Stewart v. Fonda

26 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 191
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1879
StatusPublished

This text of 26 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 191 (Stewart v. Fonda) 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
Stewart v. Fonda, 26 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 191 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1879).

Opinion

Bearned, P. J. :

The principle which holds an assessor personally liable, in certain cases, for his official acts to the party injured, is certainly hard, and ought not to be extended. The assessor is' obliged to act, and to act upon the facts as he can learn them by inquiry. (1 R. S., 390, § 8.) If, on such inquiry, the facts are presented to him in one form, and subsequently, in an action brought against him, a different state of facts is proved by evidence, seems to be unreasonable that he should suffer. He is not like some inferior officers, who act upon a written and sworn application, and who are to judge from that alone whether they have jurisdiction. But he must determine whether he has jurisdiction by “inquiry,” and is to act on the decision based thereon.

It is worth while, then, to examine the cases with some care, and to see what has been decided as to such liability.

In Dorn v. Backer (61 N. Y., 261), the plaintiff owned a farm dying partly in each of the two towns, of Ava and of Boonville. He occupied and worked the whole, and for some years had lived in Boonville, where he voted, and where his farm was taxsd. The assessors of Ava also assessed him for his farm, and collected the tax. He sued the assessor and was nonsuited by the court below. See 61 Barb., 597, where the facts appear. This was reversed by the Commission of Appeals. In this case, therefore, there were [195]*195these facts : the property was not within the jurisdiction of the assessors (1 R. S., 389; § 4), and the plaintiff had been unjustly compelled to pay a double tax.

The case of the The National Bank v. The City of Elmira (53 N. Y., 49) was not an action against assessors.

In Mygatt v. Washburn (15 N. Y., 316), the plaintiff was-assessed for personal property in a town where he did not reside. He was also assessed and paid taxes in the town of his residence. This, then, is a case where the assessors had no jurisdiction of the person, and hence had no jurisdiction to assess his personal property. (1 R. S., 390, 391, §§ 8, 9, subd. 4.)

In Clark v. Norton (49 N. Y., 243), the assessor assessed th& plaintiff for personal property after the time when, by law, their roll was to be completed. Hence, then- jurisdiction had altogether expired.

In Dorwin v. Strickland (57 N. Y., 492) the assessor assessed for personal property a non-resident of the town, and was held liable for damages. Of the same nature are the cases of Palmer v. Lawrence (6 Lans., 282); Wade v. Matheson (4 Lans., 158), and Suydam v. Keys (13 Johns., 444).

Prosser v. Secor (5 Barb., 607) was the case of a recovery, where a minister of the gospel was assessed for personal property.

Thus, in all the cases of recovery against assessors, cited by the plaintiff, there has been an assessment against the personal property of a person not within the jurisdiction of the assessors, excepting the first case, in which the land assessed was, for the purpose of assessment, out of their jurisdiction, as if it had been out of their town.

Section 1, 1 R. S. (m. p. 387) declares that all lands and personal property shall be liable to taxation. The land in question was within the town where the defendants were assessors, and was within their jurisdiction; and it was their duty to assess it. (1 R. S., 390, § 8.) In that respect the present case differs from all those on which the plaintiff relies. The subject-matter was within the jurisdiction of the defendants.

It appears, then, that in 1876 this property had been assessed to A. T. Stewart, and that the agent of the plaintiff then told one of the assessors, when consulted by him for this purpose, that the prop[196]*196erty should be charged to the plaintiff. In pursuance of that information the assessment roll was made out. In 1878, when the assessment was made which is now complained of, the agent for the plaintiff appeared before the assessors in due season, and gave evidence and examined witnesses. All the evidence thus given was on the question of the value of the real estate thus assessed. No objection was made to the form of the assessment, or to the fact that the land was assessed to the plaintiff. The evidence thus produced states that the property assessed is the plaintiff's ; and, indeed, her ownership is undisputed.

Wo have, then, a case where the assessors had jurisdiction to assess the land, and where, therefore, they were to decide the questions of fact and law involved in making the assessment. They were, therefore, to determine the manner of making the assessment. And in this they acted judicially, as decided in Buff and State L. R. R. Co. v. Supervisors (48 N. Y., 93) ; and see p. 105, notes 23 ; and also Van Rensselaer v. Cottrell (7 Barb., 127) ; affirmed, 1 Selden Notes, 25.

In fact they assessed the land to the true owner. And certainly the owner of the land might prefer that it should be assessed directly to her, rather than to the occupant, or as non-resident land. That is a matter which concerned her only. The provisions as to assessing to the occupant, and the like, are intended, not to indicate that the owner is not the proper person to pay the tax, but to facilitate the collection thereof. That the owner is to pay the taxes is recognized by chapter 327, Laws of 1855, and by the equity doctrine of apportionment.

If, then, the owner of the land should appear before the assessors, and should-admit that she was a resident of the town, and request that the land owned by her in the town should be assessed to her as a resident, and if, in compliance with such admission, the assessors should thus assess the land, on what’ principle could she recover damages against them for their act ? To permit such a,recovery would be unjust. But, practically, this is what the plaintiff did. By the request of her agent, the property had been assessed to her. By his omission to object, she waived, as against these assessors, any right to complain of their acts. Volenti non fit injuria.

[197]*197It is evident that no wish, that any other manner of assessment .should be followed, was hinted at by her. No wrong has, in fact, been done to the plaintiff. She has not been assessed in two places on the same property ; she has not been assessed in property not taxable ; she has paid taxes on her own property ; and that is what she ought to do. And the whole case loóles as if it were intended merely for revenge on the assessors for not reducing the valuation of the property as she desired. Courts .ought not to aid such an attempt to punish these, and to hold a. rod over futui-e assessors.

The case of Preston v. Boston (12 Pick., 7) is cited by the plaintiff to show that are quest to assessors to assess a person in one place, does not give jurisdiction. That differs from the present in two respects. It was not an action against the assessors; and it was an assessment for a poll tax. There was no property to give jurisdiction.

The recent and well-known case of Lange v. Benedict (73 N. Y., 12) seems to show that the act of an officer may be void, and yet not always render him civilly liable. And, therefore, the decisions in Whitney v. Thomas (23 N. Y., 281), and in similar cases, do not determine the question of the defendants’ liability.

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Related

Mygatt v. . Washburn
15 N.Y. 316 (New York Court of Appeals, 1857)
National Bank of Chemung v. City of Elmira
53 N.Y. 49 (New York Court of Appeals, 1873)
Lange v. . Benedict
73 N.Y. 12 (New York Court of Appeals, 1878)
Dorn v. . Backer
61 N.Y. 261 (New York Court of Appeals, 1874)
Whitney v. . Thomas
23 N.Y. 281 (New York Court of Appeals, 1861)
Clark v. . Norton
49 N.Y. 243 (New York Court of Appeals, 1872)
Dorwin v. . Strickland
57 N.Y. 492 (New York Court of Appeals, 1874)
Buf. and State L.R.R. Co. v. . Sup'rs Erie Co.
48 N.Y. 93 (New York Court of Appeals, 1871)
Prosser v. Secor
5 Barb. 607 (New York Supreme Court, 1849)
Van Rensselaer v. Cottrell
7 Barb. 127 (New York Supreme Court, 1849)
Dorn v. Backer
61 Barb. 597 (New York Supreme Court, 1872)
Suydam v. Keys
13 Johns. 444 (New York Supreme Court, 1816)
Wade v. Matheson
4 Lans. 158 (New York Supreme Court, 1870)
Palmer v. Lawrence
6 Lans. 282 (New York Supreme Court, 1872)

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-fonda-nysupct-1879.