Case ID: ad_11/html/0127-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Hatch, J.:", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

The Brooklyn Elevated Railroad Company, Appellant, v. The City of Brooklyn and The Registrar of Arrears of the City of Brooklyn, Respondents. The Kings County Elevated Railroad Company v. The Same.
    
      Assessment of elevated railroad structure—no allowance for the competition of surface roads — the assessment roll cannot he attacked collaterally, nor can the assessors impeach it — depositions, not taken for such purpose.
    
    Where, in an action brought by an elevated railroad company to procure an adjudication that an assessment made for the purposes of taxation is illegal and void, no claim is made that the assessment of the structure of the elevated railroad is unequal, in that the structure is assessed higher than other property in the same city, or higher than property of a similar class, or higher than surface street railroad property (except as the latter is exempted from taxation on real estate), and where no proof is made of a substantial deterioration in the structure i.tself, the corporation assessed has no legal ground of grievance.
    In determining the value of an elevated railroad structure for the purpose of taxation, no allowance can be made for the fact that its earnings have been decreased by the competition of street surface roads; nor does the corporation assessed acquire any equitable right against the city to have this result considered in reduction of its taxes, beyond an examination of its effect upon the value of its structure where the construction of the street surface road has affected the value of the structure of the elevated railroad.
    The failure of the elevated railroad company to realize a profit from i'ts business does not relieve its structure from taxation.
    When an assessment roll is made up, it partakes of the character of a judgment, and the acts Of the assessors having jurisdiction thereof in making it up are judicial in their character and final, and cannot be attacked collaterally; where the action of the assessors is sought to be assailed by one of the assessors who has certified under the statute that he performed his duty as an assessor he will not be heard to impeach his own act.
    Permitting him to do so would be against public policy.
    No right exists, under cover of securing depositions, to enter upon an examination which seeks to show that assessors, in the performance of official duty, which they have certified they performed, in fact violated the law. Evidence secured in this manner is without the sanction of law and may not be considered.
    Appeal by the plaintiff, The Brooklyn Elevated Railroad Company, from an order of the Supreme Court, made at the Kings County Special Term and entered in the office of the clerk of the county of Kings on the 1st day of April, 1896, vacating a preliminary injunction granted in the action and denying the plaintiff’s motion to make such injunction permanent during the pendency of the action.
    Also, an appeal by the plaintiff, The Brooklyn Elevated Railroad Company, from an order of the Supreme Court, made at the Orange Special Term and entered in the office of the clerk of the county of Kings on the 13th day of June, 1896, amending the printed record upon appeal herein.
    Also, an appeal by the plaintiff, The Brooklyn Elevated Railroad Company, from an order of the Supreme Court, made at the Kings County Special Term and entered in the office of the clerk of the county of Kings on the 7th day of July, 1896, denying its motion for a resettlement of the order entered in said clerk’s office on the 1st day of April, 1896.
    The case of The Kings County Elevated Railroad Company v. The City of Brooklyn and The Registrar of Arrears of the City of_Brooklyn, involved the same questions as those presented in the case of The Brooklyn Elevated Railroad Company v. The City of Brooklyn and The Registrar of Arrears of the City of Brooklyn, and was argued and decided at the same term with the latter case.
    
      William N. Cohen, Mirabeau L. Towns and Eugene Treadwell, for the appellant.
    
      Joseph A. Burr, Corporation Counsel, for the respondents.
   Hatch, J.:

