62 N.Y. St. Rep. 202 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1894
The assessors of the town of Hew Albion, in Cattaraugus county, in making their annual assessment for the year 1894, assessed, to the relator, John H. Murphy, a farm of fifty acres, situate in that town, at $950 valuation. Murphy had been a Union soldier in the war of the rebellion, and, in 1890 or 1891, received pension money from the government to the amount of $2,400, and immediately thereafter he pur
On the review day authorized by the statute the relator appeared before the assessors and asked to have the assessment stricken from the roll for the reason above given, filing an affidavit to that effect, and also being sworn and examined before the assessors. The assessors declined to strike the assessment from the roll, and the question here is whether they were justified in such action. The assessors returned, in answer to the writ of certiorari, that they made the said assessment and assessed the interest of the relator in the farm subject to taxation in the premises at $950. They say that they assessed the land in question at the full value, and in effect returned that the value of the farm over and above the pension money applied in payment of the farm was $1,000, which was not exempt from assessment and for which the relator was liable to be assessed, and they, therefore, refused to change the assessment or strike it from the roll.
The statute, Laws of 1851, chapter 176, requires the assessors to estimate and assess the land “ at the full and true value
The only complaint which the relator makes in his petition for certiorari is that the tax is unjust arid illegal, because all the property, is exempt from taxation. We are to assume that the assessors did their duty and assessed the property at full value. The evidence before the assessors justified them in assuming that the value of the property was $2,500, and, therefore, when they assessed it at $950 the presumption is that they assessed only that which was not exempt. The learned counsel for the relator claimed that real estate in the town of Hew Albion was not assessed at its full value, and that the assessors intended to assess the whole of the farm at $950, their rule of assessment being, as to all the lands in the town, at about a third of their value. This contention is without evidence to support it, and from all the facts before me I am of the opinion that it is not well founded.
The cases of Yates County National Bernik v. Carpenter, 119 N. Y. 550, and Buffum v. Forster, 77 Hun, 27, cited by the learned counsel for the relator, do not aid us, and are readily distinguished from the one before us.
The action of the assessors must, therefore, be sustained, and the writ of certiorari dismissed, with costs against the . relator, which, under section 6 of chapter 269 of the Laws of 1880, must be imposed upon him.
Determination of assessors sustained and writ dismissed, with costs against relator.