Summary
In People ex rel. Jewelers Building Corporation v. State Tax Commission (214 App. Div. 99, affd. 241 N.Y. 524) — which the Appellate Division held to be controlling in this case — there were vital facts which had different legal consequences than the facts with which we are now dealing.
Summary of this case from Matter of Park 46th St. Corp. v. State Tax CommOpinion
May 26, 1925.
Max Miller [ Jacob Feld of counsel], for the relator.
Albert Ottinger, Attorney-General [ Henry S. Manley, Deputy Attorney-General, of counsel], for the respondent.
A bond for $750,000, together with a real estate mortgage securing the same, was executed on December 6, 1923, by the relator, then known as the Masro Realty Corporation, and delivered to the Winson Mortgage Company. The mortgage was recorded on December 28, 1923, and a recording tax of $3,750, calculated at the statutory rate of fifty cents for every $100, was duly paid. On March 6, 1924, the relator's name was changed. On March 19, 1924, the mortgagee executed and delivered to the Equitable Trust Company of New York an assignment of the bond and mortgage so given. On the same day the relator executed and delivered to the Equitable Trust Company an additional bond for $250,000, together with a mortgage upon the identical real estate previously mortgaged. The Equitable Trust Company and the relator, on the same day, executed an agreement consolidating the two bonds and mortgages. After these instruments had been executed and delivered to the Equitable Trust Company, that company advanced to the relator the additional sum of $250,000. The $250,000 mortgage and the consolidation agreement were thereafter recorded upon the payment under protest of $5,000 tax. The State Tax Commission has determined that the consolidation agreement was a mortgage and that a recording tax of $5,000 was payable by the relator for the recording thereof. With this conclusion we are in accord. The consolidation agreement was accompanied by a bond of $1,000,000. It provided for the elimination of the prior bond of $750,000 and the bond for $250,000. It also imposed upon the real property, described in the other instruments, a mortgage lien to secure the payment of the bond for $1,000,000. Clearly, therefore, it constituted a mortgage. It was not a supplemental mortgage under section 255 Tax of the Tax Law (as amd. by Laws of 1916, chap. 323), since it was not given "for the purpose of correcting or perfecting any recorded mortgage" nor was a lien imposed "upon property not originally covered" by the prior instruments. The mortgage was, therefore, subject to the payment of a recording tax. ( People ex rel. U.S. Title G. Co. v. Tax Comm., 230 N.Y. 102; Matter of N Y State Gas Electric Corp. v. Gilchrist, 209 App. Div. 771; affd., 240 N.Y. 552.) The Tax Commission also determined that a recording tax of $1,250 was payable by the relator for the recording of the $250,000 mortgage. With this conclusion we do not agree. That mortgage, together with the bond which it purported to secure, was delivered to the Equitable Trust Company simultaneously with the delivery to it of the consolidation agreement. The agreement, which was in fact a mortgage, canceled the bond for $250,000 and supplanted the mortgage securing it with the new mortgage lien which it set up. No money had been advanced upon the $250,000 bond, and no debt had been represented thereby. As there had been no debt there had been no mortgage. At the moment of the delivery of that bond and mortgage, the new bond and mortgage, providing for the cancellation, came into being. Thus the delivery made of the $250,000 bond and mortgage, which might otherwise have caused them to spring into life, was synchronous with the delivery of the $1,000,000 bond and mortgage, which in terms provided for their extinction. There was, therefore, no moment of time when the $250,000 bond and mortgage had any vigor whatsoever. Since the bond created no debt, and the mortgage created no lien, we think that these instruments were wholly negligible and that the so-called mortgage for $250,000 was not a genuine mortgage, the recording of which called for the payment of a tax.
The determination, so far as it determines that a tax of $1,250 was due and payable, should be annulled, and otherwise in all things confirmed.
All concur, except VAN KIRK, J., dissenting with an opinion, in which McCANN, J., concurs.
The relator complains of the collection of the recording tax on the $250,000 mortgage. This tax is upon the mortgage, not upon any indebtedness whose payment is secured by the mortgage. The indebtedness recited in the mortgage is the measure of the tax. The tax is payable when the mortgage is recorded; its payment is a condition precedent to the recording. This mortgage was recorded; the tax was then legally due. The mortgage was a live, valid instrument when recorded. The execution and recording of the consolidation mortgage or agreement, however, soon after the $250,000 mortgage was recorded, cannot render illegal the tax thereon; nor can it render that which was a valid mortgage no mortgage.
McCANN, J., concurs.
Determination of the State Tax Commission, so far as it determines that a mortgage tax of $1,250 became due and payable upon the recording of the mortgage for $250,000, is annulled, and in all other respects confirmed.