85 N.Y.S. 147 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1903
These are proceedings brought to vacate and set aside an assessment of the expense of paving and improveing South Culver street.
It appears that in May, 1894, the east line of the city ran through the center of South Culver street, from East avenue southerly to the Erie Canal bridge. In that month the owners of lots within the city limits on the west side of the street petitioned the common council to improve the street by paving the same the full width thereof, and at about the same time the owners of lots on the east side of the street without the city limits and within the town of Brighton presented their petition in writing, to the common council, reciting that the petitioners were the owners of all the real estate fronting upon the easterly side of that part of South Culver street sought to be improved, and of about two-thirds of the real estate
In the same month of May, 1894, the common council acted upon these petitions, and adopted its first ordinance for the improvement of the street, and " upon the theory that the petition signed by the residents of the city of Rochester when read in the light of the petition signed by the property owners of Brighton, authorized the assessment of the entire expense of the improvement upon the property upon the Rochester side of the said Culver street, leaving the properly owners thus assessed to collect one-half of such assessment from the petitioners owning property on the Brighton side of South Culver street,” the entire expense of the improvement was therein directed to be assessed upon the lots on the west or city side of the street.
The street was improved during the summer of 1895, and completed and accepted by the executive board of the city in October, 1895, and thereafter, in July, 1896, the common council confirmed the assessment-roll and the entire cost of the improvement was assessed upon the lots on the west side of Culver street. Thereafter one of the owners of lots assessed on the west side of the street having brought an action against the city to vacate and annul the assessment, the common council in December, 1901, recalled the said assessment-roll and vacated and set the same aside as illegal and void.
In the meantime the easterly boundary of the city had been extended by an act of the Legislature passed in May, 1895, so as to talce into the city the lands of the petitioners owning lands on the east side of Culver street, and in May, 1902, the common council by resolution recalled said former assessment, and by an ordinance finally adopted in February, 1903, made a new assessment, amending the former assessment by directing an assessment of the expense of the improvement
The power and authority of the common council to levy an assessment to defray a proportionate part of the expense of the improvement, upon lands of the petitioners in these proceedings owning lots and parcels of land fronting on the east side of Culver street, under the new or amended ordinance adopted iii February, 1903, depends, I think, upon the power and authority which the common council had upon the completion of the improvement in 1895.
The Legislature during the progress of the work extended the boundaries of the city so as to include the lands in question within the city limits, thereby bringing the lands of the petitioners within the jurisdiction of the common council. In the annexation of territory, the Legislature has the power to extend the limits of an existing municipality by annexing territory thereto, although such territory will receive no benefit from incorporation in return for the municipal burdens thereby imposed upon it, and although the annexed territory is thereby rendered liable for the pre-existing debts of the municipality. 20 Am. & Eng. Encyc. of Law (2d ed.) 1152. Upon this principle, and by so much the stronger reason, is the rule applicable, where the annexed territory has been improved by the municipality upon the petition of the owners and an agreement that their lands may be assessed proportionately for the improvement.
It follows that the common council had the power, upon the completion of the improvement in 1895, to assess a proportionate part of the expense of making the improvement upon the lots of the petitioners fronting on the east side of Oulver street, and, therefore, in making the new or amended assessment for the purpose of correcting the previous illegal and erroneous assessment, ample authority for which is found in
It is urged that some of the petitioners in these proceedings became purchasers of their lots after the improvement was made, without notice of the lien of the assessment or knowledge that the assessment for the improvement had not been paid, and, therefore, as bona -fide purchasers the assessment of 1903 should be held invalid as to them. This question is disposed of in Matter of Deering, 14 Daly, 89, 95; affd., 105 N. Y. 667, in which case Judge Bookstaver said: “ The learned counsel for the appellant contends that since the settlement of the Brown controversy, the ownership of the lots affected by this assessment has been changed several times over, and that these owners have assumed the assessment had been paid long before they became purchasers, and that to compel them to pay for the work now, would be unjust We fail to understand why the purchasers, since the settlement, should have made this assumption, rather than those who purchased before the settlement, or why either class should have made the assumption at all, when the improvement was patent to all who saw the lots, and when it could have been easily ascertained by proper inquiry, whether the assessment had been made and paid. If they failed to make this inquiry, they under the circumstances, should suffer, and not the city.”
The petition of the Leighton Lea Association and other petitioners and their agreement to pay proportionately one-h'alf of the expense of the improvement could doubtless have been enforced as a contract, but the city was not remitted solely to the enforcement of the personal obligation of the petitioners. Their petition and subsequent legislation had the effect of charging lands with the expense of the improvement. The,dealings of members of the Leighton Lea Association with the association were matters exclusively within their own control and could not in any way affect the interests of the city. It had the right to proceed against the lots benefited.
The point is made that the interest included in the assessment is largely in excess of the amount authorized by law.
Counsel may be heard further upon that point, and if so advised petitioners may offer further proof.
Ordered accordingly.