Court Opinion

ID: 6134010
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-04 21:32:51.449024+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:54:27.423389
License: Public Domain

Daniels, J.:
The writ of certiorari was issued at the instance of the relator to review the legality of an assessment for a tax proposed to be imposed upon the shares of the stockholders of the bank. It was issued under the authority of section, 1, chapter 369 of the Laws of 1880, allowing a writ of this description, to review an assessment of real and personal property, for the puiqioses of taxation, on the petition duly verified, of any person or corporation assessed, and claiming to be aggrieved. The proceeding, by this section of the act, is in its language confined to the person or corporation assessed, and claiming to be aggrieved, while the assessment, which it was the design of this writ to review, was not against the corporation or its property, but it was against the property of the persons who were stockholders in the corporation, and they were the only individuals who could be aggrieved by the assessment. The cases of Pelton v. National Bank (101 U. S. Rep., 143), and Cummings v. National Bank (id., 153); Hills v. Exchange Bank (105 id., 319); and Boyer v. Boyer (113 id., 689), have been assumed to be in conflict with this construction of the statute, but they are not, for in those cases neither this statutory provision, nor any other resembling it, was brought into controversy. They did not proceed upon the *345writ of certiorari, but actions were maintained in each of them to restrain the collection of taxes, and that, it was considered, might be done by the banks on behalf of their stockholders, under the general principles applicable to actions in equity, and such provisions as imposed a duty, upon the association, intended to be observed for the security and certainty of the collection of the taxes. This application proceeded on no such principle, but solely and wholly upon the provisions of the statute, and that it was not authorized by the bank was considered and held in People v. Wall Street Bank (39 Hun, 525).
The writ was issued without authority, and the order denying the defendants’ motion to quash it should be reversed, with costs, and an order to that effect directed in the proceeding.
Brady, P. J., concurred.
Order reversed and motion denied.