166 Mass. 399 | Mass. | 1896
The first question in the case is whether the petitioner can contradict the record of the proceedings of the respondents so far as it recites the service of notice upon him. It is generally true that the record of a domestic judgment cannot be contradicted by oral evidence, but this is subject to some exceptions. A domestic judgment in an action at common law against an inhabitant of the Commonwealth, which recites that the defendant was duly served with process, or duly appeared by attorney, can be contradicted with respect to the service or appearance on a writ of error, and the fact can be tried and
No writ of error lies to such a tribunal as a board of health, and the only method of correcting errors in its proceedings in matters over which it has jurisdiction is by a writ of certiorari. While the record of. such a board generally cannot be contradicted any more than the record of a court at common law, yet there are exceptions in both cases, and we think that in the present case the recital in the record of the service of process can be shown to be false by evidence, and that on the facts found it must be taken that the notice was not served on the petitioner. The record recited: “ The notice of said hearing was served upon . . . the owners of all land upon which it was necessary to enter, and the owners of all land benefited by. the abatement of said nuisance, in person.”
The single justice before whom the petition was tried found as follows: “ I further find that the petitioner had knowledge of the proposed change in the condition of the brook and the adjacent premises not very long after the order was made; precisely how soon, the evidence did not enable me to determine, but certainly while the work was going on, for he was there and saw the workmen engaged upon it early in the autumn of 1891. From the circumstances of the case, and from his general intelligence and knowledge in regard to matters of this kind, and from his testimony, I find that he then believed that the work
The petition was filed on October 16,1894, and the assessments were made on January 16, 1892. The board of health acted under the provisions of the Pub. Sts. c. 80, §§ 28 -et seq. The petitioner in his brief does not ask that the proceedings of the respondents be quashed in any respect except as to the assessment upon him. If the question were of quashing the whole proceedings of the board of "health in abating the nuisance on the petitioner’s land, it might well be held on the facts found that the petitioner had been guilty of loches, and that a writ of certiorari should be refused, on the ground that justice does not require that the whole proceedings be quashed. When the petition was brought, the work had been completed at large expense, and the petitioner had stood by and seen the work done without making any objection. Stone v. Boston, 2 Met. 220. Noyes v. Springfield, 116 Mass. 87.
But the assessment stands upon a somewhat different ground. Pub. Sts. c. 80, §§ 28, 30, 32, have been amended by the St. of 1887, c. 338. Before this amendment there was no appeal from the decision of the board of health upon the necessity and mode of abating the nuisance; and there was no appeal from the assessment and apportionment of the expenses of the abatement, but this assessment was included in the city or town taxes, and was liable to abatement as other taxes were. There was an appeal from the estimate and award of damages by the board of health, and this remains as before. Pub. Sts. c. 80, § 35. By Pub. Sts. c. 11, § 74, application for an abatement of a tax must be made within six months after the date of the tax bill.
St. 1887, c. 338, gave an appeal to the Superior Court from the decision of the board that a nuisance existed, but the party appealing must give notice of his intention.to appeal within twenty-four hours after the decision, and within seven days must
As no notice was given to the petitioner, as required by the statutes, he has never been legally cited before the board of health to be heard upon the matter of the assessment, and he has had no opportunity to appeal from the decision of the board that a nuisance existed, and no opportunity to be heard upon the necessity and mode of abating the nuisance.
The seventh paragraph of the answer of the respondents is as follows: “ And further answering, your respondents say that the assessment for the benefit of the complainant’s premises was adjudicated by the board of health of said city of Malden to be three hundred forty-seven and twenty one-hundredths dollars ($347.20), payment of which was duly demanded of your complainant, but that your complainant neglected and refused to pay the same; and that on October 6, 1894, the said premises of the complainant were duly sold by George E. Hitchcock, the collector of taxes of said city of Malden, for non-payment of said amount assessed, all in accordance with the laws of this Commonwealth.” It has not been expressly found that the allegations of this paragraph are true, but, if the petitioner had notice of the assessment, undoubtedly he could have applied for a jury under St. 1887, c. 338. But under such an application he could not contend that the assessment upon him was wholly void by reason of a want of notice. Crandell v. Taunton, 110 Mass. 421. Foley v. Haverhill, 144 Mass. 852. Sisson v. New Bedford, 137 Mass. 255, 262. The notice provided by Pub. Sts. c. 80, §§ 30, 31, if duly served, is all the notice required to warrant a.11 the proceedings of the board. If this notice was not served on the petitioner, he received no legal notice of the fact that the board would proceed to make an assessment upon him. See Prince v. Boston, 111 Mass. 226. The assessment is somewhat in the nature of a personal judgment against the petitioner, and it is also made a lien upon his real estate benefited by the
A majority of the court are of opinion that the case is not so far distinguishable from Grace v. Newton Board of Health, 135 Mass. 490, as to affect the result there reached, and that the assessment is void. A writ of certiorari should issue quashing the assessment upon the petitioner. So ordered.
I am for denying the writ. The petitioner knew of the mistake, and he has lain by for some years before making any protest or complaint. He does not now intimate that there was no nuisance, nor that the best way of abating it was not adopted, nor that the work was not well or economically done, nor that the share of the cost of the improvement assessed upon his land was unfair. If he had been damaged, he might have the writ. But as the writ is not a writ of right, it should be denied because he fails to show that he has been injured or is in any worse position than if the notice had been duly served. Mr. Justice Holmes and Mr. Justice Knowlton concur with this view.