Vail v. Owen

19 Barb. 22, 1854 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 122
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 4, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 19 Barb. 22 (Vail v. Owen) 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
Vail v. Owen, 19 Barb. 22, 1854 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 122 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1854).

Opinion

By the Court,

Greene, J.

The question in this case is, can the defendants be held liable,' in a civil action, for assessing a person who is not liable to assessment. And this question depends upon another, did the. defendants, in making this assessment, act judicially; or, in other words, had they a judgment to exercise in this case, upon the question, whether the plaintiff did or did not belong to that class of persons who, by the provisions of the statute, are exempt from taxation ?

The revised statutes (1 R. S. 391, § 8) direct the assessors to ascertain, by diligent inquiry, the names of all the taxable inhabitants in their respective towns, &c., and all the taxable property, real and personal,” &c.; and having done so, they are [23]*23required to prepare an assessment roll, in which, among other things, they shall set down “ the names of all the taxable inhabitants,” &c. The 1st and 2d titles of the chapter of the revised statutes relating to taxation, contain sundry provisions declaring what persons and property shall be liable to taxation, and creating certain exceptions, or exempting certain property and the property of certain classes of persons, to a specified amount, from taxation: The 8th sub. of § 4 of tit. 1 provides that the personal property of every minister of the gospel or priest of any denomination, and the real property occupied by him, to the value of $1500,” shall be exempt from taxation. .This subdivision exempts the property of a certain class of persons from taxation; but how is it to be ascertained what particular persons belong to the general class described in the subdivision ? The eighth section of title two answers the question, and provides that the assessors shall, by diligent inquiry, ascertain this fact. The law furnishes no rule of evidence for their guide, but leaves the whole question, for the purposes of the assessment, to the judgment of the assessors, upon the evidence which their inquiries shall elicit.

I should have had no doubt on this question but for the case of Prosser v. Secor, (5 Barb. 607,) which seems to be entirely in point, and directly opposed to this view of the case. I have examined that case carefully, as well as the authorities cited by the learned justice who delivered the opinion, and in my judgment the case cannot be sustained.. The case of Suydam v. Keys, (13 John. 444,) was an action of trover to recover a quantity of flour sold by the defendant as collector of a school - district, by virtue of a warrant issued by the trustees, for a tax levied by them. The plaintiff owned some mills in the district, but actually resided in the city of New York. The defendant attempted to justify under the warrant. . By the statute under which the trustees acted, the taxable inhabitants of the. district were authorized to vote a tax “ upon the resident inhabitants of the district,” and the trustees were required to raise the sum so voted, by a rate-bill, or tax list, on all such inhabitants. The court held that the plaintiffs not being taxable inhabitants, the [24]*24trustees had no authority to impose a tax on them. This case is an illustration of that class of eases where the action of the officer is void for want of jurisdiction. The plaintiff was not one of the class of persons mentioned in the statute. In regard to such persons, the trustees were not charged with the performance of any duty, or the exercise of any power or discretion, and there was no color of authority in the statute for their acts. An example of another class of cases "where the assessors have jurisdiction but where their acts are erroneous, is found in the case of Henderson v. Brown, (1 Caines, 92.) That was am action brought against the collector of the tax levied by the United States, under the act of July 14, 1798. By that act dwelling houses and the lots on which they were' erected, were included in one class of taxable property, and were to be taxed in a particular manner; and all lands, except those on which dwelling houses were erected, were included in another class, and subjected to another mode of taxation. The assessors had assessed the plaintiff’s theater as a dwelling house. The defendant levied upon a quantity of silver coin to satisfy this tax, and the plaintiff brought an action of trespass. The defendant gave the assessment and warrant in evidence as a justification. It was contended on the part of the plaintiff that the act did not authorize the assessors to assess his theater as a dtoelling house, and that therefore their acts' were void. But the court held that as the assessors had power to tax the property in question, either as a dwelling house or otherwise, the error in taxing it as a dwelling house, when in point of fact it was not such, did not make the proceeding void. This principle is recognized by the case of Prosser v. Secor, and the distinction between the two classes of cases is a familiar one in the books. The question is, to which class does the case under consideration belong. After citing the provisions of the statute prescribing the duties of assessors, the learned justice who delivered the opinion in that case says, It will be seen it is made their duty to ascertain who are; taxable and who not, by diligent inquiry, and they have no authority to enter any person’s name .upon the assessment roll whose property is by law exempt [25]*25from taxation. They have no jurisdiction over such persons or their property.” To this proposition I cannot agree. For what purpose are they to ascertain, by the inquiry required by the 8th section, who are taxable inhabitants 1 The answer is given in the next section, in these words: they shall prepare an assessment roll in which they shall set down in four separate columns, and according to the best information in their power, 1st, in the first column the names of all the taxable inhabitants of the town or ward.” The assessment roll is the mere result of the inquiry directed by the statute; it is to contain the names of those who have been ascertained by that inquiry to be taxable inhabitants. The inquiry and ascertainment are acts essentially judicial in their nature, involving, in many cases, the decision of questions of law and fact. The law which imposes this duty on its officers cannot reasonably, and in my judgment does not in fact, exact infallibility on their part, or require them to act at their peril in discharging it. The nature of the duty, and the language of the statute prescribing it, are alike inconsistent with this position. The statute requires diligence on their part in prosecuting the inquiries which it directs them to make, and directs them as to the manner of making up their roll. The direction is to place upon the roll the names of the taxable inhabitants, but this is a duty of no little difficulty, in the performance of which errors may frequently occur, notwithstanding the utmost diligence and good faith on the part of the assessors, and the performance of the duty “ according to the best information in their power.f is all that by the language of the statute is, or in the nature of the case can, reasonably be required of the officer.

The case of Easton and others v. Calendar, (11 Wend.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Barb. 22, 1854 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vail-v-owen-nysupct-1854.