People Ex Rel. Roosevelt Hospital v. . Raymond

87 N.E. 90, 194 N.Y. 189, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 1274
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 29, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 87 N.E. 90 (People Ex Rel. Roosevelt Hospital v. . Raymond) 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. Roosevelt Hospital v. . Raymond, 87 N.E. 90, 194 N.Y. 189, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 1274 (N.Y. 1909).

Opinions

Gray, J.

The relator instituted this proceeding to review, and to have declared illegal, an assessment upon certain real estate belonging to it in the city of Hew York, for the year 1906. The following are the facts of the case. In 1863, James H. Roosevelt, a resident of the city of Hew York, died; leaving a will, by which he disposed of his real and personal estate. The residue of his personal estate he gave to trustees named, in trust for the establishment of a “ hospital for the reception and relief of sick and diseased persons and for its permanent endowment ”. He devised all of his real estate, subject to the payment of an annuity of §4,000, which has long since expired, to his executors; in trust to receive the rents and profits thereof for the use of a nephew and, upon his death without issue, to sell the same and to pay the proceeds to the trustees above referred to, towards the “ hospital endowment ”. He directed his trustees “ promptly to apply to the legislature of this state for proper acts to incorporate, secure and perpetuate said hospital ” and then provided that should such legislature, for two years next after my decease (and during two lives designated), refuse or neglect to grant a liberal charter for the safe organization, conduct and perpetuity of such hospital establishment”, the trustees were to pay over all of the trust fund to the government of the United States of America. The validity of the trust was questioned; but it wras sustained in the familiar case of Burrill v. Boardman, (43 N. Y. 254). The life of the nephew terminated some two months after the death of the testator and, thereupon, the trustees designated in the will memorialized *192 the legislature of the state for the passage of an act of incorporation ; setting forth the provisions of the will with respect to the establishment of the hospital, as above referred to. The memorial included the form of the charter desired. In 1864, the legislature passed the act of incorporation as proposed. (Chapter 4, Laws of 1864.) The act contained the provision that “the property, real and personal, of said corporation, shall be exempt from taxation”. It, further, provided that “ the said corporation shall be and is hereby empowered: 1. To demand and receive from the executrix of the last will and testament of the said James H. Roosevelt * * * and from the residuary legatees named in said will, all personal property and real estate, * * * in any manner devised or bequeathed by the said will for the establishment in the City of New York of a hospital as aforesaid”. Subsequently, the trustees, by formal resolution, accepted and adopted the act of incorporation and they requested the executrix of Mr. Roosevelt to execute a deed conveying to the corporation all of the real estate devised. This request was complied with by the executrix and she conveyed parcels of real estate, which included the parcel described in the present jiroceeding. Having received the personal and real property given by the testator for the establishment and endowment of the hospital, the trustees bought a block of land, between Ninth and Tenth avenues, and Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth streets, in the city of New York, and erected thereupon suitable buildings; which, ever since their completion, have been used for the reception and treatment of patients.

The commissioners of taxes and assessments of the city of New York have assessed the portion of the relator’s real estate for the purposes of taxation, upon the ground that none of its property was exempt, except as it came within the provisions for immunity, contained in subdivision 7 of section 4 of the G-eneral. Tax Law of 1896. Those provisions exempt the real property of such an institution, only, when “used exclusively for carrying out thereupon one or more of such *193 purposes”. The tax commissioners determined that the provision for exemption from taxation in the relator’s charter had been repealed by the passage of the General Tax Law and that, as the property assessed was not used exclusively for carrying out thereupon a corporate purpose, it was subject to taxation like any other taxable property. It appears that the property in question was leased by the relator and that the revenue derived therefrom was applied to the uses of the hospital.

Upon the hearing at the Special Term, the court ordered that the assessment be stricken from the rolls and that the tax be canceled. Upon appeal to the Appellate Division, the order of the Special Term was reversed and the writ of certiorari, procured to be issued by the relator, was dismissed.

The relator, in appealing to this court from the determination of the Appellate Division, contends that it was not the intention of the legislature, in enacting the General Tax Law of 1896, to repeal the special exemption from taxation, which was contained in the relator’s charter, and that that provision was a promise to induce the transfer to the corporation of the property. At the Special Term it was considered that there was no substantial distinction between this case and the case of People ex rel. Cooper Union v. Wells, (180 N. Y. 531); where, upon quite similar facts, the assessment had been vacated. In the Appellate Division, a majority of the justices, upon the authority of certain decisions by this court, (Matter of Huntington, 168 N. Y. 399 ; Pratt Institute v. City of New York, 183 ib. 151; People ex rel. Cooper Union v. Gass, 190 ib. 323), held, in substance, that the passage of the General Tax Law was an exercise of the right reserved by the State Constitution to alter, or to repeal, all general laws, or special acts, authorizing the formation of corporations and that, as a comprehensive- enactment upon the subject of taxation and exemption, it, impliedly, repealed all prior acts, general or special. They say that, as the present statutory provisions for exemption do not extend to the real estate of a hospital, when leased to others, however the income may be *194 devoted exclusively to hospital purposes, “ no bargain made by donors for exemption and incorporated in an act passed prior to the passage of the General Tax Law survives that enactment ”.

I am unable to agree in the view, which has been taken of the relator’s case. In my opinion, it is carrying presumption too far to say that, in enacting the General Tax Law, the legislature intended to repeal such an exemption from taxation as was granted "to the relator; however - valid the presumption, when entertained with respect to corporate charters generally, in which are lacking the peculiar features of the relator’s case. The decisions of this court, which are relied upon by the respondents, do not, and should not, conclude ns upon the questions now presented. In Matter of Huntington, (168 N. Y. 399), the state sought to collect a transfer tax upon a legacy given by Huntington’s will to this hospital, in 1900, and this court sustained the state comptroller’s claim. The reasoning, that the General Tax Law of 1896 was intended to provide for this particular class of immunities and that its enactment worked the repeal of greater and inconsistent exemptions contained in special and private acts, was correct, as applied to the facts of that case.

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Bluebook (online)
87 N.E. 90, 194 N.Y. 189, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 1274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-roosevelt-hospital-v-raymond-ny-1909.