31 N.Y.S. 659 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1894
This is an appeal from a judgment of the special term enjoining the defendant from laying out and opening a street through a tract of land owned by the plaintiff, and from fixing a district of assessment for such improvement. We agree with the special term that the resolution adopted by the common council directing the improvement is fatally defective, in failing to specify according to which of the two plans and descriptions then on file in the city clerk’s office the street is to be laid out. This defect could not be obviated by the action of the city clerk in thereafter attaching to the resolutions a map not before the common council at the time of their action, nor by the parol evidence of the aldermen as to what map they had in mind. The case in this respect wholly differs from that of Lyth v. City of Buffalo, 48 Hun, 175. But, granting this proposition, such defect did not justify the interference of a court of equity. Mooers v. Smedley, 6 Johns. Ch. 28; Mayor, etc., of Brooklyn v. Meserole, 26 Wend. 132; Guest v. City of Brooklyn, 69 N. Y. 506. The remedy must be had at law, and the objection can be raised in any legal proceedings taken to open a street.
But the objection to the district of assessment presents a different question,—a question not free from doubt. It appears that, some time past, the city constructed a.sewer through the plaintiff’s land, and that the easement for such purpose was obtained by condemnation, the plaintiff being paid |10,000. The new street is laid out over the line of the sewer. By defendant’s charter (section 2, c. 184, tit. 7, Laws 1881), the expense .of improvements of this character “shall be assessed and be a lien upon the property benefited thereby according to such benefit.” By section 4, same title, the common council is required, at the time of ordering any improvement, to fix a district of assessment for the "expense of the improvement. The district fixed in this instance is confined wholly to plaintiff’s land, excluding from it some land tha't, under any practice that has come