OPINION OF THE COURT
To improve access to the Pawling Lake Estates community in the adjoining Towns of Beekman and Dover, the Legislature authorized the establishment of a joint street improvement area (L 1993, ch 210). The Towns in turn established the joint improvement district and sold bonds to fund the improvements, the principal and interest payments to be funded by a series of special assessments imposed pursuant to article 15 of the Town Law. In November 1995, the two Town Boards imposed special assessments on the lands within the joint improvement district for 1996. The Town of Beekman failed to hold a hearing on the subject of the special assessments as required by Town Law § 239. The Town of Dover, however, did hold the required hearing and gave notice of it by publication in a local weekly newspaper, in accordance with Town Law § 239. Unaware of the local notice, plaintiff, a Connecticut limited partnership and owner of substantial vacant land in the joint improvement district, did not appear at the hearing to voice its objections.
Upon learning of the special assessment of $44,800 imposed on its property, plaintiff brought this action seeking, among other things, a declaration that the assessment was void based on the Town of Beekman’s failure to hold the hearing required
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by Town Law § 239, and challenging the Town of Dover’s notice by publication as inadequate under the Due Process Clause of the 14th Amendment to the0 United States Constitution. Supreme Court held that the Town of Beekman’s failure to hold the required hearing under Town Law § 239 invalidated its assessment. The court, however, granted the Town of Dover’s cross motion for summary judgment, concluding that because imposition of the special assessment did not result in divestiture of plaintiffs title, notice by publication satisfied due process. The Appellate Division affirmed, holding that “mere adoption of an assessment roll” was not the type of proceeding that “will substantially affect an individual owner’s property interest so as to require actual notice prior to [its] adoption” (
The determination as to what process is constitutionally due does not depend upon a mechanistic or rigid analysis
(Mullane v Central Hanover Bank & Trust Co.,
In
Matter of McCann v Scaduto
(
Town Law § 239 provides in pertinent part:
“The assessors or the town board, as the case may be, shall file the assessment-roll when completed, with the town clerk and thereupon it shall be the duty of the town board to cause notice to be *520 published at least once in a newspaper published within the town, or, if there be none published in the town, then in a newspaper published in the county and having a circulation within the town, that said assessment-roll has been completed, and that at a time and place to be specified therein the town board will meet and hear and consider any objections which may be made to the roll.”
The opportunity to appear and object at the hearing provided for under Town Law § 239 is crucial. Unless a property owner appears at such a hearing and objects to the proposed assessment, the owner will be forever barred from challenging the levy and will be responsible for paying the costs imposed (Town Law § 246). An objector has only 30 days from the date the special assessment is finalized to challenge it (Town Law §§ 239, 246), and here a failure to challenge would eventually result in a lien imposed upon the land. The right to appear and object obviously is meaningless unless the property owner has notice that is reasonably calculated to apprise it of the proceeding. Significantly, the names and addresses of the affected landowners were indisputably known to the Town because they appear on the special assessment roll. There was no showing of other compelling or persuasive reasons, economic or otherwise, why direct notice could not be given
(see, Walker v City of Hutchinson,
This case parallels
Smith v City of New York
(
Notably, the decision in
Smith
relied on
Wisconsin Elec. Power Co. v City of Milwaukee
(
The Town of Dover nonetheless claims that plaintiff should have known about the 1996 assessments because it challenged the 1995 assessments, which were the first imposed to service the debt of the joint improvement district. Both Towns, however, failed to hold a hearing for the 1995 assessments as required by Town Law § 239; it was only after the imposition of the 1995 special assessment, without a hearing, that plaintiff challenged its validity. Even with knowledge of a previous year’s special assessment, plaintiff had no way of knowing whether the 1996 levy would be substantially different from the year before. Without notice, plaintiff never had the opportunity to object to the methodology employed in imposing the 1996 assessment and should not be compelled to rely on an earlier experience. The continuing nature of the Towns’ obligation under article 15 of the Town Law should not deprive plaintiff of its entitlement to receive actual notice of the scheduled hearing to consider the 1996 special assessment and an opportunity to attend and be heard.
Finally, the Town of Dover claims that requiring actual notice in this case will open the floodgates and require actual notice in the imposition of other taxes. The United States Supreme Court, however, has long distinguished — in terms of due process — between other taxes and special assessments imposed by localities
(Browning v Hooper,
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, with costs, and defendant Town of Dover’s cross motion for summary judgment should be denied and plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment granted. Judgment should be granted declaring the subject special assessment invalid.
Chief Judge Kaye and Judges Smith, Levine, Wesley and Rosenblatt concur.
Order reversed, with costs, defendant Town of Dover’s cross motion for summary judgment denied, plaintiff’s motion for *522 summary judgment against the Town of Dover granted and judgment granted declaring the subject special assessment levy invalid.
