People ex rel. Mayor of New York v. McCarthy

2 N.Y. St. Rep. 546
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 25, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 2 N.Y. St. Rep. 546 (People ex rel. Mayor of New York v. McCarthy) 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. Mayor of New York v. McCarthy, 2 N.Y. St. Rep. 546 (N.Y. 1886).

Opinion

Ruger, Ch. J.

This is an appeal by the relator, from an order of the general term of the supreme court, for alleged error in quashing a writ of certiorari issued to the State board of equalization, to obtain a review of its proceedings in equalizing appraisements of property in the State between the several counties for purposes of taxation, during the year 1885. The writ was applied for under the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure, which, by express [547]*547provision, makes its allowance discretionary with the court. (,§ 2127.) Such an order is not reviewable by this court. If the court in making the order had refrained from exercising its discretion in passing upon the question presented, and had quashed the writ, upon the ground of a want of power to issue it, or had granted it in a case not authorized by law, the court could properly have reviewed tine questions, presented by an appeal from such deteimination. People ex rel. Second Ave. R. Co. v. Board of Commissioners of New York, 97 N. Y., 37, 42. But in a case where the court has exercised its discretion with respect to the allowance or denial of the writ, and has refused to grant it on the ground that it ought not under all the circumstances of the case to have been issued, this court has no jurisdiction to review its deteimination, and so it has been repeatedly held. People ex rel. Haneman v. Board of Tax Commissioners of New York, 85 N. Y., 655; People ex rel. Vanderbilt v. Stilwell, 19 id., 531; People ex rel. Davis v. Hill, 53 id., 547. In the opinion referred to in the order, for the grounds of the decision of the court below, that court alleged no want of power to authorize the writ, but stated many, and, as we think, sufficient reasons why, upon all of the facts of the case, the writ ought not to have been issued. It follows from these views that the appeal should be dismissed.

We might well rest our decision altogether upon this ground and refrain from any further expression of opinion, upon the questions presented, but since the appellants contend that this appeal is taken by the supposed invitation of this court, conveyed in its opinion in Mayor, etc., v. Davenport (92 N. Y., 604, 611), and considering the gravity and importance of the questions involved, and the zeal and earnestness with which they have been presented by the appellant, we have thought it not inappropriate to comment briefly upon some of the grounds of complaint stated in the relator’s petition.

If it be true, as alleged therein, that systematic injustice has been done to the city of New York in the equalization of assessments among the several counties of the state by the state board of equalization, and that such result has been produced c ‘ collusivelv, unlawfully, and by a sinister and selfish combination and conspiracy of the members of said board against the petitioners and tax payers of the city and county of New York, to benefit themselves severally and their several friends and neighbors,” etc., at the expense of the tax payers of New York, then a great public crime has been committed, and a wrong done which calls upon the proper authorities for prompt investigation and redress. Such a charge should not have been lightly or [548]*548inconsiderately made, and if made at all, should at least have been sustained by plausible proof, to shield its authors from deserved censure in making it.

A careful examination of the facts stated in the relator’s petition, and of the proof submitted therewith, has led us to the conclusion that there was no adequate foundation for the charges, and that they have been based wholly upon a misconception of the force of the evidence adduced in their support, and of difference of opinion between it and the state board, as to the proper method to be pursued, in investigating and determining questions of estimate and valuation by that body.

The principal ground upon which the charge is predicated, is the claim that the assessed valuation, of real estate in • New York approximates more closely its real value than obtains in the other counties of the'state, and that, therefore, a proper equalization would reduce the valuation of property in that city, instead of increasing it. This claim is attempted to be supported, by comparing the consideration inserted in the deeds of certain selected transfers of real estate, in the several counties of the state, with the assessed valuations of the same property and the assumption that the average amount of such ¡Drices and valuations as thus compared, conclusively established the ratio of assessment to value prevailing in such counties.

We do not think that this assumption, even if it were based upon a comparison of all of the transfers in a particular locality, or even of such as could be conclusively shown to have been fairly made, can be maintained. In the county, of New York-the instances of such sales, reported hi the relator’s petition are quite numerous, and cover a period of time extending over nearly twenty years, although the assessed valuations with which they are compared, are confined to the year 1884. These instances of sale were selected, from an almost inexhaustible number by the agents of the relators, and show great disparity in the proportions existing between their several assessed valuations, arid the prices inserted as the consideration in their respective deeds. A large number of instances appear where the assessed valuations are much larger than the prices apparently obtained for the land, reaching occasionally three and four times the amount specified in the deeds; and on the other hand still greater disparity is shown between the prices obtained in many cases, and the assessed valuation, in some instances amounting to six times the amount of the assessment. It is thus quite apparent that a partial or even careless process of selection would seriously affect the weight of such statements, as evidence, and render them particularly objectionable, when made by a party interested in producing a [549]*549particular result. The duty of malting the selections in the city of New York was wholly intrusted to an individual describing himself “as an attorney and counselor at law.” and his specialty as that “of the examination of titles to real estate.” His mode of procedure in making the table of prices was to omit therefrom “such cases as showed a nominal consideration only, and indefinite and clearly inconsistent statements of consideration and assessments, and cases where the assessment was made of property £ buildings in process.’ ” Such a rule of selection, guided by no knowledge of the facts, and influenced by vague and indefinite inferences, evidently affords the widest scope for the production of any result it might be desired to reach. The selections in the several counties of the state outside of New York were also made by agents of the relators, residing in such counties, and although made in apparent good faith, and fortified generally by the affidavits of the persons making them, as to their belief in the impartiality of the reports, they could not be accepted as conclusive, or even cogent evidence, of the facts stated, by an impartial tribunal. The- assumption founded upon such evidence is, we think, altogether erroneous, and cannot be supported upon any known principle of law, or justice, in the appraisement of property for purposes of taxation. It certainly is directly in conflict with the scheme of appraisement provided by the statutes of the state, and we believe with settled rules of valuation.

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Related

Campbell v. . Woodworth
20 N.Y. 499 (New York Court of Appeals, 1859)
De Witt v. . Barly and Schoonmaker
17 N.Y. 340 (New York Court of Appeals, 1858)
People Ex Rel. Haneman v. Board of Tax Commissioners
85 N.Y. 655 (New York Court of Appeals, 1881)
Mayor, Etc., of City of N.Y. v. . Davenport
92 N.Y. 604 (New York Court of Appeals, 1883)
Clark v. . Baird
9 N.Y. 183 (New York Court of Appeals, 1853)
Swan v. County of Middlesex
101 Mass. 173 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1869)

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Bluebook (online)
2 N.Y. St. Rep. 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-mayor-of-new-york-v-mccarthy-ny-1886.