Court Opinion

ID: 6122173
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-04 20:04:58.517034+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:23:44.662213
License: Public Domain

E. Darwin Smith, L :
The return to the certiorari shows that the assessment complained of was completed by the assessors, and the roll, duly verified *558by them, filed in the office'of the clerk of the city of Utica on the seventeenth day of August last, as required by the provisions of the charter of said city. That the Common Council of said City caused the taxes to be collected in said city to be inserted in copies of said roll, and adopted and approved the same, by resolution, in due form, on the twenty-first day of August, and directed the same to be placed in the hands of the city treasurer for collection, and the same was so duly'placed in his hands, for collection, on the twenty-ninth day of August following
The writ of certiorari appears to have been allowed on the first day of September afterward, and, I presume, was immediately served. It arrested the tax roll in the hands of the city treasurer, who was, therefore, a necessary party to return such record, and stay the collection of the tax.
The assessors of the city of Utica were, also, necessary or proper parties, that the proceedings of the assessors in making the assessment roll, and of the common council in confirming it, and making therefrom the tax roll, might be duly returned with the said writ. The collector was unnecessarily made a party. (The People ex rel. Davis v. Hill and others, 65 Barb., 170.)
But, upon the merits, we think the assessors committed no error. The relators were liable to be assessed for personal property, at the actual value of their capital stock, and taxed therefor in the same manner as other personal property, within the provisions of the act of 1857, chapter 456, 3 Sess. L., 2. (The People v. The Assessors of Brooklyn, 39 N. Y., 81; Same v. Ferguson, 38 id., 89 ; Oswego Starch Factory v. Dolloway, 21 id., 449.)
If the relators had furnished to the assessors the statement showing the real estate owned by them, the amount of their capital stock, and the amount paid in and secured to be paid, excepting the sums paid for real estate and other matters, as required by section 2 of title 4, chapter 13 of part 3 of the Revised Statutes (vide 1 Stat. at L., 374), it would have been the duty of the assessors to have adopted the data or facts embraced in such statement, and followed the direction of section 6 of said statute in determining the value of the capital stock of said relators liable to taxation. But, by reason of the neglect of the relators to comply with said statutes, the assessors had no data to follow in making such *559assessment, and were entitled, as they were bound, to exercise their judgment on the best information they could obtain on the subject.
The affidavit presented to the assessors, showing the amount of the indebtedness of the company, was, doubtless, made and presented upon the assumption that said company was only liable to be assessed and taxed for its personal property upon the same basis with individuals, and was entitled to a deduction from such assessment, for the amount of its indebtedness, upon the same principle. This, we think, was a mistake. The affidavit showing the indebtedness of the company did not show, or tend to show, the value of its capital stock. Such indebtedness may have been incurred in the purchase of property, which largely increased its business and the actual value of its stock. This affidavit may have been true, and yet the capital stock of said company be worth much above par in the market; and the affidavit shows that the company had personal property largely in excess of the amount of the assessment.
The writ, we think, should be dismissed, with costs.
Gilbert, J.:
We think the assessors acted in accordance with their duty, when they refused to yield to the. demand of the relator. That part of the capital stock of a railroad corporation which is not invested in its real estate, or its road, is liable to taxation as personal property. (1 Edm. Stat., 362, § 6; id., 360; 3 id., 374 ; 1 id., 375, § 6, sub. 1; id.,, 378, § 28.) The counsel for the relator, we think, is mistaken in supposing that the provision of the Revised Statutes, prescribing the manner in which the assessors shall prepare the assessment rolls (1 Edm. Stat., 363, § 9) affects the rule of taxation applicable to corporations. (Mohawk and Hud. R. R. Co. v. Clute, 4 Paige, 384; People ex rel. Citizens Gas Co. v. Assessors, 39 N. Y., 81; People v. Com., 23 id., 192; Thomp. Man., 138.)
As the return does not show that the capital stock, uninvested as the statute prescribes, did not exceed the sum assessed against the relator, no legal error appears which would warrant us in ordering the tax against the relator, of which he complains, to be stricken from' the assessment roll. A mistake of the assessors in the form of *560the assessment is not enough. There must be a substantial error, before the court can interfere with the tax.
The proceeding returned must be affirmed, with costs.
Present — Mullin, P. J., Smith and Gilbert, JJ.
Oertiorari dismissed, with costs.