People ex rel. Trojan Realty Corp. v. Purdy

174 A.D. 702, 162 N.Y.S. 56, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8955
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 1, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 174 A.D. 702 (People ex rel. Trojan Realty Corp. v. Purdy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Trojan Realty Corp. v. Purdy, 174 A.D. 702, 162 N.Y.S. 56, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8955 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinions

Scott, J.:

This is a proceeding by writ of certiorari to review the assessment of relator’s real estate for the purposes of taxation in the year 1915. It comes to us upon an appeal by defendants from an order denying their motion tó dismiss the proceeding for reasons to be hereinafter considered.

Sometime in the year 1914 the president of the relator corporation consulted an attorney, whom he had previously consulted on other matters, with reference to attempting to obtain a reduction of the assessment of relator’s real estate. This attorney, who now represents the relator in this proceeding, had in May, 1914, organized a corporation under the name of the Expert Property Appraisers, Inc., the incorporators being the attorney himself and two clerks in his office. The president of the corporation, though not an incorporator, was one Francis C. Wilde, who had theretofore been engaged in some form of business connected with real estate. The purposes of the corporation as set forth in the certificate of incorporation were very broad. It is only necessary at present to consider the purpose expressed as follows: To act as experts and appraisers with respect to the value of real property wherever located and to act as agent, broker, representative or in any other capacity with reference to the reduction of taxes and assessments of real property wherever located and to employ any and all lawful means on behalf of owners of such real property or otherwise in an effort to effect such reductions.”

When relator’s president had consulted the attorney and authorized bim to attempt to obtain a reduction of the assessment, the latter, instead of attending to it personally, turned the matter over to the corporation which he had organized, and a written application for a review and reduction of the assessment was presented to the tax commissioners who in the [705]*705city of New York act as assessors. This petition was signed and verified by Francis C. Wilde, who described himself as agent for the owner of the property. In the body of the application was a request that all notices with regard thereto should be addressed to Expert Property Appraisers, Inc., at its office in the city of New York. A notice was in due course sent to Wilde or the association of which he was president, as provided by section 37 of the Tax Law, requiring the person assessed or his agent or representative to appear and be examined respecting the complaint concerning the assessment. No one did appear at the time appointed and Wilde, who had signed the application for a reduction, declined in writing so to appear. The commissioners refused to reduce the assessment, whereupon the attorney above mentioned sued out the present writ of certiorari, the petition thereto being signed and verified by relator’s president.

Mr. Wilde, who had signed the application to the tax commissioners for a reduction of the assessment, describing himself as agent for the owner of the property, and who at the time was president of the Expert Property Appraisers, Inc., testified before the Special Term that he was not and never had been the agent of the relator, the Trojan Realty Corporation, and had never known any of the officers of that company. He further testified that the Expert Property Appraisers, Inc., above referred to, had been organized at his suggestion, one of the purposes being to engage in the business of obtaining the reduction of taxes upon real property; that the agreement between himself and the attorney was that the fees realized from that business, being fifty per cent of the amount by which any tax was reduced, should be divided equally between himself and that attorney; that it was proposed to employ one Tribelhorn as expert witness who was to testify, as required, both before the tax commissioners, and in case of certiorari proceedings, before the court; that for this service Tribelhorn was to receive a fee ranging from $10 to $100, which was to be paid him only in case a reduction was obtained, and that was to come out of Wilde’s share of the fee.

It is quite clear that the scheme thus devised by Wilde and [706]*706his attorney partner and the business intended to be carried on by the corporation which they formed embraced vicious features which have been condemned both by the Legislature and the courts. In the first place the business contemplated by the corporation obviously involved practicing law either by itself, or in the name of an attorney selected by it. To arrive at this conclusion it is not necessary to determine whether or not an appearance before the the tax board, clearly a quasi judicial body, is such practice of the law as is only justified by an attorney. Certainly suing out a writ of certiorari is as much practicing law as is the commencement of an action, and it is evident from the documentary and other evidence that the application tothe tax commissioners was not a bona fide effort to obtain favorable action by that body, but merely the perfunctory performance of a formality which was necessary in order to lay the foundation for a judicial review of the assessment by certiorari.

One evidence of this fact is found in the circumstance that the application to the tax board was made upon a form which contained a number of questions to be answered by the applicant, so framed that the answers thereto might reasonably be expected to assist the commissioners in arriving at a just conclusion as to the value of the property, and yet not one of these questions was answered. Other evidence is to be found in the fact that the person assuming to represent the owner or its agent refused to appear before the board, when requested so to do, and thus evaded an opportunity to furnish information which might have resulted, if the property was in fact overvalued, in a reduction of the assessment. These circumstances, as we consider, sufficiently establish the fact that this application to the tax board was not made in good faith with the intent and expectation of inducing favorable action by that board. So also it seems to be quite clear that the attorney who sued out the writ did so upon the retainer of the Expert Property Appraisers, Inc., and not upon that of the relator. It is true that he had been consulted by relator’s president and had been by him authorized to take steps to have the assessment reduced. This would have justified him in having his’client appear before the tax board, or perhaps in [707]*707appearing himself in behalf of his client, and, if the board refused to act, in suing out a writ. But he elected not to take this obvious and straightforward course, preferring rather to turn the whole matter over to the corporation which had been organized for the purpose of doing this kind of business. His employment to sue out the writ of certiorari was undoubtedly by that corporation and not by the relator.

We are clearly of the opinion that the principal business which the Expert Property Appraisers, Inc., was organized to do, and the only business which it ever did do, to wit, the reduction of the assessment of real estate for taxation purposes, contemplated and necessarily included the practice of law by the corporation either in person or through attorneys employed by it and under its domination and control. It was, therefore, organized for an illegal purpose, and its practices were illegal. (Business Corp. Law [Consol. Laws, chap. 4; Laws of 1909, chap. 12], § 2a, as added by Laws of 1909, chap. 484; Penal Law, § 280, added by Laws of 1909, chap. 483, as amd. by Laws of 1911, chap. 317;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
174 A.D. 702, 162 N.Y.S. 56, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8955, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-trojan-realty-corp-v-purdy-nyappdiv-1916.