253 A.D. 680 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1938
We think that the Special Term properly dismissed the complaint upon the ground that it did not allege such special circumstances as to warrant a departure from the statutory procedure prescribed by Local Law No. 29 of the New York City Local
The special circumstances which were present in the cases of Socony-Vacuum Oil Co., Inc., v. City of New York (247 App. Div. 163; affd., 272 N. Y. 668); Dun & Bradstreet, Inc., v. City of New York (276 id. 198), and Young Men’s Christian Assn. v. City of New York (251 App. Div. 821; affd., 276 N. Y. 619) are not found here.
In its complaint, plaintiff asserts it is a charitable organization; that it is and always has been exempt from all manner of taxation; that in the year 1880 it erected a building in the city of New York known as a temple for the use of fraternity members and that in the year 1888 it purchased and since has maintained at Tappan, in the county of Rockland, New York, property and buildings, known as a home, which was used as an asylum for the support of indigent Masons and their wives and the widows of deceased Masons; that its income from the temple building is used exclusively for the support and relief of inmates of the home; that it is aggrieved because of enforced payments on account of a sales tax imposed by the defendant city of New York upon sales to it of furniture, building materials, appliances and other personal property and gas, electricity, steam and telephone for domestic and commercial use for the aforesaid temple; that plaintiff seeks a judgment declaring it to be a semi-public institution within the meaning of the exemption provisions of Local Laws No. 29 of 1935 and No. 31 of 1936 which impose the sales tax complained of by plaintiff and an injunction restraining defendants from imposing on and collecting from the plaintiff or its vendors the so-called sales tax.
It appears in this case that there will be a sharp issue of fact as to whether plaintiff is “ a charitable institution supported wholly or in part by public subscription or endowment and not organized or operated for profit.” Its status, in the absence of special circumstances, should be determined in the statutory proceeding before the comptroller. The local law specifically provides for adequate and speedy procedure for the determination of any tax liability and for a judicial review of an assessment if the taxpayer is found subject to the tax. (People ex rel. Staten Island R. T. R. Co. v. Taylor, 247 App. Div. 405.) The statutory procedure has been heretofore followed by semi-public institutions. (Matter of New York University v. Taylor, 276 N. Y. 620.)
In Young Men’s Christian Assn. v. City of New York (supra), plaintiff was shown to be operating twenty-eight different branches and the complaint showed that the comptroller had refused to allow exemption to plaintiff, although it appeared that it was a semi-public institution.
In this case an issue of fact is involved and no special circumstances are set forth in the complaint which authorize a disregard of the statutory method of procedure in favor of an action in declaratory judgment. Borchard, in his text on Declaratory Judgments, makes the following apposite statement (at pp. 156 and 157): “ Where, however, a special statutory method for the determination of the particular type of case has been provided, it is not proper to permit that issue to be tried by declaration. This would amount to ousting of its jurisdiction a statutory court prescribed for the particular case, and it was not intended that a declaration should be employed for such a purpose.”
For the foregoing reasons the order and judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Martin, P. J., Untermyer, Dore and Callahan, JJ., concur.
Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.