Snowpine Village Condominium Board of Managers v. Town of Great Valley

144 Misc. 2d 1049, 545 N.Y.S.2d 1004, 1989 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 560
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 29, 1989
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 144 Misc. 2d 1049 (Snowpine Village Condominium Board of Managers v. Town of Great Valley) 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
Snowpine Village Condominium Board of Managers v. Town of Great Valley, 144 Misc. 2d 1049, 545 N.Y.S.2d 1004, 1989 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 560 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1989).

Opinion

[1050]*1050OPINION OF THE COURT

Edward M. Horey, J.

There is presented to the court an order to be entered on a stipulation purporting to resolve five years of tax assessments levied by the Town of Great Valley, New York, against 69 condominiums known generally and collectively as Snowpine Village.

The years of assessment which are in issue are 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988 and 1989.

The stipulation entered into between the township and the owners seeks to resolve current tax certiorari proceedings for the five years of 1985 through 1989 inclusive by an agreement which prospectively fixes an assessment for each of the 69 condominiums for the present year (1989) and five ensuing years, viz., the years 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993 and 1994. It is of note that the prospective assessments for the years 1989 through 1994 represent approximately 45% of the prior assessments for the year 1988. In sum, for the five-year period envisioned by the agreement the respective taxpayers’ assessments would be reduced by approximately 55% of the current assessments.

The stipulation states that the reason for the prospective reduction of assessments is the "inability of the respondent [township] and/or other taxing authority to pay cash refunds.” The agreement of stipulation also states that the "parties agree that petitioners’ properties were overassessed on the respondent’s 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988 and 1989 tax rolls.”

The means to resolve issues of overassessment continually plagues our municipalities and other taxing entities. Having rendered and fixed assessments for a particular year and thereafter collected a tax upon such assessment to cover the items of expenditure included in the budget, the municipalities repeatedly find themselves in a position of having spent tax moneys which it subsequently develops should not have been collected in the first place. How redress is to be made to the offended taxpayer is the problem. Financing by bonding or other debt-incurring practices to provide for a refund is expensive and at times impossible in those instances where the municipality has already reached its maximum constitutional indebtedness. As a consequence, municipalities turn to compromises which typically envision reduction of future taxes by various means of reduced prospective assessments. Such an agreement is at bar.

[1051]*1051The difficulty of reaching an agreement of compromise providing for future limitation on assessments and in turn on taxes is the statutory obligation imposed upon an assessor, viz., "[y]ear by year an assessor must use his own judgment and must verify the [tax] roll (Tax Law § 28).” (People ex rel. Hilton v Fahrenkopf 279 NY 49, 53 [1938] [italics added] quoted and followed in Matter of North Country Sav. Bank v Nunziato, 123 Misc 2d 502, 506 [Sup Ct, Albany County 1984, Conway, J.].) In addition and of greater import are the provisions of NY Constitution, article XVI, § 1 which provide that: "The power of taxation shall never be surrendered, suspended or contracted away, except as to securities issued for public purposes pursuant to law.” (Italics added.)

To avoid violating the noted statutory independence granted and imposed upon a tax assessor and the constitutional limitation prohibiting the contracting away of the taxing power, and still provide for a compromise by means of prospective reduction or limitation of assessments has taxed the legal mind. In truth, this area of the law has become a field of legal specialization. It has spawned experts in the craft of attempting to avoid the legal and constitutional pitfalls while still designing means of limiting prospective tax assessments. The drafting of such agreements has become a veritable art form. The agreement of stipulation in issue is an example.

The technique typically employed is an agreement of settlement of current tax proceedings with a promise by the taxpayer that he will settle all outstanding litigation and will promise not to initiate any new proceedings providing always that the taxing authority maintains assessments for a stated number of years at a fixed figure. Typically the figure selected is a marked reduction of the current assessment.

It is argued that under such a settlement agreement the taxing authority does not violate any law or constitutional provision in that the taxing authority promises nothing. It does not technically agree to any prospective assessments. The conditional promise not to sue remains in force and binding on the taxpayer.

The consequence of the taxing authority deviating from the prospective reduced assessments is well stated in Review and Reduction of Real Property Assessments in New York by Lee and LeForestier (at 532): "If the municipality, the very next year, does raise the assessment, deeming in its judgment that the value of the property is then more than the amount [1052]*1052stipulated in the settlement of the prior proceeding, it can do so. Nothing in the agreement prevents that exercise of its sovereign power. Such an action would not be in derogation of the terms of the agreement. It would merely release the petitioner from the covenant not to sue.”

Thus, the scenario that is set by the agreement is analogous to a house built on stilts. While the municipality is legally free to remove the underpinning by increasing assessments, the result is foretold — a house of lawsuits will come crashing down. Since in the instant case it was an admitted overcharge of assessments that led to the stipulation, the results of the ensuing lawsuits may fairly well be predicted.

If instead of the imposition of a condition that certain reduced assessments must be maintained by the taxing authority as a condition for the promise of the taxpayer not to sue, there is instead an outright promise on the part of the taxing authority that it will maintain assessments at a reduced assessment, our courts have denounced such a promise as one that is ultra vires on the part of the municipality and thus illegal and unenforceable. (Troy Union R. R. Co. v City of Troy, 227 App Div 351 [3d Dept 1929], affd 253 NY 597; Matter of North Country Sav. Bank v Nunziato, 123 Misc 2d 502 [Sup Ct, Albany County 1984], supra; to same effect is 5 Opns Counsel SBEA No. 23 [1975].) The difference then is between a condition that reduced assessments be maintained and a promise to maintain them.

Quaere: is such a difference one which should be judicially countenanced? Decisional law on this critical issue is scarce. People ex rel. Beard’s Erie Basin v Sexton (247 App Div 754 [2d Dept 1936]) stated that such agreements were not be be countenanced. Involved there was a private agreement to abide by the amounts of the assessments in amounts as fixed for the succeeding year. The court stated "[s]uch an agreement purports to substitute as the basis for assessment purposes a private understanding based upon the exigencies of a given situation as they appeal to the respective parties for and in the place of the actual value of the property, and so is illegal and void” (supra, at 755).

In their excellent text of Review and Reduction of Real Property Assessments in New York, the authors Lee and LeForestier point out that People ex rel. Beard’s Erie Basin v Sexton (supra) is the one authority to the effect that such an agreement is illegal. Such. authors state that they are in [1053]

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Bluebook (online)
144 Misc. 2d 1049, 545 N.Y.S.2d 1004, 1989 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snowpine-village-condominium-board-of-managers-v-town-of-great-valley-nysupct-1989.