195 Misc. 314 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1948
The petitioners are the owners in fee of the real property commonly known as 18 Edgewood Avenue in the city of Mount Vernon, New York, shown and designated on the official tax map as Lot 9, Block 2004, which they purchased from the respondent on or about October 23, 1945. The petitioners’ attorneys assert that before petitioners purchased the property the attorneys were informed by the comptroller of the city that Edgewood Avenue was a fully improved street. The respondent is at some pains to point out that the purchase was subject to the standard terms of sale which provided that the sale was subject to any state of facts a personal inspection might show and that the public records of the city department of public works at the time indicated there was no lateral sewer in Edge-wood Avenue. The attorneys for the petitioners reply that the comptroller assured them the street was fully improved and that his statement was apparently supported by a personal inspection by the petitioners’ attorneys which showed a manhole cover seventy feet east of G-ramatan Avenue, and one at the corner of La Porte Avenue, both on Edgewood Avenue and since there had been a swimming pool on the premises, reasonable observation indicated the availability of proper sewers.
Some time after the purchase of the premises while the owners were constructing a home, which the city has assessed for tax purposes at $35,400 in addition to $8,000 for the land, a total of $43,400, the petitioners discovered that there was no sewer between the manhole seventy feet east of G-ramatan Avenue and the manhole at the junction of Edgewood and La Porte some eighty odd feet east of their property and they petitioned the common council by letter signed by Philip Alpert, dated July 22, 1946, “ to extend the existing sewer on Edgewood Avenue ” to their residence on the south side of Edgewood Avenue “ approxi
The common council through the deputy city clerk replied and requested the presence of Philip Alpert at its next meeting to be held August 14, 1946. The petitioners apparently did not appear at the meeting but on September 11,1946, at a subsequent meeting, the common council adopted an ordinance, No. 57, September 11, 1946, “ Authorizing and Directing the Construction of a Twelve Inch Lateral Sewer in Edgewood Avenue From a Point Approximately 70 Feet East of Qramatan Avenue to a Point Approximately 270 Feet East of Qramatan Avenue ” under the control and direction of the commissioner of public works, and according to plans and specifications made by him which were thereby approved and adopted. The ordinance further authorized and directed the board of estimate and contract to proceed as provided by law to carry out ‘ ‘ the provisions of this ordinance ’ ’ and then in section 3 provided as follows:
“ § 3. When such improvement shall have been completed, the whole of the expense thereof shall be apportioned and assessed, according to law, to the end that the same may be confirmed and collected upon the property included within the following boundaries and description, being the property hereby deemed to be benefited thereby, and hereby established as the district of assessment therefor:
‘ ‘ At.t, lots, pieces or parcels of land fronting or abutting on Edgewood Avenue from a point approximately 70 feet east of Qramatan Avenue to a point approximately 270 feet east of Qramatan Avenue.”
A subsequent section directed the commissioner of public works “ to make an accurate map showing the several parcels of land within the district of assessment hereby established and to file the same with the Commissioner of Assessment and Taxation. ’ ’ Section 6 provided that the ordinance should take effect upon its approval by the board of estimate and contract. The board of estimate and contract approved the ordinance September 13, 1946, and in the resolution of approval directed the clerk to advertise for bids for the construction. This was done and the notice, published by the clerk over date of September 13, 1946, contained, among other things, the following:
*318 “ When such improvement shall have been completed, the whole of the expense thereof shall be apportioned and assessed, according to law, to the end that the same may be confirmed and collected upon the property included within the following boundaries and description, being the property hereby deemed to be benefited thereby, and hereby established as the district of assessment therefor:
“ All lots, pieces or parcels of land fronting or abutting on Bdgewood Avenue from a point approximately 70 feet east of Gramatan Avenue to a point approximately 270 feet east of Gramatan Avenue. ’ ’
On October 1,1946, the board of estimate and contract accepted the bid of the lowest bidder. By a letter dated July 7, 1947, the commissioner of public works certified that the public improvement had been performed and completed according to plans and specifications and in a good, substantial manner and maintained for the prescribed period of six months and that the contractor was entitled to the last 10% of the contract price. On July 23, 1947, the council passed an ordinance, No. 31, July 23, 1947, accepting as complete the work performed for this public improvement in which it recited, among other things, that the ordinance No. 57, September 11, 1946, had been approved by the Mayor on September 12, 1946, and had “ duly fixed the District of Assessment for said improvement ” and declared the improvement complete, and then in sections 2 and 3 of the ordinance provided as follows:
“ § 2. The total cost of said work be and the same is hereby fixed at the sum of $1,941.94, all of which is to be borne by the property lying within the District of Assessment for said improvement as heretofore fixed by ordinance of this Common Council.
