4 Abb. Pr. 310 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1868
The plaintiff has brought this suit to prevent the execution of an act of the legislature providing for the repavement of Union-street. She alleges ' that she is the owner of a lot on the southerly side of said street one hundred feet west of Smith-street; that the defendants, who are named in said act as commissioners for the purpose of carrying into effect the provisions thereof, have made a contract with the Nicolson Pavement Company for the laying down of said pavement; that the said work has been begun by tearing up the carriage way of said street, at or near Court-street, thereby rendering said street unsafe for travel; that the defendants threaten to lay down said pavement on said street at all hazards; that she is advised "and believes the said act of the legislature is unconstitutional and void ; that she will be put to great trouble and expense if the defendants shall not be restrained from doing said work; and she prays for an injunction accordingly.
It struck me upon argument that the plaintiff had not shown such an interest in the controversy as would entitle her to maintain this suit. The complaint contained no averment of any invasion or attempted invasion of the plaintiff’s property, nor does it even show that she may be subjected to the payment of a tax or assessment to defray the expenses of such a work. On the contrary, the expense of such work is, by the express provisions of said act, required to be levied and collected upon property within a district of assessment which is to be hereafter prescribed by the "common council of the city of Brooklyn. I am unable to see any ground upon which the plaintiff can maintain this suit. But this point was not raised on the argument, and I will not further advert to it than to refer to what I consider a sound principle on this subject, as laid down by the court of appeals in the case of Doolittle r. Supervisors of Broome County (18 N. Y., 155).
The act provides that the expenses of the work shall be levied and collected in the same manner as is now provided by law with reference to grading'and paving streets in Brooklyn. Such provision of law is contained in the charter of the city of Brooklyn, and requires the common council of said city to fix the districts of assessment, and to advertise for remonstrances against the same, before ordering the paving of a street. The plaintiff’s counsel contend that the commissioners cannot proceed with the work until the common council shall have fixed the dis
The remaining and important questions are: 1. Whether the act is valid ; 2. Whether the contract made is such as the commissioners were authorized to make.
The plaintiff contends that the act is invalid because it is in conflict with that provision of the constitution which requires that a private or local bill shall embrace only one subject, and that that shall be expressed in the title. I think it very clear that the act in question embraces only one subject, and that that is sufficiently expressed. If the title had been An act in relation to certain streets of Brooklyn,” it would not probably have been urged that it infringed the constitutional requirement on this subject. I think it is not a reasonable objection that the title is unnecessarily particular. Nor does the meaning of several things in the title make it embrace more than one subject. Whether in fact it does or not can be determined only by reading of the act itself, and not by that which the title expresses (People v. Lawrence, 36 Barb., 176).
The plaintiff also contends that the act is in violation of article 10 of the constitution,—which requires all the city officers whose election or appointment is not thereby provided for to be elected by the electors of said cities or of some division thereof as the legislature shall designate for such purpose. The point of the argument on the part of the plaintiff is that before the adoption of the constitution the city of Brooklyn existed as a municipal corporation: that
The only remaining objection raised by the counsel for the plaintiff is that the commissioners have violated that provision of the act which requires the contract to be made with the lowest bidder. The act provides that said street shall be paved with stone blocks known as Belgian pavement, or with wooden blocks known as Nicolson pavement, or with other improved pavement, or part with each kind, at the option of said commissioners. Contracts for furnishing material and. performing the work provided for by this act shall be given out upon ten days’ notice, &c., to the party or parties who shall appear to do the same at the lowest price, &c., &c. In the case of Dean v. Scranton (7 Am. Law Reg., 564), the supreme court of Wisconsin decided that where a city charter required that all work should be let by contract to the lowest bidder, the city authorities could not contract at all for laying the Nicolson pavement—the right to lay it being a patent right and owned by a single firm, and the work being therefore one which could not be open to competition. This decision has been followed by this court, sitting in the first district, I in the case of Dolan v. The Mayor. Without expressing any opinion as to the correctness of these decisions, I am clearly of opinion that they do not apply to this case, for the reason that the apt under consideration expressly au
The motion to dissolve the injunction must therefore be granted with ten $10 costs.