97 N.Y.S. 333 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
■ The petition sets forth that on or about the 1st day of February, 1903, an assessment was made by the commissioners, of taxes and assessments for the purpose of taxation, amounting to $200, upon the personal property of petitioner, to.wit, $10,000 ; that the said assessment is erroneous by reason of overvaluation, the actual vain-' ation of the personal property belonging to him not exceeding $500 ; that the petitioner was absent from the city of Mew York
The learned court denied the motion to dismiss and fixed the value of personal property subject to taxation at $500 and granted costs and disbursements against the appellants, and from the order entered thereon the tax commissioners appeal.
The assessment was not void for want of- jurisdiction. The 'residence of relator was fully established, and necessarily found by the court as a basis for its own order. Section 895 of the charter (Laws of 1901, chap. 466) provides as follows: “ During the time that books shall be open to public inspection , * * * application may be- made by any person * * * claiming to be aggrieved by the assessed valuation of * * * personal estate, to have the same corrected, f * * If such application be made in relation to the assessed valuation of personal estate, the applicant shall be examined ■ under oath by a commissioner of taxes and assessments or a deputy tax commissioner, as herein provided, * ■* * and if tlie assessment as hereinafter provided be determined by the board of taxes and assessments to be -erroneous, it shall cause the same to be corrected and fix the amount of such assessment as the board of taxes and assessments may believe to be just, and declare its decision upon such application within the time and in the manner hereinafter provided.” ' ,
Section 250 of the Tax Law (Laws of 1896, chap. 908) provides: “ Such petition must show that application has been made in due time to the proper officers to correct such assessment.”
It seems that certiorari will not. lie to correct an assessment complained of as_ erroneous, as distinguished from void, because made without jurisdiction of the person assessed, unless an application was made “in due time to the proper officers to correct such assessment.” “Wo excuse could take the place of the application, which is a condition of the court’s jurisdiction to‘correct’ assessments.” (Rumsey Taxn. 313, 314.) In People ex rel. Littman v. Wells (91 App. Div. 174) this court said that section 906 of the charter and section 250 of the Tax Law are to be read together, and that the petitioner was required to show that an application had been made for the correction of an assessment, and then added : “ This evidently relates to cases where the claim is that the assessment is erroneous. * * * A tax is deemed erroneous when it has been assessed at an overvaluation, or, if the subject be real estate, when the assessment, though it may not. be for the full market value of the property, is unequal in that it has been assessed at a higher proportionate value than other property upon the same roll. These are cases where an application to the assessing officers is a condition precedent to the right to a review by certiorari.”
The case at bar comes squarely within that principle, as eoncededly this is a proceeding to correct an erroneous assessment. The petition states that'“ the said assessment is erroneous by reason of overvaluation; * * * that the above-named commissioners of taxation erred in their increased assessment this year ; that the petitioner was absent * * * and could not, therefore, apply personally for the correction of the erroneous assessment at that time,” and asks that “ the decision and acts of said commissioners and their erroraforesaidmay.be reviewed upon the merits ■*- * * and a correction and reduction of said assessment be made according to law.”
The petitioner seeks to avail himself of the provisions of section
But this is a certiorari to review or correct on the merits the final determination of the board, and. that determination was the assessment. ' The allegation of the petitioner is that during the month-of May he made application for the correction of said assessmen, but, that said assessors have refused to make such correction. His proof was that-on one occasion he saw President Wells, and that Wells ¿aid petitioner was too late, and that lie' had no power to do anything for him, If the statement of the president of the board be. taken -at its full value as a refusal of the board to act in the matter l at ail for alleged want of power, that does not aid the relator here, and is-not to be reviewed upon certiorari. The remedy has: been-clearly indicated by the Court of Appeals in People ex rel. New York Hotel & Restaurant Co. v. Barker (140 N. Y. 437) to have been an application to Special’Term for a writ of mandamus directed to the commissioners commanding them to entertain -and consider the application for the correction "of the assessment. . Qf course, man-
The order appealed from must be reversed and ■ the proceeding dismissed, with costs to the appellants.
O’Brien, P. J., Ingraham, McLaughlin and Houghton, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed and proceedings dismissed, with costs to the appellants.