People Ex Rel. Troy Gas Co. v. . Hall

96 N.E. 933, 203 N.Y. 312, 1911 N.Y. LEXIS 785
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 21, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 96 N.E. 933 (People Ex Rel. Troy Gas Co. v. . Hall) 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. Troy Gas Co. v. . Hall, 96 N.E. 933, 203 N.Y. 312, 1911 N.Y. LEXIS 785 (N.Y. 1911).

Opinion

Chase, J.

The state board of tax commissioners fixed and determined the valuation of the relator’s special *315 franchise subject to assessment in the city of Troy for the year 1907 at §(>±0,500. Thereafter and on June 10, 1907, the day fixed in the notice therefor, the relator appeared before such commissioners and asked that the assessment be reduced upon the grounds of overvaluation and inequality. After hearing the relator, and on June 20, 1907, said commissioners finally determined the valuation of said franchise at $610,500 and filed a written statement of the same with the clerk of the city of Troy as provided by statute.

The city of Troy constitutes one tax district and has a board of assessors authorized to assess 'property therein, among other things, for state and county taxes. The relator is a domestic corporation engaged in the manufacture of gas and electricity. The principal office of the relator is in the third ward of said city, but the pipe lines for the distribution of gas and the wires for the distribution of electric current are necessarily continuous, and they extend through the third and into the seventeenth wards of said city, and the special franchise as defined by statute in this case is one franchise requiring a single assessment in the city of Troy.

The duty of the state board of tax commissioners is to “annually fix and determine the valuation of each special franchise subject to assessment in each city, town or tax district.”

It was held by this court in People ex rel. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co. v. Gourley (198 N. Y. 486) that the right of a steam railroad to cross streets and highways constitutes at each such crossing an independent and separate special franchise, and referring to the language of the section directing the state board of tax commissioners to fix and determine the valuation of each franchise the court say: “ This language indicates that it is the value of each right to occupy the public property, constituting the special franchise, which the state board is required to determine.” (p. 190.) It was consequently *316 decided in that case that the state board of tax commissioners failed to perform its full duty when it fixed and determined the value of the franchises at nine independent public crossings at an aggregate amount, instead of by a valuation upon each franchise, particularly in view of the fact that in the case then under consideration, within the township including said nine crossings, were two incorporated villages, each having a board of assessors for village purposes. There is nothing in the Gourley case that holds that the state board of tax commissioners is required to divide a single special franchise into parts for valuation, or holding that the franchise of a railroad, telegraph, telephone, gas, electric light, pipe line or other similar company, when it is continuous and unbroken, is to be considered other than as a single franchise, except as it is required by the statute to be valued separately in each city, town or tax district.

This court considered the right of the Metropolitan Street Railway Company to occupy the streets in the city of New York as a single franchise in People ex rel. Metropolitan Street Railway Company v. State Board of Tax Commissioners (174 N. Y. 417). In the opinion in the Gourley case (p. 491), referring to the Metropolitan Street Railway case, the court say:

“The facts were such as to make the particular decision inapplicable here; for the railway was within the streets of the city of New York and all its properties in rights and privileges were managed as one piece of property. As it was said by Judge Earl, the referee in that case, speaking' of the relator’s special franchises, ‘ there was nothing in the streets to distinguish one from the other.’ ”

The state board of tax commissioners performed its full duty, therefore, when it fixed and determined, in one amount, the value of the relator’s special franchise to occupy the streets and public places of the city of Troy with a continuous and unbroken line of pipes and wires. *317 Except for special circumstances the duty of the assessors of the city of Troy was plain and that was to enter the amount of the assessment of the special franchise as fixed and determined by the state board of tax commissioners upon the assessment roll of the city against the relator in the ward in which its principal office and place of business is located.

There were peculiar facts and circumstances affecting the determination of the tax rate in different parts of the city of Troy. In 1900 the city of Troy enlarged its boundaries by adding a large territory which included all of the then existing village of Lansingburg and other territory. Included in the act so increasing the boundaries of the city of Troy (Laws of 1900, chap. 665) is a section as follows: “Union free school district number one of the town of Lansingburg shall not be affected by this act; and no assessment shall be made or tax levied by the city of Troy, for school purposes, upon real property situate, or personal property of persons residing in that portion of the enlarged city of Troy which is situate within the present limits of. said union free school district.” (Section 5.) Union Eree School District No. 1 of the town of Lansingburg included in its boundaries the same territory then included in the village of Lansingburg, and it now constitutes the seventeenth and other wards of the present city of Troy. The territory comprising the city of Troy, other than the part thereof .included in said Union Eree School District Number 1 in the town of Lansing-burg, is for school purposes under the control of the board of education of the city of Troy and subject to taxation for school purposes in that part of the city of Troy not including the ,old village of Lansingburg. Provision was also made in said act enlarging the boundaries of the city of Troy that the portion of the enlarged city of Troy which is bounded by the limits of the city at the time when said act took effect should pay the maturing- indebtedness of the said old city of Troy. A similar provision was also made in *318 regard to that part of the new city of Troy within the said village of Lansingburg, and a still further provision for that portion of said city of Troy which then constituted parts of the towns of North Greenbush, Brunswick and Lansingburg.

The assessment against the relator bears the same proportion of all state, county and city tax whether it is placed upon the assessment roll of thé city in one or several different amounts. The valuation of the relator’s special franchise was divided for the purpose of determining the rate on that part thereof within the old city of Troy and the old village of Lansingburg respectively for school taxes and for the payment of maturing indebted-' ness arising prior to the enlargement of the city boundaries in 1900.

It is provided by the Tax Law (Cons. Laws, chap. 60, section 40; former Tax Law, Laws 1896, chap. 908, section 39):

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Related

People Ex Rel. West Shore Railroad v. Adams
26 N.E. 746 (New York Court of Appeals, 1891)
People Ex Rel. N.Y.C., Etc., Co. v. . Gourley
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Bluebook (online)
96 N.E. 933, 203 N.Y. 312, 1911 N.Y. LEXIS 785, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-troy-gas-co-v-hall-ny-1911.