
    People ex rel. Harriet M. McGruer, Relator, v. Thomas Dinneen, as Assessor of the City of Ogdensburg, New York, and Thomas Dinneen, Edward P. Lynch and William H. Jones, as a Board of Hearing and Deciding Complaints of Persons Aggrieved as to the Action of the Assessors of the City of Ogdensburg in Fixing Assessments, Defendants.
    (Supreme Court, St. Lawrence Special Term,
    April, 1914.)
    Taxes — provision of section 8 of Tax Law—'assessment of personal property — absence of evidence as to change .of residence.
    The provision of section 8 of the Tax Law, that “every person shall be taxed in - the tax district where he resides when the assessment for taxation is made,” does not mean where he resides for the purpose' of voting, or where - his domicile is.
    The personal property of one residing in the city of Ogdensburg on July 1, 1913, and whose business is carried on in said city where she and her property have the protection of the laws, is properly assessed in said city for the year 1913, in the absence of evidence that she had in good faith- changed her residence and that her personal property is assessed in any other tax district.
    Return to a writ of certiorari.
    Waterman & Waterman, for relator.
    D. W. Mulligan, for defendants.
   Van Kirk, J.

The writ of certiorari in this matter was issued, under date of September 15, 1913, to review the assessment of personal property against Harriet M. MeQ-ruer in the city of Ogdensburg for the year 1913. The defendants made their return, which is verified November 7,1913. The matter came on for hearing before this court. It was conceded at the hearing that but one question was presented to the court; that is, whether or not, on July 1, .1913, said Harriet McQ-ruer resided in the said tax district. Section 8 of the Tax Law provides in part as follows: Every person shall be taxed in the tax district where he resides when the assessment for taxation is made, for all personal property owned by him * * *. When a person shall have acquired a residence in a tax district, and shall have been taxed therein, such residence shall be presumed to continue for the purpose of taxation until he shall have acquired another residence in this state or shall have removed from this state. The residence of a person on July first shall be deemed his residence for the purpose of assessment and taxation during that year. If he shall have actually and in good faith changed his residence after July first, and before August first in any year, from one tax district to another, and shall make proof to' the assessors at or before their last meeting for the correction of the assessment-roll of such change of residence and that he is assessed in the tax district to which he has removed, his name and the assessment of his personal property shall be stricken from the assessment-roll of the tax district where he resided on July first.”

It is the evident.purpose of the statute that every resident owning personal property subject to taxation shall be assessed therefor in some tax district. The personal property, on account of which the assessment in question here was made, has never been assessed in any tax district. The relator was residing with her husband in Ogdensburg on July 1, 1913. The statute specifically says that, “Every person shall be taxed in the tax district where he resides when the assessment for taxation is made.” This does not mean where he resides for the purpose of voting or where his domicile is. The assessors of the city of Ogdensburg had jurisdiction to make this assessment. There was no evidence before the assessors, nor is there any before this court, that, after the first of July, Mrs. McGruer had in good faith changed her residence and that the said personal property is assessed in any other tax district. On the contrary the evidence shows that it is not assessed in any other district for the year 1913. The relator’s business is carried on in the city of Ogdensburg, where she and her property have the protection of the laws and enjoy the benefit of the city government with its improvements. Within the letter and spirit of the statute I think the relator was properly assessed in the city of Ogdensburg. Bell v. Pierce, 51 N. Y. 12 ; People ex rel. Lord v. Feitner, 78 App. Div. 287 ; Paddack v. Lewis, 59 id. 430 ; Boyd v. Gray, 34 How. Pr. 323 ; Bowe v. Jenkins, 69 Hun, 458 ; People ex rel. Strong v. O’Donnell, 47 Misc. Rep. 226. As to domicile and residence, Matter of Newcomb, 192 N. Y. 238 ; De Meli v. De Meli, 120 id. 485 ; Tax Law, § 8.

A final order may issue confirming the determination of the assessors. The defendants may have costs against the relator,in the sum of fifty dollars and disbursements.

Ordered accordingly.  