Van Hise v. Board of Supervisors

21 Misc. 572, 48 N.Y.S. 874
CourtNew York County Courts
DecidedNovember 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 21 Misc. 572 (Van Hise v. Board of Supervisors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York County Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Hise v. Board of Supervisors, 21 Misc. 572, 48 N.Y.S. 874 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1897).

Opinion

Nason, J.

This is an application under section 16 of chapter 686 of the Laws of 1892, consolidating chapter 855 of the Laws of 1869 and the laws amendatory and supplementary thereto', for an order compelling the hoard of supervisors of Rensselaer county to refund certain moneys paid by petitioner for taxes, alleged to have been illegally assessed and collected upon property owned by the petitioner in the village of Greenbush, purchased with pension moneys, the board of supervisors having declined to refund the same.

It appears, as far as the intent and purposes' of this controversy are concerned, that, in October, 1882, the petitioner purchased the house and lot where he and his family have resided for the last fifteen years for the sum of $600.

This $600 was a portion of certain pension moneys received by him from the government. It is now well settled that property purchased with pension money, used as a home by the pensioner and his family, was exempt from taxation until the amendment to the law enacted by the legislature in 1897. See Laws of 1897, chap. 347, § 5.

The pay, bounty and pension money received by a private from the United States government for military services in the United States army is exempt from levy and sale under an execution and seizure for nonpayment of taxes, and when the receipts from a pension can be directly traced to the purchase of property necessary or convenient for the support of the pensioner and his family, such property is exempt. See Code Civ. Proc., § 1393; Yates Co. Nat. Bank v. Carpenter, 119 N. Y. 553; Toole v. Supervisors of Oneida Co., 16 Misc. Rep. 653.

Property, exempt from levy and sale under an execution, is also exempt from taxation. Laws of 1896, chap. 908, art. 4, subd. 4.

By part I, chapter 18, title I, section 1 of the Revised Statutes it is provided that all lands * * * within this State, whether owned by individuals or corporations, shall be liable to taxation, subject to the exemptions hereinafter provided.

By section 3 of article I of chapter 908 of the Laws of 1896 it is provided that all real property within this state, and all personal property situated or owned within this state, is taxable unless exempted from taxation by law.

[574]*574We are thus quickly brought face .to face with the conclusion that the property involved in this case was exempt from taxation and from seizure for nonpayment of taxes; and that the assessors in. assessing it acted without jurisdiction, and their assessment was therefore illegal and void. In the Matter of the Petition of the New York Catholic Protectory, 77 N. Y. 342.

The petitioner could justly have refused to pay these taxes, or else proceeded by certiorari to have the assessment stricken from the assessment-roll.

Up to this point all parties to this controversy áre agreed.

The defendant, however, contends that although the assessment, valid on its face, was void in fact, yet, as .the petitioner had full knowledge of the circumstances constituting the illegality, and as no fraud or coercion, actual or potential, in law or fact, was practiced on the petitioner, but, on the other hand, the assessors acted in the utmost innocence and good faith, and the payments as a matter of law' were voluntary in. their nature, the petitioner is foreclosed from obtaining the relief he seeks, for the reason that the mistake of the petitioner is a mistake of law, and when a mistake in law is the only ground on which such an action as this is based, the courts will not interfere.

It seems to me on general principles the defendant’s reasoning on this point is clear and convincing, and the authorities cited fully sustain such a contention.

The petitioner in paying the tax had simply fallen into a mistake of law, and it is well settled that the courts will not disturb a settlement between the parties when an attempt is made to set it aside for that and no other reason. A wise and salutary rule charges all persons with knowledge of the law, and ignorance of its principles should not be allowed to provoke litigation.

The mistake here was not a mistake in fact, and “a voluntary payment made under a mistake in law, but with full knowledge of the facts and not induced by any fraud or improper conduct on the part of the payee, cannot be recalled.” Vanderbeck v. City of Rochester, 122 N. Y. 289; Silliman v. Wing, 7 Hill, 159; Flynn v. Hurd, 118 N. Y. 19.

"Where a party would recover back taxes which he did not pay under a mistake of fact and which he is. under ho obligation to pay, the payment must be compulsory. See Dill. Mun. Corp., § 946; New York & H. R. R. Co. v. Marsh, 12 N. Y. 308.

Every man is supposed to know the law, and if he voluntarily [575]*575makes a payment which the law would not compel him to make, he cannot afterward assign his ignorance of the law as the reason why the state should furnish him with legal remedies to recover it back.' Especially is this the case when the officer receiving the money, who is chargeable with no more knowledge of the law than the party making payment, is not put on his guard by any warning or protest, and the money is paid over to the use of the public in apparent acquiescence in the justice of the exaction.” And the learned author adds: “ The rule of law is a rule of sound public policy also; it is a rule of quiet as well as of good faith, and precludes the courts being occupied in undoing the arrangements of parties which have voluntarily made and into which they have not been drawn by fraud, or accident or by any excusable ignorance of their legal rights and liabilities.” Cooley on Taxation (2d ed.), §§ 809, 810; People ex rel. Edison Electric Ill. Co. v. Wemple, 69 Hun, 367, 371; Redmond v. Mayor, 125 N. Y. 636; Tripler v. Mayor, id. 617.

The Peyser case, 70 N. Y. 497, has no application to the case in hand because it simply lays down the principle that boards of assessors possess certain judicial powers, and that when their proceedings are valid on their face, their adjudications are quasi judgments. Presumptively no relief can be had as against them except by appeal, and when a person acting in good faith and in ignorance of the facts constituting the .illegality of the assessments pays the same, he is deemed to make the payments under coercion in law and an action lies to recover the amounts exacted.

Judge Folger, in his opinion in this case, does not particularly discuss the effect of a knowledge of facts constituting the illegality as far as the person; paying the tax is concerned, but he does state that it may be well to say, that if the judgment is not afterwards reversed, but is invalid for any collateral reason, or the process issued upon it is illegal, payment -with knowledge of. the fact would perhaps be voluntary, which seems a sound distinction taken by Emott, J., in Lott v. Swezey, 29 Barb. 87-92.”

There can be no question, I think, but that the petitioner must be charged with the knowledge that the assessments were illegal and that he paid them with knowledge of the facts constituting such illegality. In order to maintain this proceeding successfully it is, therefore, necessary under the decisions to show that such payments were involuntary.

In the case of Redmond v. Mayor, 125 N. Y. 632, a similar ac[576]*576tion to have an assessment on property in Rew York city declared void and moneys paid thereon refunded, Gray, I., in writing the.

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Bluebook (online)
21 Misc. 572, 48 N.Y.S. 874, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-hise-v-board-of-supervisors-nycountyct-1897.