
    Andrew J. Rose and Julia A. Rose, Plaintiffs, v. Halsey F. Northrup, Defendant.
    (Supreme Court, Erie Special Term,
    July, 1903.)
    ■Tax—County treasurer’s sale of resident lands in Olean, Cattaraugus Co., for unpaid taxes — Reassessment of tax necessary.
    Lands in the city of Olean, Cattaraugus Co., assessed as resident, cannot be sold by the county treasurer for unpaid taxes unless they are first reassessed and charged on the lands, as required by the Tax Law (L. 1896, ch. 908, § 89).
    The special statute (L. 1879, eh. 229, § 5), relative to the collection of taxes in the counties of Cattaraugus and Chautauqua and authorizing the county treasurer to sell, for taxes charged on lands, without such reassessment, does not apply.
    Demuebeb by defendant to the plaintiffs’ complaint upon the ground that it fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
    W. V. Smith, for plaintiffs.
    E. D. Northrup, for defendant.
   Kruse, J.

This action is brought by the plaintiffs, the owners of certain lands situate in the city of Olean in the county of Cattaraugus, to set aside a sale of their said lands made by the county treasurer of that county for taxes assessed therefor against them, upon the ground that the sale was unauthorized and void and that the conveyance made by the county treasurer to the purchaser on such sale is a cloud upon the title of the plaintiffs.

The precise ‘claim of the plaintiffs is. that inasmuch as the tax debtors, the owners of the lands,— the plaintiffs herein,— were residents of the city of Olean, the tax district in which the lands are situate, the lands could not legally be sold for taxes without a reassessment of the tax and charging the lands therewith, as is provided in section 89 of the Tax Law (L. 1896, ch. 908), which, in this case, was not done.

On behalf of the defendant it is contended that this section has no- application to the sale of lands for unpaid taxes in Cattaraugus county; that under the provisions of the statute relating to the collection of taxes in Cattaraugus and Chautauqua counties (Laws of 1879, chap. 229), a sale of lands for unpaid taxes may be made by the county treasurer upon the first return of unpaid taxes by-the collector to him without such reassessment.

I think the defendant’s position is untenable and that the demurrer must be overruled. The latter act, as its title indicates, relates to the collection of taxes in those two counties, and, as was said by Judge Andrews, in Chard v. Holt, 136 N. Y. 37: “The main purpose" of the act of 1879 referred to, was to eliminate the agency of the comptroller of the state in respect to the sale and conveyance of lands for unpaid taxes, and to substitute county agencies and make their authority complete and uniform in affecting and enforcing the collection of taxes in the counties mentioned.”

In section 32 of this special act it is expressly provided that where no provision on the subject is made in the act, all the general laws of this State in relation to the assessment and collection of taxes shall, so far as they are applicable, be in force in respect to the assessment and collection of taxes in these two counties, and to the sale of land for taxes therein, except wherein the authority is given or duty enjoined by those laws on the Comptroller of the State, the same authority shall be exercised and the same duties shall devolve on the treasurers of these two counties.

Sections 21 and 29 of the Tax Law relating to the form of the assessment-roll concededly apply to Cattaraugus county, and to the city of Clean as well. Section 21 requires the assessors to prepare an assessment-roll containing six separate columns. In the first column they shall set down the names of all the taxable persons in the tax district. In the second, the quantity of real property taxable to each person, with a statement thereof in such form as the commissioners of taxes shall prescribe. In the third, the full value of such real property. In the fourth, the particulars relating to taxable personal property owned by each person. In the fifth, the value of taxable rents, and in the sixth, the value of the special franchise as fixed by the state board of tax commissioners. Section 29 provides that the real property of nonresidents of the tax district shall be designated in a separate part of the assessment-roll, and requires the land to be described with precision. The details of the description are quite minutely prescribed by that section.

It will be seen that the assessment provided for by section 21 contemplates an assessment against the taxable persons resident in the tax district, while that contemplated by section 29 is an assessment against property only. So that while a resident taxable person is assessed for his real property in the tax district, the description of it is. less definite and specific than where the property itself is to be assessed, for which provision is made in section 29; and section 89, which provides for the reasssessing of such an unpaid tax of a resident taxpayer and charging the land therewith, specifically provides for adding a description of the real property to the assessment-roll of the then current year in the part thereof relating to nonresident lands, and stating that it is a reassessment of such tax; and further provides that it shall be regarded for all purposes of assessment and collection as a nonresident tax for the year in which such description is added. While it is true that the special act under consideration (Laws of 1879, chap. 229, § 5) authorizes the county treasurer to advertise and sell lands for the payment of unpaid taxes, it is only such taxes as are charged on lands, and inasmuch as no specific provision is made in the special act for charging the tax upon the lands, it would seem that the provisions of the General Tax Law contained in section 89 are applicable and that the sale of these lands made hv the county treasurer without the reassessment was without authority and is of no effect. iSTor do I think that the case of Board of Supervisors v. Betts, 6 N. Y. Supp. 934, at variance with the views which I have expressed. While the sale under a similar statute, without the reassessment, was upheld in that ease, and the record discloses that the sale was attacked upon that ground, yet an examination of the record discloses further that there was an express finding by the trial court that all of the acts done under the provisions of that special law (Laws of 1878, chap. 65) were legalized, ratified and confirmed by a subsequent act of the Legislature (Laws of 1882, chap. 322, § 15), and this seems to have been the ground upon which the judgment was affirmed at General Term; for, while these specific grounds upon which the plaintiffs attack this sale were also urged in that case, yet they were not referred to in the opinion at General Term, but the decision of affirmance seems to have proceeded upon the curative effect of the act referred to.

It follows, therefore, that the defendant’s demurrer to the complaint must he overruled, with costs, but with leave to the defendant to answer, upon payment of the costs of the demurrer within twenty days after the entry of the order overruling the demurrer and notice of entry thereof.

Demurrer overruled, with costs, with leave to defendant to answer, upon payment of costs within twenty days after entry of order overruling demurrer and notice of entry thereof.  