“ § 3. The Commissioner of Assessment and Taxation is hereby directed to prepare a proper assessment roll and report and to assess and charge the expense of such improvement upon the property lying within the District of Assessment for said improvement as heretofore fixed by ordinance of this Common Council, in accordance with the provisions of the statute in such case made and provided.”
It is at this point that the record, presented by the petition and notice of motion, the answer of the respondent and the affidavit of Edward F. Hallaban, the commissioner of assessment and taxation, in support thereof, becomes less specific but it appears from Exhibit P attached to Mr. Hallahan’s affidavit that, under date of July 7, 1947, or approximately two weeks before
Under date of July 28, 1947, or about five days after the passage of ordinance No. 31, July 23, 1947, the owner of Lot 4, Block 2002, Mr. Bobert T. Brooks, addressed a letter to the members of the council, of which he directed copies also to the mayor, the comptroller and the commissioner of assessment and taxation. This is also included in Exhibit P attached to Mr. Hallaban’s affidavit. Mr. Brooks was as dissatisfied as Mrs. Van Noy but his complaint rested on observations more directly aimed at the city and its officials in their relations with all land owners within the district of assessment than at the conflict between the respective rights and interests of the new and old residents. He made it clear that he thought the city should have absorbed part of, or all, the cost of the improvement because by its sale of the real property to the petitioners and the improvements made by the petitioners, it had provided $43,400 worth of assessable property from which it would annually take a tax of about $1,600. He said, “This is obviously a splendid deal for the City and it will become a * gold mine ’ if the City shall now pass the Cost of the improvement along to the adjacent property owners.” He suggested that this would constitute a grievous misuse of the city’s taxing power and that, although he rejoiced with the city in its unusual investment, he did not wish to share the cost unless he received something tangible for his money. He adverted to the restrictive covenants in the deeds of the development which would make it unlikely that the large parcels of land now used would or could be built upon further to make
There is no further documentation in the record from which it appears exactly how these letters affected the city fathers and other officers, or what conferences were called or counsel taken. It must, however, be assumed that the messages were not wholly without effect, from the next document, chronologically, in the record, i.e., the assessment roll of August 11, 1947. It consists of two sheets in what is apparently the usual form. The first, or undersheet, shows under the headings ‘ ‘ Description of Premises ” and “ Lot No.” the figure “ 9 ” and under the subdivision “ Location ” the block number “ Block 2004.” The column for feet is blank. The column for name of owner contains “ Philip Alpert et al ” and the column for amount shows “ $1966.94 ”. At the bottom of the page, which is otherwise blank, is the total of $1966.94 marked ‘ ‘ Carried forward ’ ’. The second or upper sheet simply shows “ Brought forward $1966.94 ” at the top and “ Total $1966.94 ” at'the bottom, after which appear the recital of execution on the 11th day of August, 1947, at the city of Mount Vernon, and the signature of the commissioner.
