Realty Equities Corp. v. Gerosa

22 Misc. 2d 817, 195 N.Y.S.2d 205, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2462
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 22 Misc. 2d 817 (Realty Equities Corp. v. Gerosa) 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
Realty Equities Corp. v. Gerosa, 22 Misc. 2d 817, 195 N.Y.S.2d 205, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2462 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1959).

Opinion

Jacob Markowitz, J.

Plaintiffs move for summary judgment in an action for declaratory judgment against the City of New York, its Comptroller, and Treasurer. The defendants have cross-moved for summary judgment by motion No. 66 of the same date, and the papers submitted on both motions are considered herein.

The complaint alleges that on July 16, 1959 plaintiff, Realty Equities 1959 Corporation, hereinafter referred to as the “grantor”, conveyed to one Mandell, as grantee, certain real property in the Borough of Bronx; that the deed was executed, acknowledged and delivered in the City of White Plains, Westchester County; that the grantor and grantee at the time and place of closing executed the “ Real Property Transfer Tax Return ” on a form supplied by the Comptroller, showing a tax [818]*818of $275 to be due under Local Law No. 49 of 1959, known as the ‘ ‘ Real Property Transfer Tax ’ ’ law, and under the Comptroller’s regulations relating to said local law; that the grantor indicated on said return that it was paying the tax under protest ‘£ for the reason that the transaction was not taxable having been consummated outside the territorial limits of the City of New York ”; that the grantor paid the $275 under protest and thereafter demanded a refund from the Comptroller and Treasurer, but never received a return of the $275. The grantor accordingly seeks judgment for the $275 with interest from the date it was paid.

Said local law defines a taxable “deed” (Administrative Code of City of New York, § 146-1.0) to include a deed “ regardless of where made, executed or delivered, whereby any real property or interest therein is created, vested, granted, bargained, sold, transferred, assigned or otherwise conveyed” (italics supplied). “Real property or interest therein” is defined to consist of realty located wholly or partly £ 1 within the city of New York ”.

The complaint requests a declaratory judgment that the local law and the regulations issued thereunder are invalid, to the extent that they purport to tax a deed delivered outside the New York City limits.

In addition to the foregoing, both plaintiffs seek a declaratory judgment that the local law and regulations and the State’s enabling act are invalid in various other respects. This aspect of the complaint will be discussed presently.

The Real Property Transfer Tax law was enacted by the city pursuant to a 1959 amendment to the State’s enabling act (L. 1934, ch. 873, as amd.). Chapter 370 of the Laws of 1959 became effective July 1,1959. It added paragraph (e) to subdivision (1) of section 1 of said enabling act, empowering the city to adopt and amend local laws imposing: “(e) Taxes on each deed by which any real property is conveyed measured by the consideration or value of the interest or property conveyed, at a rate not to exceed one-half of one per centum of such consideration or value, provided that any such city may allow deductions for any liens on such interest or property and may also allow an exemption not in excess of twenty-five thousand dollars on the consideration or value of the interest or property conveyed and provided, further, that such taxes shall not apply if the contract for any such conveyance was made prior to May first, nineteen hundred fifty-nine ”.

The authority of the city to levy a tax on deeds is, however, expressly limited by subdivision (6) of section 1 of the enabling [819]*819act, which reads as follows: “ (6) This act shall not authorize the imposition of a tax on any transaction originating and/or consummated outside of the territorial limits of any such city, notwithstanding that some act be necessarily performed with respect to such transaction within such limits.”

The grantor’s right to the return of the $275 paid under protest thus depends upon whether the taxed transaction was consummated outside the territorial limits of New York City within the meaning of subdivision (6) {supra).

Subdivision (6) is also applicable to the sales tax imposed by the city in 1934 and still in existence. Where sales at retail were made in the city which, either expressly or by implication or trade usage, required delivery outside the city, the sales have been held to come within subdivision (6) and not to be taxable (Matter of Gunther’s Sons v. McGoldrick, 279 N. Y. 148). The court held that the sales were “ consummated ” when delivery was made. In Matter of National Cash Register Co. v. Taylor (252 App. Div. 90) the court said (p. 92): “It has been decided that the word ‘ consummated ’ * * * refers to the place of performance of the contract and not to the place of making thereof.” Because sales made in New York City calling for delivery outside of the city were not taxable even if the purchasers were residents of the city, the city enacted a “Compensating Use Tax” to prevent its residents from escaping taxation by taking delivery outside the city. That tax is, however applicable by its terms, only to “ tangible personal property ”.

The Corporation Counsel contends that the applicability of subdivision (6) to the sales tax has been determined by the courts, not on the basis of where title passed, from a technical legal standpoint, but on where the personalty sold was delivered, the delivery being held to be the “ consummation ” (Matter of United Autographic Register Co. v. McGoldrick, 260 App. Div. 157, affd. 285 N. Y. 531). Accordingly, it is urged that the fact that title passed in White Plains, when the deed was there delivered, is immaterial, there being no ‘1 consummation ’ ’ within the meaning of subdivision (6) until the grantee took actual possession of the property in New York City.

The difficulty with the city’s claim that there was no “ consummation ”, within the meaning of subdivision (6), when the deed was delivered in White Plains, is that the tax imposed by the new paragraph (e) is not, upon the sale, as is the case with the sales tax on personalty, but rather upon ‘ ‘ each deed by which any real property is conveyed”. The conveyance by deed is consummated when the deed is delivered to the grantee. No [820]*820further act by the grantor is required or necessary and none occurs in actual practice. Recording of the deed, if desired by the grantee, is done by the grantee, not by the grantor. The analogy of sales tax cases where the seller is required to make delivery is, therefore, imperfect. The transaction taxed by paragraph (e), viz.: a conveyance by deed, is completely consummated the moment the deed is delivered to the grantee.

A situation very similar to that obtaining here occurred recently in Pennsylvania. A Philadelphia ordinance imposed a stamp tax upon the making, execution, issuance or delivery of any document. A contract of sale of Philadelphia real estate was closed outside the territorial limits of Philadelphia. The court (City Stores Co. v. Philadelphia, 376 Pa. 482) declared that the tax was not on the real estate or on the document, but on ‘ ‘ certain transactions pertaining to real estate ’ ’. It held that (p. 488) “ the only

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Related

Samkoff v. Gerosa
29 Misc. 2d 844 (New York Supreme Court, 1961)
Realty Equities Corp. v. Gerosa
30 Misc. 2d 481 (New York Supreme Court, 1960)

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Bluebook (online)
22 Misc. 2d 817, 195 N.Y.S.2d 205, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/realty-equities-corp-v-gerosa-nysupct-1959.