
    
      In re McLean, Receiver of Taxes.
    
      (Supreme Court, General Term, First Department.
    
    July 9, 1889.)
    1. Taxation—Excessive Levy—Failure to Object to Assessment.
    In a proceeding against a corporation under Laws N. Y. 1882, c. 410, § 857, to enforce payment of a tax on its personal property by fine, it cannot defend on the ground that the tax levied was excessive, where due notice of the assessment was given, but no attempt was made to have the tax corrected. Notice of the assessment having been given, the corporation is chargeable with notice of subsequent proceedings to complete the tax.
    2. Same—Amount—When Questioned.
    The legal correctness of a tax cannot be questioned in proceedings to enforce its collection, the assessment and levy being a judicial.proceeding.
    On reargument. For opinion on appeal, see 3 FT. Y. Supp. 45. For order granting motion for rearguinent, see 5 FT. Y. Supp. 946.
    Argued before Van Brunt, P. J., and Daniels and Bartlett, JJ.
    
      Charles B. Meyer, for appellant. George S. Coleman, for respondent.
   Daniels, J.

The appeal in this proceeding has already been before this general term, and decided, but a reargument was ordered on account of a misapprehension concerning the existence of a previously repealed section of chapter 410 of the Laws of 1882, providing for the means of correcting the tax after it had been imposed. The proceeding was instituted as it has been provided for by section 857 of this act, and it has been carried on in conformity to the requirements of this section. But it was resisted on the ground that the tax was larger by the sum of $125.32 than the corporation was liable to pay on account of its personal property. It does, however, appear that the notices required to be published by law to legalize the assessment were given as that was directed to be done by the statute. In that manner the company was made a party to the proceedings, which appear to have been regular up to the time of the completion of the rolls, and their delivery to the common council, whose sole duty then was to fix and extend the tax. In this manner the company was apprised of what was being done to tax its personal property, and it was not necessary that notice should be given to it, either by publication or otherwise, of the proceedings the law required to be taken by the common council or board of aldermen. In this respect the case differs from Stuart v. Palmer, 74 N. Y. 183, where the assessment which was condemned was provided for throughout, without any notice whatever to the parties whose property should be affected by it; for, in this case, the company was supplied with notice by publication of the proceedings for the assessment itself, and afforded an ample opportunity of appearing and resisting that, if in any respect it had been illegally made. It was in that manner made acquainted with the proceeding the law provided for, to make a regular and valid assessment of its property for taxation, and it is chargeable with knowledge of the provisions of the statute,

relative to wliat should afterwards be done to complete the imposition of the tax. And that was the proceedings of the board of aldermen to provide for and to state the amount of the tax according to the assessed value of the company’s property, which it should be required to pay; and from the notice, as well as the proceedings which previously took place, if the company desired to acquaint itself with what was done by the board of aldermen, and whether in its action any misconduct or error should intervene, it had the opportunity of so doing. As the law existed upon this subject, it was clearly prescribed what the board of aldermen should do, and the company, by observing, watching, or informing itself of the proceedings, was supplied with the means of protecting itself against any larger imposition of the tax than would be justified by the assessment. In this respect the proceeding is quite similar to that provided for by the general system of taxation throughout the state, notice of the assessment is required to be given, and the opportunity, as was the fact in this proceeding, is afforded to the owners of property to appear before the assessors, and secure a correction of any improper valuation in the assessment; and after that, and the completion of the roll in the form prescribed by the statute, the duty is imposed upon the supervisors of. the county to state and extend the tax. Ho further notice whatever is required to be given or provided for the property owner of this final proceeding of the supervisors. 1 Rev. St. (6th Ed.) 942, 943. But the owner of property assessed, being apprised of the assessment, and afforded the opportunity and means .of correcting that, is then subjected to the dutyof following and watching the proceedings, if he desires to do so, in order to avoid the disability of too large a tax according to the valuation of his property. The proceeding was similar in material respects in the imposition and extension of this tax, and after it was imposed, and the rolls in this manner completed, the only mode by which the action of the board could be corrected or changed, in case of erroneous action on the part of the board of aldermen, was by a writ of certiorari. This has been provided for by section 2120 of the Code of Civil Procedure. And that it may be resorted to in a case of this description is sustained by the preceding authorities, the result of whose decisions has not been changed. Bank v. Supervisors, 25 N. Y. 312, 315; Baldwin v. City of Buffalo, 35 N. Y. 375, 380; People v. Bank, 39 Hun, 525.

After a tax has been imposed upon the property of a contestant in this manner, and proceedings are taken upon its basis to enforce its collection, the legal correctness of the tax itself cannot be questioned in such proceedings. Upon this subject it has been repeatedly held that the proceedings cannot be attacked or set aside collaterally, as it is now proposed to do. Railroad Co. v. Supervisors, 48 N. Y. 93; Mayor, etc., v. Davenport, 92 N. Y. 604, 610, 611; McLean v. Jephson, 41 Hun, 479; Re McMahon, 67 How. Pr. 113; Smyth v. Assurance Co., 35 How. Pr. 126. The case is analogous to that of a judgment which may be recovered on the default of the defendant, after the service of a summons upon him. If it should be entered for too large a sum, he would not be at liberty to resist its collection upon execution by proving this fact. The judgment, on the contrary, would be conclusive against him, and yet he would be no more bound in that case than the company is in this; for the proceeding was judicial which resulted in this tax, and, if an error has intervened in producing an amount larger than the tax should have been, it was the duty of the company to watch the proceedings, and when that proved to be the fact, to present its objection, and if it were not allowed to prevail, then to review the decision against it by certiorari. The case is not one where there was any want of jurisdiction, but if the tax was made larger than it should have been upon the assessed value of the company's property, it was, as the fact has been stated in the answer of the company, erroneously imposed to that extent. The time for correcting that error has gone by, and the order should be affirmed, with $10 costs, besides the disbursements. All concur.  