205 N.Y. 74 | NY | 1912
This action is brought against the defendant, to whom, as trustee, was executed by the Union Bag Paper Company a mortgage dated the 28th day of June, 1905, to secure the payment of bonds to be issued amounting in the aggregate to $5,000,000. The trust was accepted and the mortgage recorded in the office of the clerk of Saratoga county on June 29th, 1905. The complaint alleges that prior to July 1, 1906, the total amount of bonds issued thereunder aggregated $3,200,000, and that in February, 1907, a further sum of $400,000 was advanced under said mortgage to the Union Bag Paper Company, the mortgagor. The complaint further alleges that there became due and payable from the *76 defendant to the clerk of the county of Saratoga a tax of fifty cents on each $100 of the further sum advanced, amounting to $2,000; the non-payment of the tax; that the state board of tax commissioners had notified the attorney-general of the failure to pay said tax, and that by reason thereof the People of the state were entitled to recover the amount of such tax, for which judgment is demanded.
The history of the legislation in reference to the taxation on mortgages, so far as material to the controversy, is as follows: By the statute of 1905 (Ch. 729) a tax of five mills on the dollar, uniform throughout the whole state, was imposed against the legal and equitable owners of any bond, note, coupon or other evidence of debt or obligation secured by any mortgage of real estate, and the same was exempted from local taxation. In 1906 (Ch. 532) a different scheme of mortgage taxation was provided, to take effect July 1st of that year, and applicable to mortgages recorded on or after that date. It prescribed a recording tax of fifty cents on each hundred dollars in lieu of the annual property tax prescribed by the statute of 1905. It also imposed on any future advances made on mortgages recorded prior to the 1st of July, 1906, a tax at the same rate to be paid to the same officer. The statute, however, did not prescribe by whom such tax should be paid. In 1907 (Ch. 340) the law was amended so as to provide that in case of subsequent advances made on a trust mortgage already recorded, an additional tax at the prescribed rate should be paid on the amount of such advance, and the trustee was forbidden to certify any bond or other obligation issued under the mortgage unless the tax was paid. The district attorney was authorized to maintain an action against the corporation making the mortgage to recover the amount of the tax. In 1909 (Ch. 412) the act was further amended so as to authorize the attorney-general, in the case of a trust mortgage, to maintain an action *77 against the trust mortgagee personally to recover the tax, and it is on this last statute that the present action has been brought.
We are unable to see any sound theory on which the judgment below can be sustained. We assume that the legislature may authorize new remedies for the collection of taxes previously imposed, but the question remains whether there ever was any valid imposition of the tax upon the defendant. In the absence of express provisions in the mortgage the duty of the trustee is confined to seeing that the mortgage is properly recorded; that bonds are certified only to the amount authorized by the mortgage, and, when the mortgagor defaults in the payment of the bonds or coupons secured by the mortgage, to the enforcement of the rights of bondholders either by entry on the mortgaged property or by legal proceedings to secure a foreclosure. The trustee has no property right in the mortgage. At the time the defendant accepted the mortgage the mortgage debt was, by the express provisions of the statute of 1905, taxable only in the hands of the owners and holders of the bonds or other evidences of debt secured by the mortgage. The tax imposed by that statute was a property tax. The mortgage at that time was subject to no recording tax, which is an excise tax, and so far as appears in the complaint the defendant has done nothing since to subject it to any liability to taxation. The legislature could not impose such a tax upon the defendant for a transaction which, at the time it was effected, was subject to no tax. In Matter of Pell
(
The judgment appealed from should be reversed and judgment given for the defendant on demurrer, with costs in all courts, with leave to plaintiff, within twenty days, to serve an amended complaint on payment of costs.
GRAY, HAIGHT, WERNER, WILLARD BARTLETT, CHASE and COLLIN, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, etc.