39 N.Y.S. 106 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1896
The relator is a domestic corporation, exercising
;a franchise in the public streets in this city, for the' carrying of •electrical conductors for hire through subways constructed in said streets. It was assessed by the respondents for personal taxation for the year 1895 at the sum of. $939,942, and cl^irm-no- to have been aggrieved thereby, 'it has sued out a writ of certiorari under chapter 269 of the Laws of 1880, which■ brings up. for review the action of the respondents in that regard. ■
It appears upon the return to the writ that the relator was primarily assessed in the sum of $3,000,000, and thereafter, while
The question was raised in the case of People ex rel. Equitable Gas-Light Co. v. Barker, 144 N. Y. 94. At-page 100 Judge Andrews says: “Beal and personal property are to be separately assessed. In case of an individual assessed for both, if the realty be undervalued, the loss Cannot be made-up by adding it to the assessment of the personalty. But the law governing the taxation of corporations (Laws of 1857, chap. 456) requires the valuation of the whole property owned by the corporation, whether real or personal, or both, in order to ascertain the capital," which is the subject of taxation (People ex rel. Union Trust Co. v. Coleman, 126 N. Y. 433), and from the aggregate is to be deducted the assessed value of the real estate, and the balance is the capital" subject to assessment, after deducting debts and any exemptions allowed by law. In assessing the capital of a corporation for the purpose of taxation, it is immaterial in which description of property the capital
Taking this, therefore, to be the law of .this case upon the question of power, it cannot be said that the .action of the respondents • in valuing the real estate of the relator at a larger amount than that for which it had been assessed for purposes of taxation was illegal; so that the only point remainitig to be disposed Of is whether there was error in the proceedings of the respondents,in the exercise' of the power. which they possessed. " It appears in the supplemental statement made by the relator that the real estate in respect of which it had been assessed consisted of their subways constructed in the public streets, and that the cost' of the construction of said subways amounted to the sum of $5,423,-717.94. In connection with this' item certain statements are made to the effect that the relator was not allowed to lay these subways in such streets and places or to. such an extent as to the company seemed best or most profitable, but" that it was compelled by the board of electrical control in said city to construct the same, not only with regard to existing requirements, but'also in reference to future demands, in order to prevent future disturbances of the streets; that many of the subways which the relator was so directed to construct have not been occupied; that by law it is required to furnish space free of charge for electrical conductors used by the ci-ty-and that only between 39 and 40 per cent, of the subways so laid are now occupied. It is’ also averted
It is quite plain that the respondents, although the fact is not affirmatively stated in the return, took the cost of the subways as fairly representing their value, for the amount of the assessment which they made is substantially the result which is obtained by counting the cost of the subways among the assets of the company, and deducting from the' total the items which by law are to be allowed. The commissioners, therefore, had before them facts which, in connection with knowledge in regard to the subways previously acquired according to the supplemental statement, were sufficient in law. upon which to base an estimate of value up to the limit of the cost of the property. In the above-cited case, Judge Andrews, at page 103, says: “ The commissioners had a right to act upon evidence outside of that furnished by the "relator. In making inquiry and collecting the facts, they are not bound by the strict - rules which govern ordinary judicial proceedings. If they act in good faith upon their best judgment, upon reasonable grounds, and they do not err in the principle of assessment to the prejudice of the taxpayer, their decision cannot be overruled.”
In the.case of People ex rel. Edison Electric Ill. Co. v. Barker, 139 N. Y. 55, the court says (p. 60): “ The section of the statute requires the commissioners to declare their decision within a certain time. This decision, it need scarcely be said, is not to be capricious, arbitrary or fanciful. It must be based upon some evidence or facts and should be the result of the exercise of judgment and discrimination. This would naturally be so, and the statute in the succeeding section (§ 821) provides for a certiorari to review or correct on the merits any decision or action of the commissioners in such matter. This does not mean that the court is to place itself in the position of an assessor, and review the decisions of those officers upon questions of value" or appraisement where the officers proceeded upon information or evidence tending to support their decision. The court generally will not look into questions of fact as to the amount or value of the personal estate of a corporation or individual. These are questions for the judgment of the assessors and their decisions will ordinarily be sustained. This doctrine has been advanced and decided in several cases,
While the difference between the assessed value of ‘the subway? and the amount of the valuation' by the commissioners in ' the assessment under review is quite startling, I do not find in the record sufficient evidence to compel a conclusion that the action of the respondents, was arbitrary or capricious or a fraud upon the relator. When it is considered that the real estate in question is, from the nature of the case, utterly without any market value, that it is of such a character that its value cannot in any way be estimated by a comparison with the value of any other kind of real property, and. that it can be used and used only for the purpose foE which it is employed by the relator, and only then in association with the. franchise in pursuance of which it was constructed and si maintained, the difficulty of the problem discloses itself; and the cost of the construction affords perhaps a more rational basis for a valuation than anything else, especially as it must be borne in mind that the franchise is not the subject of taxation. People ex rel. Panama R. R. Co. v. Comrs., 104 N. Y. 240; People ex rel. Union T. Co. v. Coleman, 126 id. 433-446. The income derivable from the property could not afford a proper basis in view of the fact that to a. large and undefmable extent it also represents the product of the franchise.
The conditions thus presented seem, therefore, under the ■ authorities to. have authorized the respondents in taking the cost of the subways as a very important, if not determining factor in estimating their value. It may also be said in explanation of the difference between, the assessed value and the actual value as thus found, that it does not appear affirmatively that the cost was before the respondents at the time when their first assessment of the realty was made, and as the presumption -is that they have acted in good faith in the performance of their official duties, it is reasonable to infer that the valuation which they made in the assessment which is now being reviewed represents the exercise of their judgment upon more accurate and detailed information..
It appearing, therefore, that the proceedings of the respondents in this matter are not affected by reversible error, it follows that the petition and writ must be dismissed, with costs.
.Writ dismissed, with costs