Ordinance No. 59, September 10, 1947, was then enacted directing publication of a notice of a hearing to be held October 8, 1947, by the common council ‘ ‘ upon the question of the confirmation of the aforesaid assessment roll.” The notice dated September 12,1947, was duly published by the clerk and a letter under date of September 11, 1947, was addressed by the clerk to the petitioners containing a notification of the meeting to be held October 8, 1947, and a statement “ The assessment on your property as prepared by the Commissioner of Assessment and Taxation is as follows: Block 2004 Lot 9.....$1966.94.” At the meeting of the council on October 8, 1947, the attorneys for the petitioners appeared in their behalf and filed written objections to the confirmation of the assessment in the form of a letter under that date. The letter objected that the total cost of the improvement had been arbitrarily assessed on the petitioners’ property by the commissioner of assessment and taxation in utter disregard of the “ resolution ” of September 11, 1946, establishing the district of assessment. It referred to the circumstances in which the land was purchased by the petitioners from the city, the assurances of the city comptroller and the physical conditions which appeared to confirm his statement. It referred to the assessable value created by the'sale and the peti
The record presented does not reveal what took place between October 8,1947, and February 11,1948, but after a delay of four months the council, on February 11, 1948, enacted ordinance No. 44, February 11, 1948, by which it attempted to confirm the assessment roll, and to levy and assess “ the assessments ” therein on the property “ therein set forth.” The preamble of the ordinance recites the public hearing of October 8, 1947, and the subject under consideration, and the presentation of both written and oral objections to the confirmation but recites that “ after due investigation and deliberation ” the council had found they had no merit.
On their petition verified March 1, 1948, the petitioners by a notice of motion dated March 1, 1948, and returnable March 17, 1948, applied for a review of the assessment for the local improvement upon the grounds specified in their objections pursuant to section 232 of the Mount Vernon City Charter (L. 1922, ch. 490), namely, that the council lacked jurisdiction to enact ordinance No. 44, February 11, 1948, and that substantial error was committed in the preparation of the- assessment roll. The relief sought was an order “ setting aside, vacating, cancelling, annulling, or modifying or reducing the said assessment levied ” in ordinance No. 44, February 11, 1948, “ insofar as the same affects the premises of petitioners ”. The city made answer containing various absolute or technical denials of certain portions of the petition and set up as a separate and distinct defense that the council had jurisdiction both to direct the construction of the lateral sewer in Edgewood Avenue and to levy an assessment therefor; that the levy of the assessment was not fraudulent; that no substantial error was committed; that only the alleged filed objections could be considered on this application, in conformity with section 232 of the charter of the city; that the objections filed did not specify total lack of jurisdiction, fraud or substantial error as required by Sections 231, 232 and 238 of the City Charter, and that the ordinance No. 44, February 11, 1948, “ is controlling ” and demanded that the petition be dismissed.
The respondent preliminarily objects that the section 232 of the charter confines the review “ to grounds in said objections specified and no other.” It argues that the grounds stated in the notice of motion and petition are not those stated in the letter of objection filed on October 8, 1947. Although these were, perhaps, not artfully drawn, they did definitely raise the question of the power of the commissioner of assessment and taxation to prepare a tax roll different from that directed by the ordinance No. 57, September 11, 1946, and they definitely raised the question of the power of the council to confirm the assessment as made by ordinance No. 44, February 11,1948. Respondent could have been in no doubt about, or without notice of, these objections. They did not contain any suggestion that the council itself was without jurisdiction to proceed as it had before February 11, 1948, and we are thus relieved from a consideration of that question.
The question, however, does not arise in this proceeding, as has been said, because it was not raised in the objections, but even if it is assumed that the respondent is correct in its argument that ordinances No. 57, September 11, 1946, and No. 31, July 23,1947, were singly or collectively the ordinance described in section 43 of the charter, the commissioner of assessment and taxation acted without jurisdiction for he wholly ignored and disregarded the commands of both ordinances. He did not in compliance with ordinance No. 57, September 11,1946, apportion, assess and charge the, expense according to law to the end that it might be confirmed and collected upon the property included within the boundaries set out in the ordinance and there deemed and determined to be the property benefited by the improvement and “ established as the district of assessment therefor ”. Nor did he give more heed to ordinance No. 31, July 23,1947, for he deliberately omitted “ to assess and charge the expense of such improvement upon the property lying within the District of Assessment for said improvement ” as theretofore fixed by ordinance No. 57, September 11, 1946, or “in accordance with the provisions of the statute in such case made and provided ” as he was directed to proceed by ordinance No. 31, July 23,1947. He entered only one parcel of real property within the district on his assessment roll. He charged the expense on that property and made no apportionment at all. With no other property entered on his roll he could, of course, do little else. He had, in fact, himself attempted to establish a district of assessment different from that set up by the council in its ordinances and he wholly ignored its action and command. He acted wholly without jurisdiction. His action was not an irregular compliance with ordinances No. 57, September 11,1946, and No. 31, July 23, 1947; it was action wholly outside the ‘ authorization they attempted to provide and, thus, wholly outside his jurisdiction. His affidavit in support of the answer says he discovered that, before the improvement was made, Lots 4 and 5, Block 2002, and Lot 10, Block 2004, had had sewer service on other streets for which they had respectively paid assessments of $228.82, $1,054.68 and $453.30 and that it is the policy of the City of Mount Vernon, through the “ sound exercise of discretion ” by the common council and commissioner of assessment and taxation, never to assess twice for sewer service to the same prop
The powers, obligations and duties of the Mount Vernon commissioner of assessment and taxation are those conferred upon, imposed upon and appertaining to the office of assessors in towns (Mount Vernon City Charter, § 223). They act in similar circumstances under sections 236 and 237 of the Town Law and, by section 237 of the Town Law, the territory to be included by the assessors in the assessment roll is not fixed by the assessors but by the town board. Here, the council, in the unchallenged, special ordinances for the improvement, fixed and determined that territory and the commissioner had no power to change the area, or to omit any property from the assessment roll he prepared (Matter of City of New York [Pugsley Ave.] 218 N. Y. 234, 240; Hassan v. City of Rochester, 65 N. Y. 516). He had no authority to decrease (Hassan v. City of Rochester, 65 N. Y. 516, 519-520), or increase (Matter of City of New York [225th St.], 150 App. Div. 223, 225) the area of assessment. He was bound to assume that every separate parcel of property within the area derived some benefit, for the council had so determined and he could not modify their determination (Ellwood v. City of Rochester, 122 N. Y. 229, 236). How great that benefit was, he was charged with the duty of determining and fixing, but he could not determine that there was no benefit or omit some property entirely. He acted without jurisdiction when he intentionally omitted from the assessment roll a portion of the property designated by the council as benefited and within the district of assessment (McKechnie Brewing Co. v. Trustees of Vil. of Canandaigua, 15 App. Div. 139, 147; Matter of Klock, 30 App. Div. 24, 42). The ordinance directed the work to be done and the expense assessed in a particular manner and the eommis
Respondent argues that it is “ a ridiculous proposition to state that the Common Council could not pass the Ordinance of February 11th, 1948, for want of jurisdiction ’ ’. The courts have not always agreed with this view. In Matter of Turfler (44 Barb. 46, supra) an assessment was held illegal and void because the assessors went beyond the authorization in the ordinance directing the assessment and it was urged that although the assessment was illegal, a subsequent confirmation of it by the common council was a ratification of it by competent authority which cured the irregularity. The court rejected this saying at page 53, that the assessment in the first instance was illegal, because not made in conformity to the ordinance of the common council, and a confirmation of it could not cure the illegality.
■ In Doughty v. Dope (3 Denio 594, affd. 1 N. Y. 79, on the reasoning below) an assessment was held void because signed by .only two of three assessors and it was there urged that
Again, in Hassan v. City of Rochester (67 N. Y. 528, 537) the Court of Appeals said the provisions of the Rochester Charter which related to the confirmation of an assessment vested no authority in its council to confirm an assessment made in violation of an ordinance and where it was plainly apparent that the assessors had disregarded it. “ Such a proceeding of the assessors is unavailing because they exceeded their powers, and its confirmation cannot infuse into it any element of strength and vitality or remedy the difficulty.”
The court’s decision is, therefore, that the acts of the council through ordinance No. 31, July 23, 1947, toward making the improvement an assessment and levying the tax, were, under the law of this proceeding and application only, within the council’s jurisdiction, valid and effective; that the commissioner of assessment and taxation, however, acted wholly without jurisdiction and that his acts and the acts of the council, in attempted confirmation thereof, were wholly without jurisdiction, void and of no effect. Those acts will, accordingly, be so declared and vacated. Presumably, the assessor may proceed anew to comply with the ordinances directing him to assess the cost of the improvement upon the property within the district of assessment. His acts heretofore, in the opinion of the court, have in no way consumed or exhausted the powers given to him by the two ordinances because he has never acted under them, exercised the authority they conferred or fulfilled any of their provisions.
Submit order on notice.