204 N.Y. 20 | NY | 1912
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *22 In 1909 and 1910, title 5 of chapter 17 of the charter of the city of New York provided: All unpaid taxes and assessments for local improvements and water rents shall be a lien upon the real estate on which they *24 are laid. (Section 1017.) Whenever any real estate tax or assessment for local improvements remains unpaid through three years from its confirmation, so as to be due and payable, and any water rent through four years from its maturity, the collector of assessments and arrears, under the direction of the comptroller, may advertise said tax liens for sale, by an advertisement, published as prescribed, requiring the owners to pay to the collector such tax, with unpaid penalties and seven per cent interest, and giving notice that in case of default therein the tax lien will be sold at public auction at a specified place and time "for the lowest rate of interest, not exceeding twelve per centum per annum, at which any person or persons shall offer to take the same in consideration of advancing the said tax, assessment and water rents and penalties as the case may be," interest, costs and charges; in case of non-payment by the owner or owners the collector may, under the direction of the comptroller, cause such tax lien to be sold at public auction, as expressed in the advertisement. The right of the city to receive taxes, assessments and water rents, and the lien thereof so sold shall be called "tax lien" and the instrument by which it is assigned shall be called "transfer of tax lien." (Section 1027.) The amount of the tax lien sold shall be paid to the comptroller within thirty days from the sale and a transfer of tax lien delivered to the purchaser. Lacking a bid the collector may purchase it for the city. (Section 1029.) The transfer shall operate to transfer and assign the tax lien, penalties, interest, and charges and costs, and create a lien upon the property affected thereby for the interest to which the purchaser may be entitled under his bid. (Section 1030.) The aggregate amount of the tax lien transferred shall be due three years from the date of the sale, but may be paid and discharged within that period by any person having a legal or beneficial interest in the property affected, after notice as provided. Until it is fully paid its holder shall be entitled to receive *25 interest thereon, at the rate bid, from the day of sale semi-annually on the first days of January and July, and to declare it due and payable upon a default in the payment of interest for thirty days or a default for six months in the payment of any taxes, assessments or water rents, which became a lien on and after the date of the tax lien (Section 1032); and may maintain an action in the Supreme Court to foreclose the tax lien. (Section 1035.) The plaintiff in such action, unless the defendants obtain judgment, shall be entitled to a judgment establishing the validity of the tax lien, so far as it is not adjudged invalid, and its transfer and directing the sale of the real property affected thereby, or such part thereof as shall be sufficient to discharge the tax lien, or such items thereof as shall not be adjudged invalid, and the interest and all other accrued taxes, assessments and water rents affecting the property together with the expenses of the sale and the costs of the action. (Section 1038.)
The learned counsel for the appellant strenuously contends that the statutory provisions, in form, delegate to the purchasers of the tax liens the power of taxation and for that reason are void. His fundamental premise is that taxation is an inalienable prerogative of sovereignty and includes the collection by the state of the sums imposed by it. Under the pleadings and the briefs and arguments of counsel, the appeal presents the sole question, do the enactments authorizing the sale of the tax liens transcend the powers of the legislature. The entire legislative power of the people of the state is vested in the legislature, except as withheld by the Constitution of the state or restricted by the Federal Constitution. The original Constitution of 1777 was framed by and for an organized, orderly and self-governing society and was in large measure the adaptation of established civil rules and institutions to the new conditions wrought by the complete dissolution of the allegiance of the colonies to the British crown. It assumed the existence and perpetuation *26
of the fundamental and acknowledged rules and principles preservative of civic order and co-operation and prerequisite to its operation and which in so far as they are not expressed must be read into it, because obedience to them is essential to its utility and purpose. An act of the legislature inimical to them is as unconstitutional as the act which contravenes an express provision of it. Whenever the language of the Constitution is not explicit or admits of doubt it is presumed that it inhibits the violation of acknowledged principles of justice and liberty. (People ex rel. Devery v. Coler,
The power of taxation is inherent in the people, because the sustenance of the government requires contributions from them. It is vested in the legislature as a part of the more general power of making laws, and, except as restrained by the Federal Constitution, its exercise for public purposes is unlimited. (People ex rel. Griffin v. Mayor, etc., of Brooklyn,
