May a school district in Suffolk County intervene in a tax review proceeding which challenges a real property assessment within the district? Contrary to the majority’s view, I believe such a school district’s real and substantial interest in the maintenance of its tax base entitles it to the grant of intervention. My opinion is unaltered by the recent amendment to *1040the Suffolk County Tax Act relieving school districts in that county of any obligation to refund tax overpayments. The instant appeal derives from a tax review proceeding brought against the assessing authorities of the Town of Babylon when the taxpayer’s application to reduce the assessment of its ' property from $9,300 to $2,790 was denied. In accordance with subdivision 3 of section 708 of the Real Property Tax Law, notice of the review proceeding was mailed to the clerk of the Lindenhurst Union Free School District No. 4 where the property is located. The Board of Education of that school district then moved to intervene in the proceeding as a party respondent alleging that it was the recipient of two thirds of the tax revenue derived from the assessment in issue and that the necessity for intervention was demonstrated by the multitude of similar proceedings involving property in the district. Although the intervention motion was unopposed, Special Term denied it on the ground that the Suffolk County Tax Act (L 1920, ch 311, § 3, as amd by L 1958, ch 95, L 1980, ch 837) renders school districts in Suffolk County immune from the liability to refund overpaid taxes. Intervention may be sought as a matter of right or by permission (CPLR 1012,1013). Intervention may be had as of right “when the representation of the [proposed intervenor’s] interest by the parties is or may be inadequate and the [proposed intervener] is or may be bound by the judgment” (see CPLR 1012, subd [a], par 2). Inadequacy of representation is generally assumed when the intervenor’s interest is divergent from that of the parties to the suit (McLaughlin, Practice Commentaries, McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 7B, CPLR 1012:3, p 152), while res judicata principles determine whether the movant may be bound by the judgment (see Matter of Unitarian Universalist Church of Central Nassau v Shorten, 64 Misc 2d 851, vacated on other grounds 64 Misc 2d 1027; Siegel, New York Practice, § 180). Where intervention is sought by permission and not as of right, the factors for consideration are whether the proposed intervenor’s claim or defense raises a question of law or fact in common with the main action, whether the intervention will unduly delay the determination of the action, and whether it will prejudice the substantial rights of any party (CPLR 1013). In actuality, however, the distinctions between intervention by right and by permission are not overly significant. Intervention should be permitted where the proposed intervener has a real and substantial interest in the outcome of the proceeding (Plantech Housing v Conlan, 74 AD2d 920; Matter of Petroleum Research Fund, 3 AD2d 1; Matter of Raymond v Honeywell, 58 Misc 2d 903; 3 Carmody-Wait 2d, NY Prac, § 19:135). As one commentator has noted, the focus should be “on whether the prospective intervener has a sufficient stake in the outcome and enough to contribute to the resolution of the controversy to justify [its] inclusion” (Shapiro, Some Thoughts on Intervention Before Courts, Agencies, and Arbitrators, 81 Harv L Rev 721, 726). Patterned after former rule 24 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the CPLR intervention provisions were intended to be liberally construed (see Bay State Heating & Air Conditioning Co. v American Ins. Co., 78 AD2d 147; Matter of Eberlin v Herman, 18 AD2d 1068; Mann v Compania Petrolera Trans-Cuba, 17 AD2d 193; Twelfth Ann. Report of NY Judicial Council, 1946, pp 218-232; 2 Weinstein-Korn-Miller, NY Civ Prac, par 1012.05; see, also, CPLR 104). Under the prevailing view in this State, school districts may intervene in tax review proceedings (see Plantech Housing v Conlan, supra; Matter of Stanford Assoc. v Board of Assessors of Town of Niskayuna, 67 Misc 2d 477, affd 39 AD2d 800; Matter of Magee v Board of Assessors of Town of Nelson, 49 Misc 2d 499, affd sub nom. Matter of Fieser v Board of Assessors of Town of Nelson, 24 AD2d 1045; Matter of Xerox Corp. v Sanger, 79 Misc 2d 480; Matter of Raymond v Honeywell, supra; Matter of Rapone v Shokey, 43 Misc 2d 87). This jurisprudence has its *1041predicate in the potential effect of reduction on the school district tax base (Matter of Stanford Assoc. v Board of Assessors of Town of Niskayuna, supra; Matter of Raymond v Honeywell, supra; Matter of Rapone v