Wilson v. Mayor of New York

4 E.D. Smith 675
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedDecember 15, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 E.D. Smith 675 (Wilson v. Mayor of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. Mayor of New York, 4 E.D. Smith 675 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1855).

Opinion

Woodruff, J.

The complaint in this action is addressed to this court as a court of equity, and prays a perpetual injune[677]*677tion to restrain the collection of a tax for the year 1850, imposed upon the defendant as the owner of personal property within the city and county of New York, for the collection of which a warrant has been issued by the defendant, Hart, as receiver of taxes for the city and county of New York, directed to the defendant, Jenkins, a constable; in pursuance of which, the latter has distrained certain property of the defendant, and is proceeding to sell the same for the collection of such tax. The facts which the plaintiff avers entitle him to the relief sought are, that lie is illegally assessed in this city and county; that the plaintiff, during the whole of the year 1850, and for eight years last past, has resided in Horwalk, in the state of Connecticut, and has not resided within the state of New York, and that as such resident of Connecticut, and a taxable inhabitant therein, he has been duly assessed upon his personal property, and has paid taxes thereon in that state; that the assessors of the city and county of New York made the assessment of the amount authorized by law to be raised by tax upon the real and personal property in the city, and, under the pretence that the plaintiff' was a taxable inhabitant in the said city did, in 1850, assess him as the owner of personal property in the third ward of the said city; that the assessment roll containing such assessment was afterwards delivered to the tax commissioners and to the board of supervisors, and submitted to their action, and afterwards the corrected assessment rolls of each ward were delivered to the receiver of taxes, with the usual warrant to collect the tax and pay the same to the chamberlain of the city; that the name of the plaintiff was inserted in such roll, and he was charged therein with $568 75, as a tax upon personal property; that the plaintiff received no notice, and did not know that he was to be assessed, nor that any tax had been imposed upon him or his property until long after such assessment roll had been delivered to the said receiver; that soon after the plaintiff learned that such tax had been imposed in May, 1851, he applied by petition, verified by his oath, to the common council, stating the fact of [678]*678his non-residence, and praying the remission of the said tax, which they refused; that previous to this petition, to wit, in January, 1851, the defendant, Hart, (receiver of taxes,) issued his warrant to the defendant, Jenkins, (a constable,) commanding him to levy the amount of the said tax, with interest and costs, by distress and sale of the goods and chattels of the plaintiff, and such distress has been made, and sale thereof will be made, unless restrained by order of the court.

The complaint then avers, that it will be the duty of the defendants, Hart and Jenkins, to pay the money, if collected, to the city chamberlain; that he has notified Jenkins of his non-residence; that Jenkins persists in his levy; that neither Hart nor Jenkins are of sufficient responsibility to answer for the damages he will sustain by a sale of his property under such warrant; that the plaintiff cannot have adequate relief except in a court of equity; that such tax, so attempted to be imposed, is illegal and void; that such illegality does not appear on the face of the proceedings, but that the evidence of the want of jurisdiction in such assessors to impose the tax, and of the illegality of such imposition, must be given, out of the record of the proceedings, by proof of extrinsic facts, upon proving which, the plaintiff' is entitled to have the assessment declared illegal as to him, and the collection of the tax restrained, &c.

The defendants have interposed separate demurrers to the complaint, for that the said complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.”

It was insisted by the counsel for the defendants, on the argument of the demurrers herein, that the plaintiff is liable to taxation in this state in respect of his personal property found here when the assessment was made; and that inasmuch as the plaintiff does not aver that he had at that time no personal property within the city and county of New York, he has not shown that the assessment was either illegal or erroneous.

The power of the state to tax all property within its limits, whether real or personal, cannot be denied. Taxation itself, [679]*679for the purpose of maintaining and upholding the government, is essential to the idea of its existence, and the power to impose such taxation is said to reside in the government, as a part of itself. In this state, while the constitution recognizes the existence of the power to impose taxes, it leaves its exercise to the legislature, and save only by prescribing certain rules regarding the mode of enacting laws imposing taxes, it has left the extent of taxation and the manner of its apportionment solely and exclusively to the wisdom and justice of the legislature. In one section of the constitution (§ 5, art. 7) the particular taxes mentioned (for the increase of the sinking fund of the state) are authorized in these terms, viz: “ The legislature shall, by equitable taxes, so increase the revenues,” &c. And it may be assumed as within the spirit and meaning of the constitution, that all taxes should be equitable. But I apprehend, that in the apportionment of taxes, and the assigning to persons or to property the portion which each shall contribute to the public burdens, the legislature have the sole and exclusive power of determining what is just and equitable, and upon what description of persons, and upon what property within the state, and in what ratio, the imposition shall be made. (See Prov. Bank v. Billings, 4 Peters, 514; McCullough v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 428, cited in The People v. The Mayor, &c., 4 Comst. 427.)

And there is nothing inequitable in requiring of the owners of personal property found in this state, and kept here protected by our laws, it may be acquiring enhanced value from our institutions and government, our public works, the large development of public and private enterprise within our limits, and various other circumstances, which give value and usefulness to property, and hold out to non-residents an inducement to bring or send their property or funds to be used or sold here, that they may derive enhanced prices or larger income therefrom, to render to our government a just equivalent ; to bear the same burden, in respect of such property, as the citizen himself bears, in respect of his own estate, in the like condition.

[680]

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Related

Hoyt v. . the Commissioners of Taxes
23 N.Y. 224 (New York Court of Appeals, 1861)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 E.D. Smith 675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-mayor-of-new-york-nyctcompl-1855.