
    The People ex rel. The American Bible Society, Resp’t, v. The Commissioners of Taxes and Assessments for the City and County of New York, App’lt.
    
      (Court of Appeals,
    
    
      Filed May 1, 1894)
    
    Taxes—Release.
    The legislature may release property which has been assessed for taxation, and "may exercise this power* in any way and at anytime during and before the completion of the proceedings for taxation.
    Appeal from order of the general term of the supreme court in the first judicial department, made March 6, 1894, which affirmed an order of special term directing a writ of mandamus to issue to defendants, commanding them to remit of the tax of 1893 levied on the real estate of the relator so much thereof as was assessed upon that portion of the real estate used by the relator exclusively for its own purposes.
    The facts, so far as material, are stated in the opinion.
    
      George S. Coleman, for app’lt; Frederick S. Duncan, for resp’t.
   Gray, J.

The relator was one of the religious societies, or corporations, referred to in chapter. 498 of the Laws of 1893, and claims to have been exempted from taxation for the year 1893, by force of the provisions of that act. Section I provided that the real property of such a corporation, “ shall be exempt from taxation ” and section II provided that this act shall take effect immediately.” It became a law, with the governor’s approval, on April 29th, 1893. The sole question presented was whether the language of the act should be construed to have prevented any tax from being imposed or collected for the year 1893. We think that the order of the special term, directing the commissioners (through the writ of mandamus) to remit the tax for that year, has been properly affirmed below. It is true that there is nothing in the act authorizing us to give retroactive effect to its provisions; a construction which, in the absence of language containing an unmistakable direction, legislative acts should not receive. But we are not called upon to give such a construction. The point is whether immediate effect could be given to the legislative provision. Could property, which then was in the course of assessment for purposes of taxation, be withdrawn therefrom ? All we have as to the legislative intention, when the act should be operative, is what we read in the second section. While the legislature commanded that its act should have immediate effect, we should not, and we need not here, infer any intention to discharge or release a tax, if, under the general tax laws, the proceedings for taxation had arrived at that stage, when the assessment was an unalterable fact, and beyond the power of the taxing officers to change. The legislative body will be presumed to be acquainted with the established plan of taxation throughout the state and to know of the processes, or successive steps, prescribed by law to be taken by taxing officers, in the assessment of property, subject to taxation, and in the imposition of the amount of the tax. They are presumed to know that under the plan, as prescribed for the city and county of New York in the Consolidation Act, there are limitations of time, which bear upon the liability of persons and the assessable character of property and the general powers of taxing officers. In the city and county of New York the books, which contain the “ annual record of the assessed valuation of real and personal estate,” are opened upon the second Monday of January and remain open until the first day of May. Within that period of time the commissioners have the power to correct the books; but on the first of May they are closed by direction of the statute. We have had occasion to consider the law, which thus regulates taxation in the city and county of New York, and it must be regarded as settled that the assessable character of property is fixed on the second Monday of January. There is power conferred upon the commissioners by the statute, during the time the tax books are open, to correct them with respect to valuations ; but, on the first day of May the books are closed by law, and thei'e is no provision for the amendment, or alteration of the record. Consol. Act, § 817 ; Sister of St. Francis v. Mayor, etc., 51 Hun, 355 ; 20 St. Rep. 985; affirmed 112 N. Y. 677; Association for Colored Orphans, etc., v. Mayor, etc., 104 Id. 581; 6 St. Rep. 477.

The judicial functions of the tax commissioners terminate upon the first day of May, and thereafter the duties are of a clerical nature. But it is indisputable that the legislature may release property, which has been assessed for taxation. The power over the subject is unlimited and can be exercised in any way and at any time during the proceedings for taxation. If it is claimed that a legislative enactment has arrested those proceedings at a stage when, by the general law, the tax books are closed and the assessable character of the property has been fixed, beyond the power of the taxing officer to alter, the language must be very explicit to warrant them in thereafter remitting the tax. In the Colored Orphan Asylum case, supra, the property, for which exemption was claimed, was acquired on July 31st and its claim was refused, upon the ground that as with the closing of the record on the first day of May the power of the amendment or alteration had ended, the exemption given in the Eevised Statutes must be regarded as prospective in its operation. In the present case, however, we have the command of the legislature, to exempt the relator, given at a time when the records, or tax books, are recognized by the general law to be open for correction. The implication, from the statutory direction that they shall be open, is that up to the date for their closing no basis is absolutely fixed for extending the amount of the tax upon the assessment rolls. We feel constrained to hold that the act having been given immediate operation, at a time when the tax books were directed by law to be open, the effect was to withdraw the property affected from all liability to taxation, and that the tax commissioners actually had a warrant in law for the correction of the tax books by removing therefrom the entry of the property in question. "We recognize the possibility that our decision may operate to release a large amount of property assessed for 1893, and that our construction ascribes to the legislature an intention which it may not, perhaps, have had. However that may be, we have, as our only guide, the language of the act; which, for being imperative-as to the time for its provision to'take effect, must be considered with reference to the existing condition of the proceedings for the imposition of a tax. That it would have been better legislation, by clear and appropriate language, to prevent any doubt with reference to the application of the exemption to pending taxation proceedings throughout the state, is one of those' reflections not infrequently suggested by a consideration of legislative work.

The order should be affirmed, with costs.

All concur.

Order affirmed.  