Shokey, supra), liability for refunds under section 726 (subd 1, par [c]) of the Real Property Tax Law (Plantech Housing v Conlan, supra; Matter of Xerox Corp. v Sanger, supra; Matter of Magee v Board of Assessors of Town of Nelson, supra), and the requirement of subdivision 3 of section 708 of the Real Property Tax Law that notice of the proceeding be given to the affected school district (Matter of Xerox Corp. v Sanger, supra; Matter of Stanford Assoc. v Board of Assessors of Town of Niskayuna, supra; Matter of Raymond v Honeywell, supra). Whatever its significance elsewhere, however, refund liability has never been an intervention factor in Suffolk, where the custom of not imposing refund chargebacks on school districts has now been supplanted by the amendment of section 3 of the Suffolk County Tax,Act (L 1980, ch 837, eff Sept. 1, 1980), extinguishing any liability for such refunds. Under the current provision, the burden of refunding school taxes rendered excessive through tax review proceedings rests with the county which-may, in turn, charge its outlays back to the town involved (L 1980, ch 837). Although such chargebacks must be borne by school districts in most of the rest of the State (see Real Property Tax Law, § 726, subd 1, par [c]), the legislative bill jacket for the 1980 amendment of the Suffolk County Tax Act establishes that the new law merely continues long-standing procedure in th&t county under which refunding is a town and county obligation without school district participation. More precisely refined, then, the issue is whether the formal elimination of refund liability for Suffolk school districts has created a change of such proportion as to extinguish their right to intervene. I conclude that it has not. My analysis begins with an incontestable factual proposition — that almost everywhere the local real property tax base directly provides over half the revenues which finance educational operations (see Board of Educ. v Nyquist, 83 AD2d 217, 224, mod 57 NY2d 27). It therefore takes no depth of intellectual endeavor to deduce that decreases in the tax base diminish the ability to fund education. With two thirds of the real estate tax moneys collected in the Lindenhurst School District accruing to the district, its interest in the integrity of that revenue source is substantial (see Matter of Teleprompter Manhattan CATV Corp. v State Bd. of Equalization & Assessment, 34 AD2d 1033). Once the base has been reduced by judicial adjudication concerning a particular assessment, any future increase in that assessment is strongly impeded by principles of res judicata, for the value fixed in a tax review proceeding cannot properly be raised by an assessor in a future year unless there has been a leap in true value after the adjudication. As a consequence, the deadening effect of an adverse adjudication may have an extended degree of endurance. Another basis for the grant of intervention is statutory construction. When it mandated that notice of tax review litigation be given to school districts (Real Property Tax Law, former § 708, subd 2), the Legislature' manifested an intent that such districts “should have the opportunity of seeking to sustain the assessments as made or that the [districts] at least should have forewarning of an impending change in valuations affecting its tax base” (Long Is. R. R. Co. v City School Dist. of City of Long Beach, 13 AD2d 782, 783; Matter of Raymond v Honeywell, 58 Misc 2d 903, supra). While the notice provision also serves to warn of refund liability (see Matter of Magee v Board of Assessors of Town of Nelson, 49 Misc 2d 499, affd sub nom. Matter of Fieser v Board of Assessors of Town of Nelson, 24 AD2d 1045, supra), it is significant that termination of that liability in Suffolk was not accompanied by deletion of the notice requirement. Since the notice requirement reflects legislative recognition of school district interest in tax review proceedings and *1042their outcome (cf. Matter of Wallace v MVAIC, 25 NY2d 384), and intervention is the only meaningful action a school district can take to protect that interest, it is. apparent to me that the Legislature intended that self-protection be a course open to school districts. Furthermore, since the Legislature is deemed to be aware of the jurisprudence permitting intervention (see Transit Comm, v Long Is. R. R. Co., 253 NY 345, 355; Orinoco Realty Co. v Bandler, 233 NY 24, 30), its 1980 amendment to the Suffolk County Tax Act should not be construed as abrogating for Suffolk the general rule permitting intervention unless such an intention to abrogate has been clearly expressed (see Burnside v Whitney, 21 NY 148; McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 