The receiver of taxes in the city of Hew Y ork seeks by this action to recover of the executors of Henry Lawrence the sum of $1,572 for a tax imposed upon the latter’s personal estate in the year 1881.
Under the statute, chapter 410 of the Laws of 1882 (being the Hew York City Consolidation Act of 1882), the prelimi*430nary inquiries are begun by the deputy tax commissioners on the first Monday of September of each year, and the tax lists are required to be placed in the hands of the commissioners of taxes by the second Monday of January thereafter, where they constitute what is termed the “annual record of the assessed valuation of real and personal estate,” and there remain open for examination and correction from the second Monday of January until the first Monday of May in each year, when they are closed to enable the commissioners to prepare assessment-rolls for delivery to the board of aldermen (Id., secs. 314 to 317).
By the 819th section of the act the commissioners are empowered to increase the assessment valuation of any real or personal estate at any time before the second day of April, and may diminish the same at any time before the closing of the books on the first day of May in each year, as in their judgment may be necessary for the equalization of taxation, but no increase thereof can be made by them after the books are open for inspection and review, except on a notice of twenty days before the closing of the books to the party affected by such increase. By section 828 the commissioners are required, on the first day of May in each year, to prepare from the books of annual record of assessed valuations, assessment-rolls for the several wards of the city, to each of which shall be annexed their certificate that the same is correct in accordance with the entries in the books of the record. The rolls, by the same section, must be delivered on the first Monday of July of each year to the board of aldermen, who, by virtue of subsequent sections of the act, are required to impose the requisite tax and cause the same to be properly set down or extended in the several assessment-rolls. Section 832 authorizes the board of aldermen to correct the description of real estate of non-residents so as to conform to the provisions of law, and if such alterations cannot be made, they must expunge the same from the rolls.
Henry Lawrence having died on the 22d day of June, 1881, *431after the time when the annual record was placed in the hands of the tax commissioners, and after it was closed against correction, hut before the delivery of the rolls by them to the board of aldermen, it is contended by the learned counsel for the defendants that the assessment of the personal estate of the defendants’ testator was not completed before his death, and that consequently no recovery can be had therefor by the plaintiff. They cite in support of their position the cases of People agt. Supervisors (1 Kern., 563); Mygatt agt. Washburn (15 N. Y., 316) and Townsend agt. The Mayor, &c. (16 Hun, 362; S. C. affirmed, 77 N. Y., 542).
The first two cases undoubtedly bear directly upon the question now involved, though of course they should be regarded as one, rather than separate, inasmuch as they grew out of the same transaction. It was there held, where one of the assessors, while engaged in ascertaining the names of the taxable inhabitants and the taxable property, in May, called upon a person then a resident of the town, and made an entry of his name and the value of his taxable personal estate at a given amount, and so informed him, and such person soon thereafter removed to another county, and afterwards, and in July, the assessors prepared and completed the assessment-roll, in which he was assessed for the above-named sum, that the assessment was not made till July, and the assessors had no jurisdiction to make it. The court there say (as reported in 1 Kern., 571): “ One assessor cannot make an assessment; it is the joint act of all, or at least of a majority of the assessors,” citing the statute and the precedent authorities. In the case as it stood as Mygatt agt. Washburn (15 N. Y., 320), the court, per Denio, Ch. J., say: “Evidently there must be some day, in the course of the proceeding, on which the assessment may 'be said to be made. The fixing of this day cannot depend upon the degree of diligence with which the assessors •perform their duty; "for in that case it would be different in different towns, and there would be a liability to a double assessment. In my opinion the assessment should be consid*432ered as made at the expiration of the time limited for making the inquiry, namely, on the first day of July. If there is any change of residence or in the ownership of the property after that day, it does not affect the assessment-roll; the inquiries are then completed. Any changes which the assessors are authorized to make after that time, are such as may be required to correct mistakes. No earlier day can be assumed, because what is done by one or all of the assessors prior to the first of July is inchoate and preparatory, and liable to be altered . according to their final judgment upon the matter. When the statute speaks of the time ‘ when the assessment is made,’ it refers to the binding and conclusive act which designates the taxpayers and the amount of the taxable property.” See, also, Clark agt. Norton (49 N. Y., 243); Westfall agt. Preston (Id., 349), which are in substance to the same effect.
