Roosevelt Hospital v. Mayor, Aldermen & Commonalty of New York

84 N.Y. 108, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 382
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 11, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 84 N.Y. 108 (Roosevelt Hospital v. Mayor, Aldermen & Commonalty of New York) 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
Roosevelt Hospital v. Mayor, Aldermen & Commonalty of New York, 84 N.Y. 108, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 382 (N.Y. 1881).

Opinions

This action was commenced by the plaintiff to vacate and restrain the collection of an assessment imposed upon its land for the expense of a sewer.

James H. Roosevelt died in 1863, leaving a will in which he gave a large property to trustees named, for the purpose of founding and maintaining a hospital in the city of New York, and he directed the trustees to apply to the legislature for proper acts to incorporate, secure and perpetuate such hospital. In compliance with these directions the trustees applied to the legislature and by the act chapter 4 of the Laws of 1864, the plaintiff was incorporated.

By section 3 of the act it is provided that "the property, real and personal, of said corporation shall be exempt from taxation, and shall be entitled to the benefit of the provisions of law relative to charitable institutions."

In 1873 there was imposed upon the land of the plaintiff, owned and held by it for hospital purposes, an assessment of nearly $10,000, for the expense of a sewer constructed near such land, and the claim of the plaintiff is, that its land was exempt from such assessment by virtue of the section cited. We agree with the courts below that this claim is not wellfounded. *Page 112

In a broad sense, taxes undoubtedly include assessments, and the right to impose assessments has its foundation in the taxing power of the government; and yet in practice, and as generally understood, there is a broad distinction between the two terms. Taxes, as the term is generally used, are public burdens imposed generally upon the inhabitants of the whole State, or upon some civil division thereof, for governmental purposes without reference to peculiar benefits to particular individuals or property. Assessments have reference to impositions for improvements which are specially beneficial to particular individuals or property and which are imposed in proportion to the particular benefits supposed to be conferred. They are justified only because the improvements confer special benefits and are just only when they are divided in proportion to such benefits.

What the legislature undoubtedly meant was to exempt the plaintiff from such taxation as it would, but for the exemption, have to share for governmental purposes with all the other persons in the ward or city or State. It cannot be supposed that it was intended to exempt it from assessments made for the expense of improvements specially beneficial to its property and to impose the whole of such expense upon other property or upon the public generally. If such had been the intention, the legislature would have used more comprehensive terms, particularly as it must be presumed to have known the wide distinction in the city of New York between taxes and assessments, and the fact that taxes and assessments were there imposed for different purposes, upon different systems and by different officers.

These views are fully sustained by authorities quite uniform. In Matter of the Mayor, etc., of New York (11 Johns. 80), certain churches claimed exemption from assessments for street improvements, under an act passed April 8, 1801, which exempted churches from being "taxed by any law of the State," and the exemption was denied on the ground that such assessments were not taxes within the meaning of the act. In Bleecker v. Ballou (3 Wend. 263), SAVAGE, Ch. J., speaking of *Page 113 an assessment for street improvements, said there was no doubt that such an assessment was not a tax. In Sharp v. Speir (4 Hill, 76), it was held that a statute which authorized the sale of land for a tax did not authorize the sale for an assessment for benefits. In Hassan v. City of Rochester (67 N.Y. 528), it was held that the provisions of the Revised Statutes (1 R.S. 387, § 1) exempting from taxation lands belonging to the State did not exempt such lands from assessments for local improvements. Judge MILLER, writing the opinion, said: "A manifest distinction exists between taxes and assessments, which is distinctly recognized in the decisions. And it is held that an assessment is not a tax in many reported cases." (See, also, Cooley on Taxation, 147, where, in a note, many cases very much in point are collated.) This line of decisions, quite uniform in this State and elsewhere, may be supposed to have been known to the legislature, and its language to have been used in reference thereto.

There is nothing in conflict with the authorities cited inMatter of Van Antwerp (56 N.Y. 261). In that case it was decided that the right to impose an assessment for local improvements is based upon the taxing power possessed by the government, and that with reference to that power an assessment is a tax, and so, undoubtedly, it is. But the point here is that while taxes and assessments are both fundamentally based upon the taxing power, they are widely different species of taxation. InHarvard College v. Aldermen of Boston (104 Mass. 470), the college was held to be exempt from assessments for street improvements, under a provision in its charter which exempted its property from "all civil impositions, taxes and rates" — language much broader in its import than that used in plaintiff's charter.

The scope of the word taxation, as used in the charter, is not enlarged by a consideration of the object for which the plaintiff was incorporated. The object was the establishment "of a hospital for the reception and relief of sick and diseased persons, and its permanent endowment pursuant to the directions of the last will and testament of its founder." It cannot *Page 114 be supposed that this object will be defeated by assessments made for benefits to its property from local improvements. It must be assumed that such assessments will be justly and fairly made, and that they will not exceed the benefits actually conferred. If they are not thus made, the plaintiff may resist them in the manner in which all citizens are obliged to fight against unjust, unequal and unfair taxation.

It is said that the purpose was to found a permanent hospital and that the permanency may be defeated if plaintiff's property is liable to be swept away by assessments, and that therefore the assessments should not be allowed. The attribute of permanency is a chartered privilege. The legislature did not undertake to guaranty the perpetuity of the hospital against all contingencies. Its property may be swept away by bad management, by debts lawfully created, or by assessments. But it cannot be supposed that the legislature intended to secure the permanency of the hospital, said to be endowed with several millions of dollars, by the exemption from taxation. In consideration of the public good which the hospital would accomplish and the charitable use to which its funds were to be devoted, the legislature simply intended that its funds should not be depleted by general taxes taken for public purposes. To comply with the founder's will, the legislature was required to grant a "liberal charter," and hence it is claimed that the exemption from taxation should be held also to exempt from assessments, and that unless it is so held the charter is not liberal within the meaning of the will. But the charter granted is a liberal one. It is perpetual. It enables the plaintiff to take and hold forever all the property devoted to it by the founder not only, but to take without limit property from other sources, and to hold without limit real and personal property.

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Bluebook (online)
84 N.Y. 108, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roosevelt-hospital-v-mayor-aldermen-commonalty-of-new-york-ny-1881.