217 A.D. 123 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1926
The several petitioners have brought these three certiorari proceedings under section 290 et seq. of the Tax Law (as amd. by Laws of 1916, chap. 323, and Laws of 1920, chaps. 643, 649) to review their respective assessments in relation to real property on the annual assessment roll of the city of Jamestown for
As the matters involved in all three proceedings are the same, they are considered together.
In such proceedings as this, persons aggrieved may seek relief on three grounds: 1. For overvaluation of the property; 2, For inequality in the assessment of their property as compared with other property upon the rolls; and 3. For illegality. The petitioners in these proceedings allege grievances on all three grounds.
Overvaluation is alleged and the petitions state, inferentially at least, the extent of the overvaluations claimed. It is conceded that proper objections were filed before the reviewing officials. It is apparent, therefore, that the petitions are sufficient to raise the question of overvaluation and the motions to quash the writs in loto were, therefore, properly denied.
As to the objections founded on inequality, the petitions are also sufficient. The allegation in each petition is that a rule assessing property at sixty per cent of the actual value was generally followed and applied. No specific parcels of property are cited as instances. The allegation is sufficient under the authorities. The remaining properties on the roll are inferentially named as instances. (People ex rel. Ward v. Sutton, 230 N. Y. 339; People ex rel. N. Y., O. & W. R. Co. v. Wakeman, No. 3, 143 App. Div. 816; People ex rel. Erie R. R. Co. v. Webster, 49 id. 556; People ex rel. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co. v. Budlong, 25 id. 373; People ex rel. Fiske v. Feitner, 95 id. 217; affd., 180 N. Y. 536.)
The petitioners also contend that the entire annual roll is illegal for various reasons. To understand these grounds some statement of the provisions of the Charter of the City of Jamestown relating to assessments and of the acts of the assessing officers of 1925 under such provisions of the Charter is necessary.
The Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Charter of the City of Jamestown (Laws of 1923, chap. 665) imposes the duty of preparing the annual assessment roll on an officer called the director of assessments appointed by the mayor subject to confirmation by the city council. The director of assessments is required to complete the roll by July first of each year except when his time for doing so is extended by the city council, which can be for a period not to exceed thirty days. When the roll is completed by the director of assessments, he is required to cause notice of review and correction to be published for such time as the city council may direct. A board named the board of review and correction is authorized to hear all persons considering
In 1925 Henry T. Krieger was the director of assessments of the city of Jamestown and as such he completed the annual assessment roll on or about May twenty-ninth and deposited a copy of the same with the city clerk on June twenty-second. On the latter day the city council by resolution extended the time for the completion and filing of the roll for thirty days and directed an investigation of certain valuations contained in the roll. On or about July twentieth the city council by resolution declared this roll accepted, and directed the publication of notices fixing October sixth as the date for the review by the board of review and correction. This roll so completed and accepted is in these proceedings called the Krieger roll. No review of this assessment roll was had. The board of review and correction did not meet on the date fixed by the city council and no opportunity was ever given for the presentation of objections by persons aggrieved. The officers of the city apparently abandoned this roll entirely. About June twenty-sixth the city council adopted a resolution rejecting the Krieger roll and conferring upon a committee power to employ experts familiar with the so-called Somer system to prepare a revised roll to be submitted for approval and adoption to the director of assessments. This direction was followed and on or about October twelfth the director of assessments filed with the city council a new roll which is known in these proceedings as the Somer roll. The city council by resolution at once directed the printing of this Somer roll and fixed November fifth, and such following days as might be necessary, as the dates for the hearing of objections and the review and correction of the roll and directed notices thereof to be published. This was done and the petitioners appeared on the date named and filed proper objections with the reviewing board raising the questions which they now press in these litigations. On November eighteenth the board of review and correction having completed its work, filed the corrected roll with the city clerk and the petitioners alleged that such roll so prepared and completed is the basis upon which is attempted and threatened the collection of the city tax for the year 1925.
While the petitioners set out various specifications of illegality, the city officials, the appellants in this court, assert that such claims are either unsound as matter of law or at least are not matters
Illegality as that word is used in section 290 of the Tax Law (as amd. by Laws of 1916, chap. 323) is not to be taken in its broadest sense. It does not include conditions where there is an utter want of power in the persons making the assessment. It contemplates rather an application of conceded power in an irregular Planner or upon a basis erroneous in law or in fact. In cases of a complete absence of power the person aggrieved must seek his remedy in other legal forms. He cannot review the assessment as a quasi judicial act and assert at the same time that there was no act at all partaking of such judicial character. (People ex rel. D. & H. C. Co. v. Parker, 117 N. Y. 86.) Generally matters open to review for illegality relate to assessments in an otherwise legal roll and not to an entire roll. (Vandeventer v. Long Island City, 139 N. Y. 133.) This, however, is not always the case. It is not fatal to the proceeding that the irregularity or error amounting to illegality permeates the entire roll provided it is not of the character which goes to the judicial quality of the assessment. (People ex rel. Friendly v. Davenport, 119 App. Div. 790.)
These general principles require a determination that the objections sought to be raised as to the constitutionality of the charter provisions relating to the imposition of the duty to assess upon a director of assessments and the duty to review upon a board of review and correction and as to the constitutionality of the provisions relating to the method of selection of director of assessments and the members of the board of review and correction are not proper subjects for litigation in these proceedings. Similarly the claim that when the director of assessments fully completed his duties by making and filing the Krieger roll within the time specified in the statute, he was thereafter completely without power to file another roll and that all acts which resulted in the Somer roll are, therefore, null and void and beyond the authority of the officers who performed them, is likewise not within the scope of review permissible in these proceedings. On the other hand, the allegations of illegality resulting from insufficiency of verification and an unsound theoretical basis for the assessments are within the scope of such proceedings. (Vandeventer v. Long Island City, supra; U. S. Trust Co. v. Mayor, etc., of New York, 144 N. Y. 488.)
The allegation of the petitions that the Krieger roll is illegal on account of the absence of review, while sound, is immaterial here as the assessments on such roll are not the subject of attack
The order in so far as it directs a reference and appoints a referee is premature as no issue has as yet been joined and there is, therefore, as the cases now stand, nothing to refer.
The order should be modified so as to provide for striking out from the petition in the first above-mentioned case paragraph A, the first sentence of paragraph B, paragraph C, paragraph D, paragraph E, paragraph G, paragraph H, except the last seventeen words thereof of the section numbered “ twelfth ” and the order should provide for striking out from the petition in the other two proceedings-the corresponding allegations; and the order should be further modified by striking out the last paragraph of the order, and as so modified the order should be affirmed, without costs.
Hubbs, P. J., Clark, Davis and Taylor, JJ., concur.
Order modified in accordance with the opinion, and as modified affirmed, without costs of this appeal to either party.