People ex rel. Moller v. O'Donnel

47 Misc. 267
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 47 Misc. 267 (People ex rel. Moller v. O'Donnel) 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. Moller v. O'Donnel, 47 Misc. 267 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinion

Leventritt, J.

This is an application to quash a writ • of certiorari and depends for its disposition on the determination of the question whether the city of Hew York is or is not a single tax district.

According to the petition, Joseph H. Goodwin died in Hew York county, August 9, 1903. Letters testamentary on his estate were issued on September 24, 1903, to the relators Emma L. Moller, a resident of the borough of the Bronx, and Isaac P. Smith, a resident of the. borough of Manhattan.

On the assessment-roll for the borough of Manhattan fox the year 1904 appeared an assessment in the following form:

This tax was paid by the relators in time to get the benefit of the rebate allowed by law and they received a receipt in full fromi the receiver of taxes.

The petition further shows that' on the completed assess[269]*269ment-roll for the borough of the Bronx for the same year appears this entry:

It is alleged that it was the intention of the tax board to place upon the relators, as executors and trustees of the estate of Joseph II. Godwin, a further assessment in addition to that imposed by the roll for Manhattan borough. The additional assessment is asserted to be illegal and void on the ground that the estate is assessed twice in the same year in an entire tax district. The corporation counsel seeks to sustain the assessment on the ground that the city of Mew York is made up of five separate tax'districts.

The error in the description of the estate as that of Goodwin, instead of Godwin, may be disregarded. The entry in the first column of the first part of the assessment-roll (Tax Law, § 21, subd. 1) must be substantially accurate so as to enable a reasonably intelligent person searching the roll for an assessment against him to identify the name as intended for him, or the estate as the one for which he is acting in a representative capacity. Rumsey Taxation, 27, 179, and cases cited.

The serious question arises under sections 2 and 8 of the Tax Law and certain sections of the Greater Mew York charter.

Section 2 of the Tax Law defines a tax district as follows:

Tax district as used in this chapter means a political subdivision of the state having a board of assessors authorized to assess property therein for state and county taxes.”

It is to be noted that the use of this term as defined was original in the Tax Law (Laws 1896, chap. 908). Section 8 of the law provides: “ Every person shall be taxed in the tax district where he resides when the assessment for taxation is made, for all personal property owned by him, or un[270]*270der his control as * * * executor * * „ *. Where taxable personal property is in the possession or under the control of two or more * * * executors. * * * residing in different tax districts, each shall be taxed for an equal portion of the value of such property so' held by them.”

If the borough of the Bronx and the borough of Manhattan can be treated as separate tax districts, the Bronx assessment, which is the sole one here involved, can be sustained on the theory of the presumption of law in favor of the legality of an official act; that is to say, it would be presumed that the commissioners had acted according to law and had imposed an assessment only upon one-half of the property held by the relators. People ex rel. Kellogg v. Wells, 92 N. Y. Supp. 5. “ The burden would be on the relators to overcome this presumption by proof.”

Tinder the Tax Law and the charter, however, the borough of the Bronx cannot be considered as a separate tax district. It is not a political subdivision of the State; it has not a board of assessors authorized to assess property therein for State and county purposes. The political subdivision is the city of New York; the department of taxes and assessments is one of the city departments, and it is the head of that department that is called the “ Board of Taxes and Assessments.” Greater N. Y. Charter, §§ 884, 885. There is no separate board for each of the five boroughs constituting the city, and it is not even incumbent that each borough be represented on the board, although no borough except that of Manhattan may have more than one resident as a member. Ibid. 885. The charter provides for a complete devolution of the rights, powers and duties of the several tax boards of the various municipal corporations consolidated by the act on the “ board of taxes and .assessments in the City of Hew York ” and authorizes this single board to adopt a common seal. § 886. It vests in the new board all the functions devolved by law upon the tax departments of the various municipalities. People ex rel. Thomson v. Feitner, 168 N. Y. 441, 448. The main office of the board is in the borough of Manhattan; [271]*271branch offices are maintained in the boroughs of Brooklyn, Queens, Richmond and Bronx and the books and records are required to be maintained in such offices as may be most convenient to the taxpayers. Greater N. Y. Charter, § 890. The branch offices are declared in law to be part of the main office. Ibid. The deputy tax assessors assigned to the various branches and drawn from the various boroughs act under the direction of the board, are in no sense independent officers and have no power to assess, revise or cancel. That power is centralized in the board acting for the entire city; it alone assesses. People ex rel. Thomson v. Feitner, supra. The charter and the construction it has thus received clearly make the city of Mew York, which is a political subdivision of the State having a single board of assessors authorized to assess property, a tax district within the meaning of section 2 of the Tax Law.

The defendants invoke various sections of the charter to show that each borough is a separate tax district. Thus they instance the making of the original assessments by the deputy tax commissioners (§ 889), the maintenance of the branch offices in the various boroughs and the keeping of the books and records there for the convenience of the taxpayers (§ 890), the hearing of applications for the reduction of taxes at the various borough offices (§ 898), and especially, that part of section 894 which reads; “ If, at any time prior to the first day of May in any year, it shall appear to the tax commissioners that a person assessed for taxation on personal estate on the books or rolls of one borough should have been assessed therefor on the books or rolls of another borough, they shall forthwith cause the assessment to be cancelled and a new assessment to be made on the proper books or rolls, and within five days thereafter shall cause written notice of the new assessment to be mailed to such person at his last known residence or business address within The City of Mew York, and an affidavit of the mailing of such notice to be filed in the main office.”

I think none of these provisions taken singly or together sustains the claim made. They relate primarily to matters of procedure, and while they may affect the validity of a [272]*272tax where directly involved, do not affect the jurisdictional question as to what is the tax district. They are not in conflict with the theory of a single centralized body acting for a single political subdivision. Though the original tentative assessment is to be primarily made by the deputies, they act only “ under the direction of the board of taxes and assessments ” (§ 889) and their valuations are merely advisory.

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Related

In re the Estate of Oakley
175 Misc. 463 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
47 Misc. 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-moller-v-odonnel-nysupct-1905.