People ex rel. Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Dolan

11 N.Y.S. 35, 32 N.Y. St. Rep. 599, 57 Hun 589, 1890 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 588
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 7, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 N.Y.S. 35 (People ex rel. Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Dolan) 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. Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Dolan, 11 N.Y.S. 35, 32 N.Y. St. Rep. 599, 57 Hun 589, 1890 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 588 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1890).

Opinion

Mayham, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of this court at special term dismissing and quashing a writ of certiorari brought by the relator to review and set aside an assessment made by the respondents as general assessors of the city of Troy, in 1885, on relator’s property in Troy. The assessment roll for that year was filed by the assessors with the city comptroller on the 26th day of February, 1886, to which was attached the oath of the assessors, in the form required by chapter 201 of the Laws of 1885, sworn to on that day. The writ of certiorari was allowed on the 13th of March, 1886, and on that day filed in the Rensselaer county clerk’s office, and served on the respondents. The learned trial judge found that the property of the relator, including the property of the other telegraph companies owned or controlled by it in the city of Troy, was assessed at the aggregate sum of $11,700 for taxation in the city of Troy for 1885; that the aggregate assessed valuation of all the taxable property in that city for 1885 was $46,600,932; and that the rate of taxation was $1.24 on each $100, and that the total tax assessed against that city for 1885 was $575,434.53, of which the relator’s share was $145.08. He also found that the relator was a domestic corporation with a capital of about $81,000,000, with a business office in the city of Troy, with connection forming a part of an extensive system of transmitting information and news by telegraph, the earnings of which at that office during the year 1885 were upwards of $30,000, exclusive of the rental of seven private wires at $'2,000 each a year; that no application was made by, or on behalf of, the relators to the respondents, before the completion of the assessment roll for the year 1885, for any reduction of the valuation of its property on said roll; that for the year 1885 the relator neglected to make and deliver to the general assessors of the city of Troy, or any of them, a wriiten statement of its property in said city, as required by section 2, tit. 4, c. 13, pt. 1, of the Revised Statutes; that it does not appear from the evidence that the relator’s property is taxed or assessed out of proportion to other real estate in said city. On the' hearing the relator gave evidence tending to show the actual cost of the material and construction of its telegraph property in the city of Troy, and the witness upon that subject estimated Lite cost at $4,087.20, and now claims that the assessment is excessive and erroneous, because it is largely in excess of-that amount. Upon these and other facts found by the judge at the trial-court, which need not be recited here, the learned trial judge dismissed the writ.

It is insisted that the judgment rendered upon the decision of the special term should be reversed on the ground of alleged erroneous findings of fact by the trial court, but on a careful examination of the evidence we are unable to discover any essential finding of the court that is not supported- by the evidence. This writ was granted under the provisions of chapter 269 of-the Laws of 1880, which provides for a review of the assessment, and a reversal, of the same in cases therein enumerated. The petition must set forth-either that the assessment is illegal, specifying the ground of the illegality; or is erroneous by reason of overvaluation; or is unequal in that the assessment has been made at a higher proportionate valuation than other real or personal property on the same roll, by the same officers, and that the petitioner is,or will be injured by such alleged illegal, erroneous,, or unequal as[37]*37sessment. Section 1, c. 269, Laws 1880. The petition in this case makes no claim that the assessment is illegal, but it alleges that it is erroneous by reason of overvaluation; and is unequal in that the assessment has been made at a higher proportionate valuation than other real property on said roll, by said officers, and that the relator will be injured in consequence thereof. Upon the question of overvaluation the'relator gave some evidence upon the trial, first, as to the cost of the material and construction, and also a judgment in a proceeding by certiorari from the assessment of the same property in 1883, by which it appears that other real estate in the city of Troy was assessed at 33¿ per cent, only of its value that year, and the property of the relator was assessed at its full value, in which action it was adjudged and determined that the relator’s property should be assessed at the same rate as other property, and when so assessed the aggregate should not exceed in that year the sum of $6,000. While this evidence was doubtless competent to be considered by the court as bearing upon the question of real value, it was by no means conclusive upon it, in determining whether or not there was an overvaluation. As was said by the learned trial court, the cost of construction was by no means controlling 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. Again, if that evidence was to be considered as controlling, then the other evidence in the judgment roll offered by the relator would be nullified, as that judgment fixed the maximum one-third value at $6,000, which on the reassessment ordered was made $3,900, and which if increased to its real value would, at that rate, amount to $11,-700, the exact amount of the assessment complained of. But we are not called upon, on this appeal, to speculate as to the real value of the relator’s property in Troy. The assessors having fixed by the assessment the actual value, and their assessment having been sustained by the judgment of the special term, this court on appeal should not interfere, unless the finding of the special term is clearly against the preponderance of evidence. People v. Keator, 36 Hun, 592. This court cannot, from the evidence in the record, discover any such preponderance of evidence, upon the questions of facts submitted to the special term, under the rule laid down in the case above cited, as to justify a reversal of the findings of the same upon the facts on the ground of overvaluation; nor does the evidence in this case justify the court in reversing such judgment on the ground that the relator’s property was assessed at a higher proportionate rate than other real property in the same territory, and assessed by the same persons. Indeed there seems to be no evidence in the case upon that subject, as there was no proof giving a comparison of values of other property with that of the relator’s for that year. It follows that the judgment must be affirmed unless some erroneous principle was adopted by the court at special term in determining the questions in issue before it at the trial.

In determining the questions before the court at the trial, it was doubtless competent for it to take into account all subjects which bore directly upon the value of the relator’s real property in Troy, and upon that subject the cost, earnings, extent of the system of which the part located in Troy was a part, might all be considered by the court; all of these might be considered as elements in the problem. People v. Keator, 36 Hun, 594; People v. Weaver, 34 Hun, 321; People v. Pond, 13 Abb. N. C. 1; Smith v. Mayor, 68 N. Y. 552, 555. It does not appear, therefore, that the trial judge violated any rule of law in reaching his conclusion upon the question of value. People v. Hicks, 40 Hun, 601, 602; People v. Weaver, 36 Hun, 322; People v. Pond, 13 Abb. N. C. 1.

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11 N.Y.S. 35, 32 N.Y. St. Rep. 599, 57 Hun 589, 1890 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-western-union-telegraph-co-v-dolan-nysupct-1890.