In 1892 the authorities of the city of Brooklyn placed upon the property of the plaintiff, for purposes of taxation, an assessed valuation of $2,903,665, and the tax levied thereunder for that year is the sum of $83,119.37. No application was made by the plaintiff to correct this tax or to change or modify the assessed valuation, and no protest was made of any character to the authorities having the matter in charge. The tax ivas not paid and no steps seem to have been taken to enforce collection until November 22,1895, when the registrar of arrears of said city served upon the plaintiff a notice that he was about to sell the property of the plaintiff for the nonpayment of the tax levied in 1893, and that such sale would be had on the 11th day of December, 1895. On the day prior to that upon which the sale was to take place this action was commenced, and it seeks to have it adjudged, among other things, that said assessment and the taxes levied thereunder are illegal and void. Upon the complaint, certain affidavits and depositions and other papers, an order to show cause was obtained, together with a preliminary injunction which restrained the defendants from selling plaintiff’s property; and it was asked in the order to show cause that said injunction be continued during the pendency of the action. On the return of this order, the court, having heard the parties and considered some additional evidence, made an order vacating the preliminary injunction, and denied the application to continue the same during the j>endency of the action. An appeal from this order brings the matter before ns for examination.

Laying aside for the moment all consideration of technical matters respecting the legal right of the plaintiff to maintain this action, let us consider the question as presented by this record upon the merits, in order to determine, if we may, whether the plaintiff has any real grievance aside from the technical objections urged by it. The theory upon which taxes are levied is that there shall he a common contribution, and that all property shall hear an equal burden, usually determined by its value, upon which the amount required to be raised is to be apportioned in some uniform ratio of equality. No claim is made in the record that the assessment is unequal, in that it is assessed higher than other property in the city, orhigher than property of a class similar, as telegraph and telephone structures and property, or higher than surface street railroad property, except as the latter is exempted from taxation on real estate. It is not claimed, and no proof exists in the record, to show that there has been substantial deterioration in the structure itself since 1891 and the time when this tax was levied. While some questions were asked of the assessors, as to whether they observed any impairment of the structure, it was not shown or claimed that any serious impairment existed. That its value consists in its use in connection with the franchise is apparent, but as a structure for that purpose it is substantially as it has always been, and continues to he so maintained, and it is upon that basis that it is assessed.

The main claim consists in its reduced earning capacity, produced by the competition of street surface roads, and this claim is undoubtedly substantial. There seems, however, to he an attempt to hold the city responsible and to create an equitable claim of some sort, because it has authorized the operation of surface roads. But if we assume that by the act of the defendant increased privileges have been given to the surface roads, and that these privileges have increased their earning power, it cannot operate to reduce the assessment upon plaintiff’s property if the structure is still of the value at which it has been assessed, even though by such act its earning power has been curtailed. Nor does the plaintiff thereby acquire any equitable right against the city to have such result considered in reduction of its taxes beyond examination of its effect upon the value of its structure. The fact that competition has impaired the plaintiff’s earning power is no fault of the city. The latter did not agree that the plaintiff should have any exclusive right in the transportation of passengers, and no just complaint can be made if there has been diversion to others of such traffic. Nor did the city assume to be the guarantor of plaintiff’s earning power. The city granted to it the franchise to erect the structure and make profit thereby, if it could. But failure to make profit does not exempt it from taxation at a fair valuation, and the fact that it does not make as much as it thinks it ought or thought it would when it erected its structure, furnishes no reason for reducing its actual value for purposes of taxation. At the time when the assessed valuation of the plaintiff’s property was determined, the board of assessors had before it a statement, made by the president of the plaintiff, in which was given the number of passengers carried by it in each of the years 1891-1892, and up to July 25, 1893. By plaintiff’s complaint in this action it is alleged that, as a common carrier of passengers for hire, it carries upwards of 95,000 people per day; and this statement of earning power was verified by oath of plaintiff’s president on the 20tli day of December, 1895. It is, therefore, easy to see from these statements that, deducting the fixed charges from the gross earnings and operating expenses, there will be left a very large percentage of net income upon the assessed valuation of the property. The same measure of result is reached if the report made by the plaintiff to the Board of Railroad Commissioners for the year 1893 be taken as the basis of earning power. Surely we ought not to disregard the plaintiff’s statement of earning power, or fail in giving it just force as a measure of value of the property. Since they have placed before us this means of ascertaining the just value of this property, we are quite able to see that the assessed valuation is not excessive when measured by it.

