People ex rel. Hill v. Board of Supervisors

2 N.Y.S. 555, 56 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 476, 18 N.Y. St. Rep. 898, 49 Hun 476, 1888 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 827
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2 N.Y.S. 555 (People ex rel. Hill v. Board of Supervisors) 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. Hill v. Board of Supervisors, 2 N.Y.S. 555, 56 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 476, 18 N.Y. St. Rep. 898, 49 Hun 476, 1888 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 827 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1888).

Opinion

Bradley, J.

The charge made by the relator is that the defendant adopted •an erroneous method in making the equalization, and that the result was prejudicial to his town. The statute imposing this duty on the board of supervisors of each county provides the manner of its performance to attain the object to be accomplished. They are required to examine the assessment rolls of the several towns in the county, for the purpose of ascertaining whether the valuations in one town bear a just relation to the valuations in •all other towns in the county. They may increase or diminish the aggregate valuations of real estate in any town by adding or deducting such sum on the hundred as may in their opinion be necessary to produce a just relation between all the valuations of real estates in the whole county, but they shall in no instance reduce the aggregate valuations of all the towns below the aggregate valuation thereof as made by the assessors. 1 Bev. St. p. 395, § 81. In the petition upon which the writ issued it is alleged, and not ques'tioned by the return, that the result was produced by the adoption and use of a table of decimals, one for each town, which represented the percentage of the aggregate assessed valuations with which the towns, respectively, were charged in the equalization as made; and in the application and use by the •defendant of these factors the assessed valuations of the personal as well as the real estates were included, by which means the valuations in the respective towns of the personal property as they appeared in the assessment rolls were modified, and for some of the towns increased and for others diminished; but the aggregate valuations of the real or personal estates, and both, of all the towns, remained the same as that of the assessed valuations. This method was clearly irregular and erroneous, for the reason, if for no other, that the board of supervisors, in making the equalization, lawfully had nothing to do with the assessed valuations of personal property, other than to continue them as made by the assessors of the respective towns. Id.; People v. Hadley, 76 N. Y. 337. The return made to the writ contains the statement, in effect, that the defendant examined and inspected the assessment rolls of the several towns, and made a correct and just equalization of.the value of 'the property in the towns; that the valuation finally determined by the board -for the real estate in the town of Ontario bears a just relation between the valuations of all the real estates in the county; “that the equalization made by said board as aforesaid was and is, in fact, effect, and result, the same substantially that would have been accomplished and produced if the said board Fad employed exclusively the method of equalization indicated by the Revised •Statutes as a proper method; that the apparent irregularity of including personal property in the method of equalization employed was corrected by allowances in the valuations of real estate counterbalancing the effect of such alleged irregularities;” and that in making the equalization the board included and made the addition and deduction of such sums upon the hundred as was necessary to produce a just relation between all the valuations of real estate in the county. Ho data or information is furnished by the return of the process by which the decimal multiplier was obtained, or in support of the alleged conclusion that the result produced by the equalization as made was the legitimate one, and such as the statute required. The return, therefore, fails in that respect to furnish the means for the court to determine that no prejudice resulted to the relator’s town by the erroneous method adopted and employed by the board in the equalization so made. If the board pro[557]*557ceeded intelligently upon any theory practical oridemonstrable to reach the required result through the peculiar means employed for the purpose, it may», it would seem, have been represented by the return. This particularity in. the return was required by the writ. Formerly the review upon certiorari was dependent, for the facts entitled to consideration, exclusively upon the return; and the relator’s only remedy for an insufficient return was by proceeding to require a further or more specific one, and by action for a false return. People v. Burton, 65 N. Y. 452; People v. Commissioners, 73 N. Y. 437 ; People v. Mayor, etc., 6 Hun, 652. These remedies still remain, but the rule applicable to the hearing is now modified by the statute, which provides that it “must be heard upon the writ and return, and the papers upon which the writ was granted, ” (Code Civil Proc. § 2138,) so as to permit the facts stated in the writ or in the papers on which it was granted, as to which the return is silent, to be considered and have effect upon the hearing, (People v. Commissioners, etc., 106 N. Y. 64, 12 N..E. Rep. 641.) The court is therefore enabled to refer to a schedule annexed to the petition upon which the writ issued, and verified by it, which represents the valuations as assessed and. equalized of the property, real and personal, of the several towns of the county, and the decimals used as to the towns, respectively, to produce, in the manner before mentioned, the equalization as made. This schedule, termed. “Equalization Table,” shows apparently errors in the results produced; because it appears that, by the application made of the decimal process, alike to the assessed valuations of the personal and real estates, the former was affected and changed accordingly for the purposes of equalization, and in some-of the towns very considerably. In the town of Ontario the increase of the-amount of the assessed valuation of the personal estate was upwards of $26,-000. This may not be deemed comparatively large, but it must be treated as-an error prejudicial to the town, resulting from the irregular and apparently unauthorized method of the proceeding of the board. While the equalization rests wholly in the judgment of the board of supervisors, and the results must depend upon the action of a majority when all the members do not concur, the error in the manner of doing it is not simply one of judgment, when the proceeding is in evident violation of the statute, as was that under consideration, nor was it justified by the recognized use of the method in the county of Wayne for several years preceding that in question, nor is the principle of estoppel applicable to the action in that respect of any supervisor as the representative of his town. His duty is of a public nature, and he is authorized to take no proceeding in behalf of his town not authorized by the statute», with reference to which, and for its observance in the discharge of his duty, he is given his official character by the people of the town which he represents in the board. The conclusion seems to be required that the town of Ontario-may have been prejudiced by the equalization as made, by reason of the erroneous manner in which it was accomplished.

In respect to the assessment of the year in question, the functions of the board of supervisors have terminated. The tax based upon it has been collected. There is therefore no opportunity for the board to review or reconsider their action upon that equalization; nor can the court make any correction or grant any relief to the relator’s town by way of correcting the error or injury complained of. And any determination which the court could now make on this review would seem to have no practical effect. But the question of the right to review such proceeding upon this writ is raised by the defendant’s counsel. The statute provides that the writ of certiorari

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Bluebook (online)
2 N.Y.S. 555, 56 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 476, 18 N.Y. St. Rep. 898, 49 Hun 476, 1888 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 827, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-hill-v-board-of-supervisors-nysupct-1888.