
    The People ex rel. The New York Central and Hudson River Railroad Company, Relator, v. Clytus Sheppard et al., Assessors, etc., Respondents.
    (Supreme Court, Onondaga Special Term,
    December, 1900.)
    Tax — Town, assessment-roll when deemed filed — Certiorari.
    A town assessment-roll cannot, for the purpose of determining the running of the fifteen days within which an assessment contained therein may be reviewed, be deemed to have been filed by town assessors with the town clerk on the day when a mail carrier, at their request, left it done up in a package on top of a box on a post in front of the clerk’s house, it appearing that his wife took the package from the post, with the mail, he being absent from home, and that he did not find or open the package until two days later, when he indorsed the roll as filed then.
    The roll must be deposited by the assessors with the clerk with the clear and unmistakable purpose of having it filed.
    Motion to quash the writ of certiorari herein to review the assessment of relator’s property, in the town of Pamelia, Jefferson county, upon the ground that the application for such writ was not made “ within fifteen days after the completion and filing of the assessment-roll and the first posting or publication of the notice thereof,” as required by statute.
    Rogers & Atwell, for motion.
    Purcell, Walker & Burns, opposed.
   Hiscock, J.

The petition in this case was presented September 8, 1900, and the disposition of this motion is to be governed by the decision of the question whether the assessment-roll in question was filed in the town clerk’s office, August twenty-second or August twenty-fourth. If it was filed upon the latter date the petition was presented in time; if upon the former date, the petition was not in time.

The facts bearing upon said question are as follows:

Grievance day in said town was upon August twenty-first, and upon that day the assessors completed and verified the assessment-roll and caused notice to be posted in three conspicuous places in the town as required by statute. Upon the following day one of their number delivered the roll in question, tog-ether with the assessment-roll of 1899, inclosed in one package, to one Graves, a mail-carrier, with a request that he deliver it to Mr. Fox, the town clerk. Graves left the package at the post on which a mailbox was fastened in front of said clerk’s house, and the latter’s wife immediately went out and brought the package into the house with the mail. This was August twenty-second. The clerk was absent from home, and it does not appear that the package was opened, or that anybody knew what was contained in it until two days later when Mr. Fox, the clerk, found the package somewhere in the house, opened it, discovered what was in it, and then and thereupon indorsed the roll as filed on that day, namely, August twenty-fourth. In fact, it is a fair inference from the affidavits presented upon the part of the defendants, upon this motion, that no request was made to have the roll filed, and that neither Mrs. Fox nor anybody else knew that it was an assessment-roll until Mr. Fox opened the package upon the latter date. In addition to marking the roll “ Filed,” at said later date the clerk, in response to an inquiry by relator’s attorneys, wrote that the roll was filed upon August twenty-fourth.

Upon these facts, and for the purposes of this motion, I think it should be held that the filing took place upon August twenty-fourth, and not upon August twenty-second.

It is undoubtedly true, as a general rule, as claimed by defendants’ counsel, that where a paper is left with a public officer, manifestly and intelligently for the purpose of being filed, it is the deposit and receipt of the paper which constitutes such filing, rather than a mere indorsement' of a memorandum of the act on the paper; and that a party is not to be deprived of his rights, because such official has indorsed a wrong date upon the paper, or has even failed to indorse any date at all. But that hardly seems to me to be this case. In the first place, that rule has ordinarily been laid down, in order to protect the rights of parties, rather than for the purpose of depriving a party of a right or a remedy, as will be the case here, if defendants’ contention is upheld. In the next place the rule implies that the paper shall be deposited with the official, with the clear and unmistakable purpose of having it filed. Such rule has heen laid down in cases where the circumstances attending the leaving or depositing of a paper for filing, indicated the purpose to have it filed, and gave some evidence at least of the nature of the paper which was to be filed. In this case no act accompanied the leaving of the assessment-roll at the house of the clerk, which indicated the purpose for which it was left. In addition to that, the roll was done up in a package, and neither the clerk, nor anybody acting in his behalf, even knew what it was until he opened the package two days after it was left. I think it would be a strained construction to hold that the mere deposit of the assessment-roll in the office of the clerk, under such circumstances, constituted a filing. It certainly would violate the intention of the statute so to do, for that provides that such a roll shall be open to public inspection for fifteen days, and then limits to said period the time within which a petition for the writ of certiorari must be presented. The period of fifteen days ought not to run against relator, while the roll was not open to its inspection.

The motion is, therefore, denied, with ten dollars costs.

Motion denied, with ten dollars costs.  