Van Deventer v. . Long Island City

34 N.E. 774, 139 N.Y. 133, 54 N.Y. St. Rep. 510, 94 Sickels 133, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 982
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 3, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 34 N.E. 774 (Van Deventer v. . Long Island City) 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
Van Deventer v. . Long Island City, 34 N.E. 774, 139 N.Y. 133, 54 N.Y. St. Rep. 510, 94 Sickels 133, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 982 (N.Y. 1893).

Opinion

Earl, J.

This is an equitable action to have certain city, county and state taxes laid upon plaintiff’s real estate in Long Island City in the years 1877 to and including the year 1886 and various sales thereunder declared void and canceled, on the ground that the taxes were illegally imposed. The grounds of the illegality are that a large quantity of real estate was intentionally omitted from the assessment rolls in each of such years, and that in the years 1882 and 1883 the assessor’s resolved that no personal property within the city should be assessed, and in pursuance of such resolution no person resident within the city was assessed in either of the two years on account of any personal property. The real estate omitted from the assessment rolls was located within streets and parks laid down upon the official map of the city, which had not in fact been opened and which remained in the ownership and possession of the individual owners thereof.

Tire real estate omitted from assessment was probably liable to taxation, and hone of it was exempt until 1889, when, by chapter 548 of the Laws of that year, amending the charter of the city, it was provided that “Ho taxes shall, after the passage of this act, be levied, assessed or collected upon any unimproved land included within the lines of streets, avenues *136 and roads shown and laid out upon the official city map.” While it was found by the trial judge that the assessors intentionally and purposely omitted to assess the real estate, it was not found that they made the omission knowing that the real estate was liable to assessment and taxation. It is a legitimate inference from the facts found that the assessment was omitted by the assessors in the exercise of their judgment under the belief that real estate thus situated was not liable to taxation.

There is no question that the plaintiff’s real estate ivas liable to assessment; that the assessors had jurisdiction to assess it; that they acted within their jurisdiction; that they observed all the forms of law, and that the assessment rolls were proper in form. Was the entire assessment in each of the years -mentioned absolutely illegal and void so that any person assessed can assail it and thus defeat the collection of the tax imposed upon him or his property because some real estate liable to -taxation was omitted from the assessment roll ? If we were obliged to answer this question in the affirmative a Pandora box of litigation would be opened and scarcely any taxation for governmental purposes could be upheld. Fortunately, upon principle and authority, the question can be answered in the negative.

Most of the taxes complained of have been confirmed by subsequent legislation. (Laws of 1882, chap. 883, § 1; Laws of 1886, chap. 656, § 15.) There can be no doubt about the validity of these acts. Acts of the same purport and effect have frequently received the sanction of the courts. (Spencer v. Merchant, 100 N. Y. 585; S. C., 125 U. S. 345 ; Franklyn v Long Island City, 32 Hunn, 451; S. C., 102 N. Y. 692; Ensign v. Barse, 107 id. 329 ; In the Matter of Lamb, 51 Hun, 633; S. C., 121 N. Y. 703 ; Cromwell v. MacLean, 123 id. 474.) The legislature could have originally exempted the land omitted from thqse assessment rolls from taxation, and could thus have cast the whole burden of taxation in the city upon the other property, and what it could originally have done it can do by ratification and confirmation subsequently.

These acts relate only to the taxes prior to 1883, and do not *137 touch the taxes for the years 1883, 1884, 1885 and 1886, and the validity of the taxes for those years must stand upon other considerations.

The trial judge based his decision against the plaintiff upon the two acts above mentioned, and also upon the act chapter 656 of the Laws of 1886, section 10 of which provides that “ any action or proceeding by any person or corporation to test the validity or regularity of any tax levied, or assessment or water rates, or rents made, shall be commenced within one year from the time of delivery of the roll in which said tax or assessment, or water rates or rents are claimed, to the ” village treasurer. That act may defeat this action as to the taxes of 1886, as the assessment rolls for that year may have been delivered to the treasurer before the passage of that act; but it can have no retroactive operation so as to defeat the action as to the prior years. (Matter of Trustees of Union College, 129 N. Y. 308.)

The learned counsel for the defendants contends that the only remedy of the plaintiff for relief against the taxes complained of was by certiorari, under the act chapter 269 of the Laws of 1880. But that act is not applicable to a case where the whole assessment roll is claimed to be illegal and void. It applies only to cases where there is a valid assessment roll in which some person has for some reason been illegally assessed, or where the assessment is excessive or unjust. (People ex rel., ete., v. Parker, 117 N. Y. 86.)

But we think there are fundamental reasons for defeating this action which have not yet received attention. The assessors in making the assessments acted judicially, and if they omitted any property from the assessment rolls, either by mistake or design, the entire assessments are not thereby rendered invalid. An assessment roll is in the nature of a judgment, and it was never heard that a judgment rendered by an officer exercising judicial functions was void because by mistake or design he had made it too large or too small, in a case where he had jurisdiction, and acted within his jurisdiction. *138 That no action could be maintained against the assessors who-made the assessments cannot be doubted, and this is so whether tliey omitted the property by mistake or design. They have-'the immunity of judicial officers. (Weaver v. Devendorf, 3 Denio, 117.) The only complaint the plaintiff can have is that he was taxed too much, because other property ivas omitted from the rolls, and that is a complaint Avhich can nearly if not always be made in the case of all taxation for governmental purposes. It is doubtful if a village, tOAim or city assessment-roll is ever made from which some property is not omitted. If an assessment is void because some property is omitted, Avould it not also be void in those numerous cases Aidiere assessors agree to assess property at one-half, or some other fractional part of its value ? It is quite apparent that if the plaintiff’s contention is well founded very few assessments could stand assaults, and that the collection of revenues for governmental purposes would be very uncertain, and that interminable litigation would attend its collection. The case of Dillingham v. Snow (5 Mass. 547), is a very precise authority for the defendants in this case. There certain real estate Avas purposely omitted from the assessment roll by the assessors, and a taxpayer contended that the assessment was thereby rendered illegal and void; and the court held against that contention, expressing views quite pertinent to this case.

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Bluebook (online)
34 N.E. 774, 139 N.Y. 133, 54 N.Y. St. Rep. 510, 94 Sickels 133, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 982, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-deventer-v-long-island-city-ny-1893.