People ex rel. Hollock v. Purdy

72 Misc. 122, 130 N.Y.S. 1077
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 72 Misc. 122 (People ex rel. Hollock v. Purdy) 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. Hollock v. Purdy, 72 Misc. 122, 130 N.Y.S. 1077 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

Erlanger, J.

The relator, claiming that his property has been illegally assessed, brought these proceedings to review the action of the tax commissioners and to have such assassment canceled.

It appears that the property in question was acquired by the city on April 22, 1908, in accordance with the provisions of chapter 4 of the Laws of 1891, known as the Rapid Transit Act. In its petition to this court for the appointment of commissioners of appraisal, the applicants, constituting the Public Service Commission for the First Distritit, among other things, set forth that it desired to acquire the same for public purposes, to wit: to construct a part of a rapid transit railroad, known as the Brooklyn Loop Lines. After the property was so obtained, the subsurface of a portion thereof was appropriated for the object declared and, after the work was. completed, the surface was restored to its former state. All of the property, consisting of a number of parcels, except as mentioned, having become unnecessary for rapid transit purposes, the Public Service Commission on Hay 24, 1910, pursuant to authority, sold the same at public auction to the relator for the sum of $251,000, subject, however, to the easements for the perpetual maintenance and operation of the subway structure as it now exists.

The tax commissioners assessed the property for taxation for the year 1910 at the sum mentioned, and it is against this assessment that objection is made.

The relator insists that at the time of his purchase the lands were exempt from taxation.

In the city of Hew York, the status of taxable property is [124]*124fixed on the second Monday of January in each year. The city concedes that, on the second Monday of January, 1910, it owned the property in question, and that it was not sold to the relator until May in that year.

By subdivision 3 of section 4 of the Tax Law (Cons. Laws 1909, chap. 62, p. 4023), it is enacted that property of a municipal corporation of the State, held for a public use, except that portion of municipal property not within the corporation, is exempt from taxation.

• If the exemption existed on the second Monday of January, 1910, the city further admits that the assessment is unauthorized. It is sought to justify the assessment upon the ground that, as the necessity for the use of the property ceased, it was no longer an agency or means of city government and, therefore, the holding on the part of the city was merely that of proprietor, in like manner as a private individual holds his property. This contention it seems to me cannot be sustained.

The fundamental right to condemn in the first instance depended upon public necessity, and such necessity was a sine qua non to its taking. This fact the Public Service Commission presented as the basis of its application. And where the right of eminent domain is exercised, all that the law requires is that the property taken shall be dedicated to public purposes and, once ownership of the municipality attaches, the public character continues during all the time it shall possess it. The mere fact that the property condemned was afterward found to be unnecessary does not, it seems to me, alter the rule.

A city may become vested with the fee to lands by means other than by condemnation. It may obtain it by gift, devise or by purchase. It may even acquire it, as was said in People ex rel. Mayor v. Assessors, 111 N. Y. 509, in satisfaction of a debt. While it cannot be said that property so obtained is held by the municipality for governmental purposes, it nevertheless belongs to the public impressed with a trust for its benefit. So that, even if the lands in question were condemned for a specific purpose, and it was later ascertained that it could not be used in whole or in part for the [125]*125object originally intended, it still remained public property, even though a private ownership is claimed for it.

In Brooklyn Park Comrs. v. Armstrong, 45 N. Y. 234, 243, the Court of Appeals said on this subject: “When land is condemned for a special purpose, on the score of public utility, the sequestration is limited to that particular use. But this is where the.property is not taken, but the use only. Then, the right of the public being limited to the use, when the use ceases the right ceases. Where the property is taken, the owner paid its true value, and the title vested in the public, it owns the whole property, and not merely the use; and though the particular use may be abandoned, the right to the property remains. The property is still held in trust for the public by the authorities.”

It does not seem to me, because the property in question was found to be unnecessary for the object condemned, that it was subject to taxation on the theory of municipal private ownership. If for that reason the power of taxation was exercisable on the second Monday of January, 1910, the property was taxable against the city who owned it at the time. But, if the object of taxation is to raise revenue to meet the expense of government, how could the city be benefited by taxing it against itself? This, it seems to me, is entirely incongruous with the fundamental theory of taxation. If the lands in question were outside of' the territorial limits of the corporation, no question under the Tax Law could arise. But such is not the fact. The question of taxing the property of a municipality adjacent to a ferry came before the court in People ex rel. Mayor v. Assessors, 47 Hun, 390, and the court among other things said: “The powers of a municipal corporation are divided between such as are governmental and public, and proprietary and private and it is believed that a failure to discriminate between these two kinds of powers and the manner and purposes of their exercises, has sometimes led to confusion and misapplication of terms because property held and controlled by a city in its proprietary capacity, and used solely to promote the mere convenience of the public, may with propriety he said to be held for public purposes; and the fact that such property is [126]*126controlled by the city in its proprietary capacity, by no means renders such property private in its character.”

The Court of Appeals, in affirming the lower court (111 N. Y. 509), held, that, although the city operated the ferry through lessees and derived revenue from the rental, and not by its own operation, that circumstance did not make the franchise or landing taxable. It did not decide whether property not devoted to public use was taxable. In that- regard the opinion proceeds as follows: We prefer, however, to express no opinion on the question whether there is, in principle, a distinction between taxation of the property of a municipality strictly devoted to public uses, and property which it owns, though not acquired for a public use, although it may be heldj on the general trust, applicable to all property of the corporation, but the acquisition or holding of which-has no essential connection with the public functions of the municipality.”

In Matter of Hamilton, 148 N. Y. 310, it was sought to have a legacy to the city relieved from taxation on the ground that it was exempt under the Inheritance Tax Law. Mr. Justice O’Brien, writing for the court, said: The property held by the state, or by any of its municipal divisions, for public purposes, is not, and never has been, subject to taxation.

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Bluebook (online)
72 Misc. 122, 130 N.Y.S. 1077, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-hollock-v-purdy-nysupct-1911.