The sale assumes a valid tax and lien. It is no part of the process which produces them. They constitute an exact demand and a security therefor in favor of the city, the relation of which to the person or property obligated by them is determinate. While it is true that a tax is not a debt of the person charged or a judgment against him, it is a contribution or demand in a sum fixed by law, enforceable in a prescribed method and of a salable and transferable nature. The sale and transfer of the right to receive it and of its lien do not, in and of themselves, affect their character or their relation to the taxpayer or *28
his property. By them the amount of the tax is not increased or its effect upon the person or property or the procedure for its collection changed. The rights and powers of the purchaser do not rest in his discretion, but are created and defined by the legislature. We are unable to perceive in the effects of the statutory provision authorizing the sale and transfer of the right to receive the taxes and the liens the semblance of an infraction of the protection of persons or property afforded by the Constitutions. Nor can we perceive such infraction in the provision authorizing the plaintiff or a purchaser to invoke and apply the remedy of foreclosing the lien for the purpose of collecting the tax. There is no need of citing authorities in support of the obvious proposition that the prescript of the remedy of foreclosure of the lien of delinquent taxes is within the discretion of the legislature. While it would be incompetent for the legislature to leave to a state officer or department the power to determine whether a tax should be levied, or at what rate, or upon what property, it may lawfully delegate to a ministerial officer or any department, or its appointee or other authority, the power of using the machinery, as and in the method created by it, for the collection of the taxes it has levied. By whom, when and through what procedure or remedy, taxes shall be collected is a matter for legislative determination, subject to the rule that the procedure cannot be utterly unreasonable or arbitrary or unequal and unjust in its operation. It is not within the power of the legislature to create different remedies against taxpayers for demands of one character. That would not afford equal protection of the laws or regard the constitutional safeguards of property. If the city had, in the absence of another bid, bid in the tax lien, it would have had "the same rights in, to and under such transfer of tax lien" as the plaintiff has, except the right to have interest or damages at the rate of twelve per cent; and its right to have then foreclosed the *29
lien under the default of appellant is not discussible. The foreclosure by the plaintiff, rather than the city, does not impose an additional or increased burden or hazard upon the appellant or her property. Whether the city or the plaintiff or other person enforces under legislative authorization the remedy through which the payment of the tax shall be enforced is beyond her questioning. The legislative regulation under which the respondent Gautier is the plaintiff in the foreclosure action does not disturb her legal or constitutional rights. The application of the procedure or remedy through which the tax is collected is no part of the power of taxation within the meaning of the principle that "taxation is the most delicate and highest attribute of sovereignty and cannot be delegated." These conclusions have support in the authorities. (Litchfield v.Vernon,
Appellant contends further that the provision for the competitive bidding as to the rate of interest at which the tax liens shall be purchased makes the act void, because the rates of interest fixed by the successful bids are penalties capriciously and unequally imposed by the bidders. The statute denominates the sums to be paid by those charged with the taxes to the purchasers, interest, and such is its nature. Penalties in taxation are, generally speaking, additions of some definite per centum to the taxes as inducements to pay and as punishments for failure to pay, within a designated period. The rates of interest at which the tax liens are purchased fix the compensation or interest of the purchasers for advancing to the city the delinquent taxes and securing the landowners *30
the extension of the times of payment. The legislature lawfully fixed the maximum rate of interest at twelve per cent. The provision that purchasers may make their advances at lower rates to be fixed by the bidding applies to all delinquent taxes, is uniform and impartial, and there is no principle which makes it illegal. (People ex rel. Farrington v. Mensching,
The wisdom or unwisdom of the statute is a matter for the legislature and not for the courts, which cannot legitimately question the policy or condemn the effects of any law consistent with the organic law of the state and nation.
Each of the questions certified should be answered in the affirmative and the order appealed from affirmed, with costs.
CULLEN, Ch. J., HAIGHT, WERNER, WILLARD BARTLETT, HISCOCK and CHASE, JJ., concur.
Order affirmed.