27 N.Y.S. 202 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1893
This is a certiorari proceeding instituted by the relator, under chapter 269 of the Laws of 1880, to review the action of the defendants in assessing the personal property of the relator in the town of Palmyra, in the county of Wayne, for the. year 1892. It appears from the evidence that the relator was assessed by the town assessors for that year the sum of $5,175 for real estate and $20,000 for personal property. The referee to whom this matter was referred to take the testimony and to report the same, with his opinion thereon, to the court, recommends that the $20,000 personal property assessed to the relator be stricken from the roll, upon the ground that the assessment is illegal. The evidence shows that the relator, on the 15th day of March, 1892, was the owner of bonds and mortgages amounting in the aggregate to $20,000 or over, which were upon real estate located in the counties of Wayne and Monroe, and that these bonds and mortgages were assigned by the relator, on that day, without consideration, to his daughter, Jeannetta Palmer, of Chicago, El.; that he retained the assignments until the 29th of March, when they were mailed to her. He also retained the bonds and mortgages in his possession until after the 4th day of July, 1892, and collected the interest on some, if not all, of them up to as late a period as the 1st of July. The assignments of the mortgages were not recorded in the clerk’s office of the county of Wayne until the 15th day of July, 1892.
The principal question which arises on this motion is whether the assessors, upon the above state of facts, had a legal right to assess the bonds and mortgages to the relator, either as principal or as the agent of his daughter. By the provisions of the Revised Statutes, aU property, real and personal, within this state, unless exempt, is liable to taxation. 1 Rev. St. p. 387, § 1. Chapter 176 of the Laws of 1851 provides that every person shall be assessed in the town or ward where he resides when the assessment is made for all personal estate owned by him, including all personal estate in his possession or under his control as agent, trustee, guardian, executor, or ad. ministrator; and in no case shall property so held under either of those trusts be assessed against any other person. 1 Rev. St. p. 389, § 5. The term “personal property,” as defined by the Revised Statutes, includes all household furniture, moneys, goods, chattels, debts due from solvent debtors, whether on account of contract, notes, bonds, and mortgages, public stocks, and stocks in moneyed
“A nation within whose territory any personal property is actually situated has entire dominion over it while therein, in point of sovereignty and jurisdiction, as it has over immovable property situated therein.” Story, Confl.. Laws, § 550.
Chief Judge Comstock, in the case of People ex rel. Hoyt v. Commissioners of Taxes, supra, says:
“I can think of no more just and appropriate exercise of the sovereignty of' a state or a nation over property situated within it and protected by the-laws than to compel it to contribute towards the maintenance of the government and law.”
Judge Rapallo, in Williams v. Board of Sup’rs, 78 N. Y. 565, says:
“The general rule in regard to taxation of personal property is that it is to be assessed to the owner at the place of his residence, and, but for the provision of our statute which authorizes the assessment of persons resident in this state for property held by them as trustees or agents for others, there-would be no legal means of taxing the personal property of a nonresident, as there could be no jurisdiction here over the owner.”
The right, therefore, of a state or town to tax real estate or personal property is based upon the control or dominion which it has over the property at the time the tax is imposed.
The learned counsel for the relator also claims that if the bonds and mortgages were subject to taxation they should have been assessed to the relator as agent. There is always the legal presumption that public officers will properly discharge their official duties;, and if the assessors, at the time the relator made his application for the correction of the assessment roll, had discovered facts sufficient to satisfy them that the roll should have been corrected so as to have-it appear that he was holding the securities as the agent of his daughter, they, no doubt, would have corrected it. Where a party claims that public officers have failed to discharge a statutory duty,, the burden is upon him to show that such duty was not discharged. The assessors, whose duties required them to make diligent inquiry during the months of May and June for the purpose of ascertaining the taxable inhabitants of the town, and the property, real and personal, liable to taxation, must have learned that the relator had three children, and that his property liable to taxation amounted to $25,175, from which $20,000, consisting of bonds and mortgages on property in the counties of Wayne and Monroe, had been assigned without consideration to his daughter, who lived in Chicago, HI., and that the assignments on the 1st day of July were not recorded,, and that the securities had not been delivered to her, but were retained by the relator, and in his possession. The assessors, therefore, being in possession of all these facts, could not very well escape-
The relator also contends that these securities were exempt from taxation, under chapter 176 of the Laws of 1851.
Laws 1851, c. 176, (2 Rev. St., 8th Ed., p. 1094, § 5,) provides that “the products of any state of the United States, consigned to agents in any town ■ or ward in this state, for sale on commission, for the benefit of the owner thereof, shall not be assessed to such agents, nor shall such agents of moneyed corporations or capitalists be liable to taxation under this section, for . any moneys in their possession or under their control transmitted to them for -the purposes of investment or otherwise.”