Thе defendant claims title to the horses, omnibus and baggage wagon, for the conversion of which this action is brought as purchaser at a sale thereof by the tax collector оf Niagara Falls, on the 30th day of September, 1879, by virtue of a tax warrant duly issued for the collection of a tax assessed on the real estate of one Fulton in said village, used for hоtel purposes, for the sum of $398.96, the sale having been made by the collector pursuant to said warrant to satisfy the tax. The property on and prior to October 14, 1877, was owned by Fultоn, and was used by him in connection with his hotel business. On that day it was mortgaged to the plaintiffs to secure a debt owing by him to them, and the mortgage by its terms became due October 1, 1878. Fulton made default in the payment of the mortgage debt, but he continued in possession of the mortgaged property after default, as before, using it in connection with his business, until its seizure by the tax collector under the warrant. On the sale the plaintiffs gave public notice that they were the owners of- the property, and that it could not be lawfully sold for the tax against Fulton. This presents the only question in the case.
The defendant justifies the levy and sale under the provision of the Revised Statutes (1 R. S. 398, § 2), which is as follows : “ In case any person shall neglect or refuse to pаy the tax imposed on him, the collector shall levy the same by distress and sale of the goods and chattels of the person who ought to pay the same, or of any goods and chattels in his possession, wheresoever the same may be found within the district of the collector; and no claim of property to be made thereto by any other person, shаll be available to prevent a sale.” It is claimed on behalf of the plaintiffs that Fulton at
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the time of the levy and sale by the tax collector was not in possession of the рroperty within the meaning of the statute, and second, that if he had possession within the statute, the property was in the plaintiffs, and that the statute so far as it authorizes the sale of thе property of one person to satisfy a tax against another is unconstitutional and void. The claim that the plaintiffs, upon default of the mortgagor to pay the mortgage dеbt, became the absolute owners of the mortgaged chattels, and that in the absence of any special agreement changing the relation, the possession of Fulton аfter that time was that of a mere naked bailee, cannot be successfully controverted.
(Fuller
v. Acker,
The principal ground upon which the counsel for the plaintiffs relies for the reversal of the judgment, is, that the statute is unconstitutional. The argument has been presented by the learned counsel for the plaintiffs with great elaboration and ability but we deem it unnecessary to follow it in detail. It is claimed that legislative authority to seize and sell the property
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of A. to pay the tax of B. is not due process of law, and also that it violates the constitutional injunction that private property shall not be taken for public use without just comрensation. (Const., art. 1, § 6.) Confining the proposition to this bare statement, its correctness may be admitted. But the statute in question adds the additional prerequisite or condition, that to authorize the property of A. to be taken for a tax against B. the property must be in the possession of B. at the time of the taking or rather, the statute does not inquire whether the legal title is in A. or B. but it conclusively adjudges it to be in the person taxed for the purposes of seizure and sale, provided it is in his possession. For the purpose of collecting the tax, thе actual ownership, in contemplation of the statute, follows the actual possession. The possession under the statute is not „ merely a badge of ownership, it is title, so as to subject the property to seizure and sale for a tax against the possessor. Is the statute a violation of any constitutional guaranty? It has a very close analogy in the common-law proceeding of distress for rent, which permitted the distraint of the property of a stranger found on the demised premises. The law of distress for rent was the law of this State uр to 1846. The principle that the property of a stranger on the demised premises, might be distrained was always recognized in our legislation, although its rigor was relaxed and its hardships mitigated from time to time by qualifications and exceptions. (2 R. S. 502, § 14.) I am not aware that the constitutionality of this feature of the law was ever questioned. Its validity has frequently been assumed by the courts.
(Holt
v. Johnson,
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The proceeding in the case before ns was an execution of a power of government in respect to taxation, and although the right to take the plaintiffs property for the tax was not adjudged in a judicial procéeding, the act of the legislature, and the acts of the administrative officers thereunder, is, we think, due procеss of law within the meaning of the Constitution. The plaintiffs property was not taken by the right of eminent domain, but under the taxing power, and no question, therefore, arises under the clause of the Constitution prohibiting the taking of private property for public use, without just compensation.
(People
v. Mayor,
etc.,
The judgment should be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.
