Summary
In Holmes Elec. Protective Co. v. City of New York (304 N.Y. 202), the Court of Appeals unanimously reversed this court which had erroneously held that a local utility tax was applicable to a company selling nonutility service, namely protection against unlawful entry and burglary.
Summary of this case from American Locker Company, Inc. v. City of New YorkOpinion
Argued March 5, 1952
Decided June 5, 1952
Appeal from the Supreme Court, Appellate Division, First Department, RABIN, J.
Frank A. Fritz, Arthur P. West and Joseph B. Diamond for appellant. Denis M. Hurley, Corporation Counsel ( Morris L. Heath and Stanley Buchsbaum of counsel), for respondents.
The plaintiff company conducts in the city of New York a business through which it safeguards buildings in that city against burglary or other unlawful entry (see Penal Law, art. 38). To that end, the company installs in every building committed to its protection a combination of electric devices whereby, in the event of a wrongful breaking or entry, an alarm is mechanically transmitted by wire to one of the company's offices from which guards in its own employ or city police are thereupon notified to go to the site of the disturbance.
The defendants — the City of New York and officers charged with the enforcement of its utility tax laws — characterize the plaintiff as a utility engaged in furnishing or selling telegraph service and on the basis of that classification the city has collected taxes upon the gross operating income which the company gets from its above-mentioned protective business. In this action, the company demands a judgment (1) declaring such taxes to be illegal, null and void, and (2) directing refund of payments thereof that were made by it under protest.
The complaint was dismissed by the court at Special Term. The Appellate Division affirmed the judgment of dismissal, one Justice dissenting, and the plaintiff then appealed to us from the judgment that was entered upon the order of the Appellate Division.
In 1942, we affirmed a decision of that court whereby the business then carried on by the plaintiff company in the city of New York was declared not to be the sale of electric telephone or telegraph service, within the meaning of the utility tax laws which at that time were in force in that city ( Matter of Holmes Elec. Protective Co. v. McGoldrick, 288 N.Y. 635). The business now conducted by the company in the city of New York is in no wise different from the business which it was conducting in that city when this court decided Matter of Holmes Elec. Protective Co. v. McGoldrick ( supra). Hence the judgment here demanded by the company is required by the cited case, unless a contrary determination is now called for by a definition of the phrase "telegraphic service" which became part of the utility tax laws of the city of New York in 1938, after commencement of the litigation which this court resolved in the cited case.
The 1938 definition of "telegraphic service" is in text as follows: "8. The term `telegraphic service' shall include any service requiring the use of electric or telegraph wires, equipment or device, instruments or any other means employed or employable in the transmission of messages, signals, alarms, notices, news, pictures, music or information of any kind." (Local Laws, 1938, No. 22 of City of New York; Administrative Code of City of New York, § Q41-1.0.) But that 1938 definition cannot now be taken to have altered the significance which in 1942 this court assigned to the phrase "telegraph service", when we adjudged that the then business of the company was service of a different character. For no claim has been made of the occurrence of any change in the service supplied by the company after 1942 when it was not engaged in the sale of "telegraph service", as we decided in Matter of Holmes Elec. Protective Co. v. McGoldrick ( supra).
Perhaps it should be added that the power of a city to tax utilities is limited by section 186-a of the Tax Law (see, too, General City Law, § 20-b; Matter of Brooklyn Union Gas Co. v. Joseph, 298 N.Y. 536). The City of New York, of course, was and is bound by section 186-a. No definition of "telegraphic service" is to be found therein. Nor was this omission inadvertent. Indeed in 1942, the Legislature was requested to include in the State Tax Law and in the State General City Law the above definition of "telegraphic service" which since 1938 has been part of the New York City utility tax laws that are here in question (see 1942 Assem. Pr. No. 688, Int. No. 654; 1942 Assem. Pr. Nos. 2539, 2614, 2633, Int. No. 2054; and Sen. Pr. No. 621, Int. No. 550, of Senate bills of the same year). These items of legislative history indicate an unwillingness of the legislators of the State to adventure themselves with the New York City definition of "telegraphic service" which that city has heretofore pressed upon them — a fact that seems to us to be significant (see McKinney's Cons. Laws of N.Y., Book 1, Statutes [1942 ed.], § 124; Woollcott v. Shubert, 217 N.Y. 212, 221; Travis v. American Cities Co., 192 App. Div. 16, 27).
In short, the power of the city to tax utilities was not enlarged when it adopted its own definition of "telegraphic service".
The judgment of the Appellate Division and that of Special Term should be reversed, with costs in all courts, and the case remitted to Special Term for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
LEWIS, CONWAY, DESMOND, DYE, FULD and FROESSEL, JJ., concur.
Judgments reversed, etc.