1, Statutes, § 301, subd b). Not only has there been no express declaration of any intent to prevent intervention, but the legislative history of the amendment itself indicates that its sole purpose was to codify long-standing Suffolk County practice (see legislative bill jacket for L 1980, ch 837). Since that practice is unchanged by the amendment, I am mystified as to why it should be given the rather grandiose construction of barring Suffolk school districts from protecting their revenue sources. A final reason for granting intervention is the possibility that school district interests may not be represented adequately by town counsel (see CPLR 1012, subd [a], par 2; Siegel, New York Practice, § 180). The problem is not town attorney incompetence, but the fact that town and school district interests do not always coincide (see McLaughlin, Practice Commentaries, McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 7B, CPLR C1012:3, p 152). A town administration may be motivated by considerations apart from the merits of a particular case, for “resource constraints and even political considerations may govern the decision whether to litigate and how far” (see Matter of Martin v Ronan, 47 NY2d 486, 491). Judicial notice may be taken of the fact that a town’s financial interest in the results of tax review litigation always will be considerably smaller than that of a school district within a town. With a tax base almost always larger and an individual tax bite always smaller than that of a school district, town finances are considerably less shaken by individual assessment reductions. The constraint on town incentives to indulge serious litigation expenses to protect any particular assessment is obvious. With only $6,510 in assessed value involved in the current proceeding, it is difficult to envision any strong town impulse to expend for defense sums beyond the town’s own tax yield from the assessment. Thus, the degree and extent of resistance to be interposed to defend a particular assessment may differ according to the degree of benefit from that assessment and warrant school district participation to shield the benefit it receives (see Matter of Teleprompter Manhattan CATV Corp. v State Bd. of Equalization & Assessment, 34 AD2d 1033, supra; Siegel, New York Practice, § 180). I do not imply that towns are uninterested in protecting assessments or that, in most cases, their defense lacks vigor, but considering the difference in interest that sometimes may be involved, nothing in the recent amendment should be deemed to deprive Suffolk school districts of the right that districts elsewhere have — to contest reduction proceedings to the extent they believe requisite to the maintenance of their financial interest. My conclusion as to intervention has not been reached without consideration of Matter of Sperry Rand Corp. v Board of Assessors of County of Nassau (Supreme Ct, Nassau County, July 22, 1980, Farley, J., affd without opn 77 AD2d 822, mot for lv to app dsmd 52 NY2d 702), which denied a Nassau County school district’s motion to intervene in a tax review proceeding. The case is distinguishable for two reasons. First, the motion to intervene in Sperry Rand was untimely because it was made on the eve of trial after the case had been pending for approximately eight years. Timeliness, a sui generis inquiry, depends on whether intervention will *1043confuse the issues or unduly delay litigation to the serious detriment of other parties (see 2 Weinstein-Korn-Miller, NY Civ Prac, par 1014.02). Since the school district in Sperry Rand could have sought intervention at an earlier stage of the proceedings, the lateness of its effort seriously weakened the merits of its claim to intervention (see Krenitsky v Ludlow Motor Co., 276 App Div 511, mot for lv to app dsmd 301 NY 609). Second, school districts in Nassau County are not entitled to notice of tax review proceedings (Nassau County Administrative Code, § 6-17.3), a fact which arguably evinces some legislative intent not to permit intervention under the Nassau assessment scheme which is administered by county officials (see Matter of Wallace v MVAIC, 25 NY2d 384, supra). In any event, I cannot view this court’s affirmance without opinion in Sperry Rand as disestablishing the body of general jurisprudence permitting school districts to intervene in tax review litigation. In sum, the interest of the appellant Board of Education in future tax revenues warrants its intervention to protect the source of those revenues. This interest survives the formal abolition of refund liability and justifies participation in the instant proceeding. Accordingly, I vote to reverse and to grant the motion to intervene.