76 N.Y.S. 580 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
This action was brought by the plaintiffs, as the owners in fee of the lands described in the complaint, to set aside certain tax deeds and tax certificates. Upon a prior appeal (61 App. Div. 66, 70 N. Y. Supp. 129), and where the facts are fully stated, a new trial was granted because the record did not show that the land was occupied when it was assessed, but, “so far as appears, the property was all the years vacant and unoccupied, and the owners were nonresidents,” and, if such were the facts, the assessments were valid. The case comes to us after another trial without the evidence, but upon the decision of the trial court containing the facts found in detail. It appears from the findings that the lands in controversy were not assessed to the owner or occupant, but to a third person; that during all the years covered by the assessments upon which the tax deeds and tax certificates are founded the owner of the lands resided in the ward where they are situated. The .plaintiffs contend that the assessments, and conse
“The board [of assessors] shall prepare annual assessment rolls of each ward, which shall consist of two parts; the first part shall be the assessment of the taxable lands of the ward, substantially in the form in which town assessors are required to make them, except that no distinction shall be made between the lands of residents and non-residents, but those of both shall be assessed in form as resident lands. The second part shall contain the names in alphabetical order, of all inhabitants of the city, corporations and association deemed taxable in the ward upon personal estate, and opposite to such name shall be set down the amount of the personal estate assessed to them respectively.”
It is obvious that the scheme intended by this enactment differs from that contained in the Revised Statutes in that the distinction between the lands of nonresident owners and those of resident owners was done away with, and all were treated as resident land, so far as the form of assessing was concerned. But in other respects the purpose was to adhere to the form applicable in town assessments, and the only departure, apparently, was to render effective the abrogation of the distinction referred to. Had it been intended to deviate from the mode provided in the Revised Statutes in so important a particular as omitting the name of each owner from the roll, we should expect to find a clear expression of that intention in the statute itself, instead of being left to a dubious construction of the statute. It is important in an assessment roll that the fullest opportunity be given to the individual assessed to know
In Newell v. Wheeler, 48 N. Y. 486, the assessment had been made for local improvements against a person not the owner, and it was held invalid. In that case the tax was, by the city charter, made a lien upon the land, but the method of enforcement originally was against the person, following a rule that seems well-nigh invariable. The counsel for the appellants insists that this construction will operate to relieve nonresident lands from assessments, as the charter provides that all lands shall be assessed in form as resident land. The -nonresident land must be in the same column as the other land, but there is no name opposite in the list of taxable inhabitants. The only distinction from the general law is that the lands of nonresidents are placed with the other lands, instead of in a separate part of the roll. In Collins v. City of Long Island City, 132 N. Y. 321, 30 N. E. 835, in which city there was a like provision as to the placing of the lands of nonresidents on the roll, the court, in commenting upon the method of complying with this provision, say, at page 325, 132 N. Y., and page 836, 30 N. E.:
“If the land is vacant, and owned by a nonresident of the city, the first -column of the roll should state, instead of the name of the owner, such a designation or description of the land as the statute requires.”
But the question has been settled by authority in Zink v. McManus, 49 Hun, 583, 3 N. Y. Supp. 487. The plaintiff, who was the owner ■of the land, was a resident of the city of Buffalo, and the premises were in the actual possession of his tenant. The assessment was to a stranger, and the court held it was void, being in contravention of the provisions of the Revised Statutes referred to. This case was affirmed in the court of appeals (121 N. Y. 259, 24 N. E. 467) upon another ground, the court declining to follow the general term on the point stated because the owner had procured the land to be' assessed to the stranger whose name appeared on the roll. It gave no ■opinion, however, either for or against the view taken by the general term, upon the question involved in this appeal. The counsel for the appellant relies upon Collins v. City of Long Island City, 132 N. Y. 321, 30 N. E. 835. In that case the lands of nonresidents were not
Judgment affirmed, with costs to the respondent. All concur, except WILLIAMS, J., who dissents.