Court Opinion

ID: 6121644
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-04 18:50:19.628459+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:23:31.801571
License: Public Domain

Barnard, P. J. :
It is difficult to determine the intention of the Legislature in making, in the city of Brooklyn, the addition to the usual oath of assessors to the assessment rolls in other parts of the State. The general oath was revised and established in 1851. (Chapter 176, Laws of 1851, § 8.)
In 1854, Brooklyn and 'Williamsburgh were consolidated. By this act it was provided that two assessors should be elected from each ward, and the whole number were made a board of assessors. The oath required was the general oath. (Chap. 384, Laws of 1854, tit. 4, §§ 28, 33.)
In 1862, the assessors were reduced to five in number, and were to be appointed. No two of the assessors should reside in one ward, and two should reside in the eastern district. The additional oath was added, and was to be sworn to by “ at least two of the assessors, according to the oath provided by law in regard to assessment rolls in the different towns of this State ; and, further, to the effect that they have together personally examined, within the year past, each and every lot or parcel of land, house, building or other assessable property within.the ward, to be,delivered to the board of supervisors of the county of Kings, which board shall proceed thereon, in the manner required by law for the laying and collecting of taxes.” It will be seen that this oath need not be taken by a majority of the board, and the two who swore to the oath need not be either of the three who have fixed the value, without seeing the lots within the year. If the two assessors in each ward had continued, it would seem to have been the design of the provisions ••of this act-that the two ward assessors in each ward would assess and swear to the oath for their ward. After the change in the number of the assessors it would seem *385that if the law was to be effective, it would require that the majority, or all of the assessors should swear that they had seen the land, or that one or more should swear that all had seen each piece assessed within the year. Whatever may have been the design of the law, the oath that the assessors had seen every lot assessed within the year is omitted, and only the general oath is annexed to the assessment rolls. I do not think this omission made the assessment rolls void ; as assessors they had the jurisdiction over the subject-matter of the assessment. The assessment itself was valid. In the absence of any evidence or averment to the contrary, it will be presumed that the assessors did their official duty, and that they, or a sufficient number of them, saw the lands assessed within the year. A portion of the oath ia omitted when the rolls were delivered to the supervisors. Tha supervisors levied the tax. No case holds that the action of the supervisors in laying the tax upon the rolls thus verified are void. In Van Rensselaer v. Witbeck (7 N. Y. Rep., 517), it was held that an oath must be taken by the assessors that they had assessed “ according to the usual way of assessing.” In Westfall v. Preston (49 N. Y., 349), the Court of Appeals held that the assessors could not place a tax against an individual for personal property after they had lost jurisdiction of the rolls, and that the order of supervisors to collect the tax did not aid it. In The People v. Suffern (68 N. Y., 321), the court decided that if no affidavit was annexed to the roll, the roll was invalid.
The same court has decided that an omission of a portion of the statute oath, by assessors, did not make invalid the assessment roll. (Parish v. Golden, 35 N. Y., 462.) Also, that the assessors were only required to comply substantially with the statute, oath. (Buffalo and State Line R. R. Co. v. Supervisors of Erie County, 48 N. Y. Rep., 93.)
Under this state of the adjudication, we do not deem it plant that the omission of the portion of the oath complained of renders the proceedings of- the board of supervisors void, in laying the tax upon it.
The tax in one case was laid in 1862 ; in the other in 1872. The case should bo plain which has the effect to unsettle the tax levies in question for those years.
*386The judgment should be reversed, -with costs, and the plaintiff be allowed to amend, in twenty days, on payment of costs.
Present — Barnard, P. J., Gilbert and Dykman, JJ.
Judgment reversed, and new trial granted j costs to abide event.