of the principal due upon which the tax was paid, together with the hook and page where said mortgage is recorded, together with the town, city or village in which the mortgaged property is assessed, and if assessed in two or more tax districts the amount apportioned to each tax district by the state board of tax commissioners, and the amount deducted for his necessary expenses as approved by the state hoard of tax commissioners. Such statement shall be filed in his office and he is required to furnish a copy thereof to the clerk of the hoard of supervisors and another copy thereof to the state hoard of tax commissioners; thereafter the board of supervisors from the statement filed with them by the county clerk apportions one-half of the tax paid to the county treasurer under the act, one-half to the payment of school taxes, and one-half thereof to the payment of state, county, city and town expenses.

The recording officer, as well as the county treasurer, is required to furnish a bond conditioned for the faithful and diligent discharge of the duties required of them respectively to the people of the state in a penal sum not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars as the state comptroller may prescribe.

Another duty imposed upon the recording officer arises in case a mortgage is given to secure the payment.of a *57 series of bonds,- notes or other evidence of indebtedness. The mortgagor when he pays a tax on said mortgage may present to the recording officer bonds, notes or other evidence of indebtedness, secured by said mortgage, and it thereupon becomes the duty of the recording officer to indorse upon each of said bonds, notes or other evidence of indebtedness presented to him a statement signed by him to the effect that the tax imposed by this article on that portion of the principal indebtedness secured by the mortgage represented by bonds, notes or other evidence of indebtedness has been paid and such statement is made conclusive proof of such payment.

Attention has been called to the various duties imposed by the Tax Law upon the recording officer in addition to the ordinary duties performed by-him as county clerk. It is apparent that the labor imposed upon the recording officer by the Tax Law involves a keeping of books of account covering the various transactions referred to, the employment of accountants, copyists and assistants in his office, expenses for postage, books, blanks, wages of employees and other items incidental to the services required. Section 262 of the Tax Law provides:

“Recording officers and county treasurers and the chamberlain of the city of New York, shall severally be entitled to receive all their necessary expenses for the purposes of this article, including printing, hire of clerks and assistants, being first approved and allowed by the state board of tax commissioners, which shall be retained by them out of the moneys coming into their hands.”

By the language of the statute quoted, the expenses incident to the duty imposed upon recording officers were limited in their scope to the “ necessary expenses for the purposes of this article.”

The word “ necessary ” has no meaning peculiar to itself; it may express something indispensable, or it may be construed as reasonable, useful and proper, dependable upon the character of its application. When used *58 with reference to the public,'as in the statute under consideration, it should be construed strictly for the benefit of the public. The words ‘ ‘for the purposes of this article, ” as used in the statute, were intended as words of limitation to restrict the allowance for necessary expenses incurred by the recording officers in the performance of duties imposed upon them by the article of the Tax Law, which we have enumerated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 N.E. 932, 213 N.Y. 51, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 728, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-frost-v-woodbury-ny-1914.