People Ex Rel. Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Dolan

126 N.Y. 166, 37 N.Y. St. Rep. 28
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 14, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 126 N.Y. 166 (People Ex Rel. Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Dolan) 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. Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Dolan, 126 N.Y. 166, 37 N.Y. St. Rep. 28 (N.Y. 1891).

Opinion

Peckham, J.

We have lately held in People ex rel. West Shore Railroad Company v. Adams, Trustee, etc. (125 N. Y. 471), that a person, under the circumstances in which this *171 relator stood, failing to appear before the board of assessors on what is known as grievance day, is guilty of such laches as to warrant the court in refusing to grant him any relief in the premises.

It sufficiently appears in this proceeding that the relator did thus fail in the years 1885 and 1887.

This leaves only the assessment of 1886 open for inspection and review.

In the affidavit made on the part of the relator to procure the certiorari to review the assessment for that year, it is alleged that the assessment is erroneous and illegal by reason of overvaluation and is unequal because made at a higher proportionate valuation than other real property on' the roll. It is also alleged that the actual value of the property of the relator-within the limits of the city of Troy, and all fixtures connected therewith, does not exceed $4,000. . The writ of certiorari was duly issued and the defendants made return thereto, and the issues were referred to a referee to take testimony, after which the matter came on for a hearing before the court at Special Term, which made various findings of fact and upon the merits quashed the writ. Upon appeal to the General Term, that court affirmed the order of the Special Term, and from the affirmance the relator has appealed here. The court at Special Term found the value of the taxable property of the defendant and listed on the assessment-roll of Troy for the-year 1886 to be at least $12,000.

If there be any evidence to support the finding this court is concluded. But, if it appear that, in coming to that conclusion, the courts below have included improper and illegal elements as a basis for valuation, then an error of law has been made which is reviewable here.

Upon the hearing before the referee to take testimony, the Counsel for the defendants, under the objection of the relator’s, counsel, proved that the annual receipts of the relator’s Troy-office were about $30,000. At another time before the court, the counsel for the defendants objected to proof as to the cost of-setting the ordinary-sized pole in Troy, because as counsel said,, *172 the property, of the company was real estate and must he valued as a whole. He also objected to evidence of the cost of freight in transporting relator’s poles to Troy, because it was not competent to reduce the value of the real estate in such manner. He made the same objection to proof of the wages of employes engaged in setting the poles.

The eleventh finding of fact by the court is that “ except as appears from the assessment-rolls in said city, for the year 1886, there is no sufficient proof of the actual value of the relator’s telegraph property, as it was then established and-in operation in the city of Troy as part of an extensive system for transmitting information and news by telegraph.”

In his opinion at Special Term, the learned judge said: “ In ascertaining the value of the real estate in question, it must be regarded as a part of a whole of a complete telegraph fine in operation. Its valuó, not as poles and wires simply, but for telegraph purposes, and its position with its connections and its productive capacity are important if not controling considerations.” At the General Term in the opinion delivered, the' learned judge says upon this point: “ The cost of construction was by no means controling as to the value of the relator’s property in Troy. That was only an integral part of a great -system which extended over the entire state, and by itself might be of little value as compared with -its value as a part -of the entire system.” And in his brief before this court, the learned counsel for the defendants, in justifying the valuation placed upon the relator’s property by the assessors and by the court at Special Term, uses this language : In ascertaining the actual value of such property, the assessors had the right and it was their duty to look beyond the cost of specific material at wholesale prices, and the cost of the labor, and to estimate such property not as an isolated piece of land, but in connection with its position, its incidents and the business and profits to be derived therefrom.”

It is thus seen that it has been assumed as a fact by the courts below, and it is conceded by counsel, that the defendants pursued the method above mentioned of determining the *173 value of the property of the relator in the city of Troy for purposes of local taxation. The question now to be decided is whether tins method or system is valid.

For the purpose of fixing the manner of assessing what the legislature denominated “ certain real estate of telegraph companies,” it passed, in the year 1881, an act (Chap. 597 of the Laws of that year), by which it was provided that telegraph companies in the state should, on a certain day in each year, make a sworn statement showing the total length of their lines in each county, with the cost of construction and equipment thereof, and the assessors within each county were to assess for purposes of taxation such proportion of the cost of construction as the length of the lines in the district of the assessors bore to the total length of the lines in the county.

The legislature at the same session passed the act (Chap. 361), taxing the corporations therein named in the manner stated. Among such corporations are telegraph compames. The tax is declared to be one upon the corporate franchise or business of the corporation, is payable annually, and is computed upon the par value of the capital stock, the percentage of tax depending upon the amount of dividends paid by the company, or if no dividends or a less amount than six per cent is paid, then the tax is to be at the rate named in the statute upon a certain valuation of the capital stock. In addition to this tax, and by the same act, the companies named therein are to pay to the state treasurer, as a further tax on their corporate franchises or business in the state, a certain tax upon the gross earnings in the state for the business therein. These two acts of the legislature should be construed together as in pari materia, and in them is provided a system for the taxation of the property of telegraph companies, their franchises and business (exclusive of real estate in the ordinary acceptation of that term which might be owned by them). This system continued until 1886, when the legislature passed the act providing for the assessment of telegraph, telephone and electric light lines, and known as chapter 659 of the Laws of that year. This act should also be construed in connection *174 -with the act of 1881, chap. 361. The important sections are 1 and 2, and they read as follows:

Section 1.

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Bluebook (online)
126 N.Y. 166, 37 N.Y. St. Rep. 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-western-union-telegraph-co-v-dolan-ny-1891.