All these decisions relate to the powers and duties of town assessors. While the times for discharging like duties by the tax commissioners of the city of New York, and the machinery by which the assessment of taxable property is accomplished, are different from those pertaining to other counties, yet these authorities render it not difficult to ascertain in the case before me — what they all aim at determining — the day when the assessment .must be deemed complete. As it seems to me, aside from such difference in the times in which the assessment is to be made, and the difference in the names of the instruments by which it is to be accomplished, the analogies between the cases cited and this one are quite perfect. It is argued -by counsel for the defendants, that all the proceedings of the tax commissioners are only preliminary inquiries; and, the rolls being open for inspection for fifteen days after they have been deposited with the board of aider-men, that it is the board of aldermen, and not the tax commissioners, who make the assessment, because, as they say, it is the board of aldermen who “ impose ” the tax. But making the assessment and the imposition of the tax are different things, and are not done by the same persons or bodies in any *433part of the State, so far as I am aware. Imposing the tax is nothing more than ascertaining the whole amount of taxes to be raised and the share of the burden which each item of the property already assessed shall bear. Assessment, as used in the statutes, is determining the value of a man’s property for the purpose of levying a tax. The whole sum to be raised through taxation is ascertained by them from the reports of the city comptroller and from other sources named in the statutes. The aggregate is then distributed over the assessed property, and, as the statute expresses it, is properly set down or extended in the several assessment-rolls which have theretofore been placed in their hands by the tax commissioners. In this respect the board of aldermen perform precisely the same corresponding duties as the country boards of supervisors, to whom the rolls are furnished by the town assessors, as illustrated in the cases before alluded to. It would be extremely difficult, if not impossible, to devise and carry out successfully a scheme by which a board of supervisors or a board of aldermen should determine the valuation of property for taxation in individual instances. An examination of the provisions of the several statutes consolidated in the second volume of the Laws of 1882, convinces me that it was the manifest and uniform purpose of all the legislation upon the subject to put the responsibility of assessment, namely, the fixing of the value of property for taxation, upon the tax commissioners alone.
There is a day, therefore, when the assessment must be deemed to be made, and be final (except, of course, in cases of amendments, and the correction of mistake, specially provided for by statute), while yet the annual record of the assessed valuation of property is still in the hands of the tax commissioners. That time is, in my judgment, the second Monday of January. From the first Monday of September to the second Monday of January these books of record are prepared by the deputy tax commissioners under the direction of the tax commissioners themselves. They are delivered *434into the hands of the tax commissioners by the deputy tax commissioners, where they remain open for examination and correction until the first day of May, when they are closed. After that the tax commissioners have no power over the subject-matter contained in them. As the annual assessment record, containing the names of the taxable persons and the valuation and description of tlieir property, it exists and is completed on the second Monday of January (See opinion of Ruger, Ch. J., in People agt. Commissioners of Taxes, delivered March 13, 1883, not yet reported). It is thereafter open only for corrections and amendments. On the first of May it is closed. After it is thus closed, the only duty or power of the commissioners which remains is to furnish assessment-rolls to the board of aldermen, with their certificate that they are correct, and to deliver them on the first day of. July, thus conforming, mutatis mutandis, to the practice of assessors of taxes in towns. Hence, following the adjudged cases leads to the same conclusion as does a sound inductive reasoning from the policy and the terms themselves of the statutes.
'While publication of the fact of such deposit, and that the rolls are open for inspection, is prescribed by law, no power is given to the board of aldermen or to any other person to correct them, save in respect to the amendments of the description of non-residents’ lands, already mentioned.
If these views are correct, it follows that the complaint states a good cause of action, and that the defendants’ demurrer should be overruled with costs. It is so ordered, with leave to the defendants to answer the complaint on payment of the costs of the demurrer.