We may reach the same result by another measurement of value in which the acts of the assessors. form no part. It is not disputed but that the actual cost of the structure is far in excess of its assessed valuation per mile. Plaintiff’s bonded debt upon its elevated structure, secured by four mortgages, is $12,968,000, an average per mile of about $648,400. Its stock issue upon the same property is $13,283,000. It would seem that property which can be made to secure an indebtedness of this sum is not overvalued,, for purposes of taxation, at an assessed rate of valuation of ouly $170,000 a mile.

We have read the criticism contained in the brief of counsel for the plaintiff upon the conclusions reached by the learned court below from a consideration of these figures, but we are not able to find therein any merit, and we agree with the views expressed by the learned court below upon this subject. The assessed valuation of this property for the years 1891 and 1892 was at the rate of $200,000 a mile. When the present tax was levied this valuation was reduced to $170,000 a mile. We are convinced, from a review of the evidence, and considering the matter upon the merits of the assessment, that there exists no just ground for complaint, so far as the plaintiff is concerned; it was treated with all fairness by the board of assessors. The law requires (Laws 1888, chap. 583, § 9) that when the assessors have completed the assessment they shall evidence the same by their oaths, and this attestation must be to the effect that they have laid the assessment in accordance with law in the specific respects required therein to be stated. When the assessment roll is made up it partakes of the character of a judgment, and the acts of the assessors in making it up are judicial in their character. Where the assessors have jurisdiction to act, their action becomes final, and may not be attacked collaterally in any proceeding. (Buf. & State L. R. R. Co. v. Suprs. of Erie Co., 48 N. Y. 93; Mayor v. Davenport, 92 id. 610, 611.)

In the present case it appears, indeed it is not disputed, that the assessment roll as made up contained the attestation clause attached thereto in the form prescribed by law. It is not contended but that the assessors had jurisdiction to levy the assessment. Having jurisdiction to act, and having certified that they have acted as the law requires, there remains nothing which can be attacked by this action. It has been sought to be shown that, in fact, the assessors did not lay the tax in accordance with law. But there exists no right to do this in this action, within the doctrine of the foregoing cases. . And it •matters not how this is attempted to be shown. If by the assessor himself, the law replies that, having certified that he performed his duty, he will not now be heard to impeach his act. This principle rests upon the solid ground of public policy which restrains public officials, certainly those acting in a judicial capacity, from impeachment of official acts which the law requires, and which they have solemnly declared that they have performed. ■ If by other proof the barrier is firmly set against collateral attack, the practice which obtained in this case cannot be supported. No right exists, under the cover of securing depositions, to enter upon an examination which seeks to show that assessors in the performance of official duty which they have certified they performed, in fact violated the law. Evidence secured in this manner is without the sanction of law, and may not be considered.

We have examined the points which have been raised by the plaintiff upon this appeal, and find them without merit. The case of the Kings County Elevated Railway Company involves the same questions, and must meet with a like result. The appeal from the order denying the motion for a resettlement by striking from the order vacating the injunction the report of the plaintiff to the Board of Railroad Commissioners, and which has been argued herewith, we think, must be affirmed. It is the statement of the learned court below that plaintiff’s counsel was informed that the reports of the Railroad Commissioners had been submitted, and the learned judge suggested that if it was desired to submit anything against it he would consider it. So far as appears no objection was made, and there has never been any request to submit anything in opposition or to be heard thereon, and it is not now claimed that the reports are in any respect incorrect. The claim simply is that they do not extend beyond June 30, 1893. We are unable to see that plaintiff has been in any respect prejudiced by the consideration of these reports. In view of the expressed statement of the complaint as to the extent of the business of the plaintiff, the report may not be considered misleading in the respects claimed, for the inference which may be drawn from the allegation of the complaint is quite as strong as the one to be inferred from the report.

It follows that the orders appealed from should’be affirmed, with ten dollars costs in each case and disbursements.

All concurred.

Orders appealed from affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements in each case.