Court Opinion

ID: 8065856
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 05:29:28.689929+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:38:12.010314
License: Public Domain

Kellogg, J. (dissenting):
The only question before us is, has the Special Term exceeded its. powers in directing to be incorporated in the writ running to the defendants the language above quoted ? It must be conceded, I think, that the Special Term, the court having the 'review of the proceedings before the board of tax commissioners, has a discretion in such matters and power to direct as to. the particular facts it desires returned so long as it keeps within the limit prescribed by law or statute. This, I believe, has been heretofore the universal practice both as to common-law writs and statutory writs. (2 Fiero Spec. Proc. 1252,1255 ; People ex rel. Manhattan R. Co.,v. Barker, 48 App. Div. 248.)
The statute (Laws of 1896, chap. 908, § 252) prescribes as to the return to. writs in assessment cases as follows: “ The return must concisely set forth such other facts as may be pertinent and material to show the value of the property assessed on the roll and the grounds for the valuation made by the assessing officers.” Who is to determine, if not' the court, what “ other facts as may be pertinent ? ” Must it be left to the assessor to say ? These proceedings start with a petition to the court alleging the particular grievance of the petitioner created by some act of the assessors. To meet this grievance, and to correct it if - it is proven to exist, the court must necessarily have before it the particular facts and acts which lie at the foundation of' it, and I think it very appropriate for the court to say by its writ what are those “ other ■facts ” which “ may be pertinent and material.” The same reasoning applies to the requirement to return “ the grounds for the valuation.” The “ grounds,” as here used, embraces something besides naked facts, because these are elsewhere specified as we have seen. . What may be comprehended under this term, as here used, properly belongs to the.court and not to the assessors to say. At any rate the right to. say is not exclusively with the assessors. And when the court has said what particular things it requires in order to dispose of the grievance set forth in the petition, and* it appears that the particulars are within the terms of the statute liberally construed, the assessors have no just ground, for complaint. The “ special franchise ” is made by the law real estate for the purposes of taxation. . The law defines what shall be included under the *189name “ special franchise.” The tangible property which is on or under the property of the public, and the right to use this tangible property so placed. It is not difficult in any case to reách by well-known rules, which have the sanction of the court, the actual value of the tangible property.
The value of the right to use the public streets or other public lands or space is quite another matter. So far the courts have had no opportunity to fix and determine what shall be the grounds of such valuation, or what shall be the grounds of the valuation of the tangible and intangible combined.
The complaint here is that the assessors have made an overvaluation ; that such overvaluation is the result of some improper rule or method, the assumption of erroneous “ grounds for the valuation,” and it sets forth facts which go. far to show that some non-elastic formula was used by the assessors which accurately evolved a result in odd dollars rather than a round sum. The court to intelligently review the conclusion of the assessors and determine whether it is right or wrong- obviously must be possessed of all the pertinent facts, all the “grounds for the valuation,” all the ingredients of this compound of tangible and intangible property expressed by the figures “ $1,342,195.50,” not alone the ingredients but the formula adopted to get the result-, the rule, the method, if there was one used, in reaching these exact figures. It is no answer to say that the court may avail itself of its powers under the statute and take evidence as to these things. It is a mistake to suppose that the statute contemplates that in every case the court shall resolve itself into an original assessing board. It is only in case of necessity that it may take evidence, and the necessity may not exist if all the needed facts and grounds are o with particularity returned. The statute contemplates a review of the acts of the assessors in the first instance and a determination upon the return alone, if it shall be sufficient, as to the grievance complained of. The court may take evidence, but this is only where it is necessary to reach new facts or settle disputed facts; it in no way dispenses with a full and particularized return.
The requirement here is to return the “ manner of making ” the assessment, “ the basis adoptedthese are essential facts without which no intelligent review could be had. “ Method pursued ” is also *190a fact and has- been declared' altogether important in determining whether a grievance such as the petition here alleges is well or'ill founded. (People ex rel. D., L. & W. R. R. Co. v. Clapp, 152 N. Y. 490 ; People ex rel. Manhattan R. Co. v. Barker, 146 id. 304.)
Since, as we have seen, it is for the court at Special Term in any-given case to determine what facts are “ pertinent and material,” and since it plainly appears that the court has called for none except such-as are contemplated by the statute "may or shall be returned by the assessors, I think the order was a proper one and should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.
Order so far as it is appealed from is reversed and the motion to strike out granted, and in lieu of the words stricken out the following to be inserted : “ Including such other facts as may be pertinent and material to show the value of the property assessed on the roll, and the grounds 'for the valuation made by the assessing officers.”