174 A.D. 694 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1916
Lead Opinion
These are appeals from two orders denying motions to dismiss writs of certiorari sued out to review the assessment of real property in the city of New York for the purposes of taxation.
One proceeding relates to the assessment of relator’s property for taxation in the year 1914, and the other for the year 1915. As substantially the same questions are involved in both appeals they may conveniently be considered together.
The ground for moving to dismiss the writ in each case is that the proceeding was in fact brought and conducted, in behalf of relator, by a business corporation known as L. Tanenbaum, Strauss & Co., Inc., in violation of law. (Business Corporations Law [Consol. Laws, chap. 4; Laws of 1909, chap. 12], § 2a, as added by Laws of 1909, chap. 484; Penal Law, § 280, added by Laws of 1909, chap. 483, as amd. by Laws of 1911, chap. 317.)
It appears very clearly from the evidence taken at Special Term in both of these cases upon the motions to dismiss, that this proceeding, including the preliminary application to the tax board for the reduction of the assessment, have been conducted by the corporation of L. Tanenbaum, Strauss & Go., Inc., under a contract for a fee contingent upon success, and that the attorney who appears as the attorney of record for the relator was selected and employed by said corporation, and will be compensated, if at all, by it out of its contingent fee.
The corporation in question was organized in the year 1912 by the present attorney for the relator and two clerks in his office as incorporators, with an authorized capital of $2,000, of which it was proposed to begin business with $500. The purposes of the corporation as stated in its certificate covered a wide field of possible business activities. All that is of interest at present is its authorization “ To appraise all forms of real and personal property and all interests therein and to furnish services in the reduction of taxes and assessments so far as and to the extent that the same may be done and performed
But a.much more serious objection to the proceeding is that the attorney who appears for the relator, although apparently not now a stockholder of the corporation referred to,
In the case in which Mr. Justice G-reenbaum thus wrote he refrained from dismissing the writ for reasons which do not appear in the present cases. That the facts invested the court with power to dismiss he clearly demonstrated and we find in the present cases no reason why we should refrain from exercising that power.
The order appealed from should be reversed, with ten dollars
Glarke, P. J., Smith and Page, JJ., concurred; Dowling, J., dissented.
Since amd. by Laws of 1916, chap. 254.— [Rep.
Since amd. by Laws of 1916, chap. 323.— [Rep.
See Penal Law, § 270. — [Rep.
See Penal Law, § 280, added by Laws of 1909, chap. 483, as amd. by Laws of 1911, chap. 317. Since amd. by Laws of 1916, chap. 254.—[Rep.
[See Penal Law, § 27.—[Rep.
Dissenting Opinion
For the reasons set forth in my dissenting opinion in People ex rel. Trojan Realty Corporation v. Purdy (174 App. Div. 710), I do not think that the corporation of “L. Tanenbaum, Strauss & Go., Inc.,” was practicing law or violating the statute in representing, as agent, the owner of the premises in question, before the tax commissioners in the effort to secure a reduction of the assessment thereon.
In the proceeding to review the assessment for the taxes of 1914, the owner had employed the corporation to represent him as agent before the commissioners. The corporation succeeded, upon its application on behalf of the owner, in securing a reduction of the assessment to the amount pf $208,000. The tax commissioners did not question the propriety or legality of the owner being represented by a corporation, but granted the reduction solely on its application as agent for the owner. The owner, however, desired it to be still further reduced to $195,000 and before his departure for Europe authorized Tanenbaum, president of the corporation, whom he knew personally for some years, to take the steps which might be necessary to protect him in his absence. Tanenbaum, thus authorized, selected and retained counsel for the owner, whom the latter swears he was to pay, and the counsel thus retained commenced the present. proceeding on the last day it could be begun, his client still being in Europe. Later, and a year before this proceeding came on for the hearing, and when so far as appears no suggestion of any attack upon the attorney’s authority had been made, the owner signed a written author-, ization and retainer for his said attorney to represent him in the present proceeding, which he has continued to conduct down to the present time. I think it fairly established that the attorney Lewis was duly authorized to represent the owner and to apply for the writ herein, and I do not see how the tax commissioners, having reduced the assessment in question once
In the proceeding to review the assessment for the taxes of 1915, it appears that the attorney Lewis was duly retained in writing by the owner to represent him therein, such retainer being executed before the proceeding was instituted and the owner signed and verified the petition upon which the writ was issued.
Since in my opinion “L. Tanenbaum, Strauss & Co., Inc.,” violated no law in presenting the grievances of the owner before the tax commissioners and since Gabriel I. Lewis was duly authorized to represent the owner in applying for the writs herein, I think the orders appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Orders reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements in each case, and motions granted, with costs in each case.