This controversy concerns the right of several hundred electricians to recover excess money paid- to the City of New York during the years 1954 through 1959. During *148 this period license fees were charged ranging from $100 to $250, which were held in Adlerstein v. City of New York (6 N Y 2d 740) to be so excessive as to be unconstitutional as bearing no reasonable relationship to the costs of the services involved in issuing the licenses. In the present action they have been granted recoveries representing the excess over $25 apiece (the correct fee amount) which the city contends to be erroneous for the reasons that these license payments were not made under protest nor, as the city contends, under compulsion and duress. It is not claimed that they were made under protest. Plaintiffs have judgment on the pleadings, it having been held that the payments were made under duress as matter of law and that consequently protest was not required. The payments were held to be involuntary since, in the language of Special Term, failure to make them would have required plaintiffs ‘1 to discontinue the conduct of their business and this alone is sufficient to support a conclusion of law that the payments were made under duress
Both sides cite
Mercury Mach. Importing Corp.
v.
City of New York
(3 N Y 2d 418). Recovery of taxes illegally levied was there denied which were paid without protest and not under duress. They were held to have been voluntary payments. In
Title Guar. & Trust Co.
v.
City of New York
(
We agree with Special Term and the Appellate Division that under the circumstances of this case protest was not required in view of the compulsory nature of the payment of these exorbitant license fees. We are aware of the repeated reference in the cases to duress existing “ where present liberty of person or immediate possession of needful goods is threatened by nonpayment of the money exacted ”
(Mercury Mach. Importing Corp.
v.
City of New York, supra,
p. 425;
Peyser
v.
Mayor of City of N. Y.,
supra) as well as the statement in
Adrico Realty Corp.
v.
City of New York (supra)
that this formula yields to the reason of other situations (
*151
Anything to the contrary in
Maguire
v.
State of New York
(
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Chief Judge Desmond and Judges Dye, Fuld, Froessel, Burke and Foster concur.
Judgment affirmed.
