85 N.Y. 489 | NY | 1881
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *491
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *492 This is a proceeding under the General Railroad Act (Chap. 140 of the Laws of 1850, as amended by the act chap. 282 of the Laws of 1854), to acquire title to land in Gravesend avenue, on Long Island, for the purposes of the Prospect Park and Coney Island Railroad Company. Commissioners of appraisal were appointed, and after hearing the parties they made their report, awarding to the owners each $1 as compensation for the lands taken. That report was confirmed at Special Term; but, upon appeal to the General Term of the Supreme Court, the order of confirmation was reversed and the report was set aside and new commissioners appointed, who were ordered to make a new appraisal. It appears from the opinion of the General Term then pronounced that it set aside the report of the commissioners on the ground that they had awarded but nominal damages, when the land-owners appeared from the case as then presented to be entitled to more substantial damages.
A hearing was had before the new commissioners, and they made their report, which again awarded to the land-owners nominal damages, $1 each for lands taken. The land-owners then made a motion at Special Term to set aside and vacate such report on the ground that it was in violation of and in conflict with the opinion and decision of the General Term upon the prior appeal, and for gross error and misconduct, and the notice of motion also asked for the appointment of new commissioners. That motion was opposed by the railroad company upon affidavits, and was denied.
The company then made a motion at Special Term for confirmation of the report of the commissioners, and it was confirmed; and at the same time the land-owners made a motion that the report be sent back to the commissioners, with directions that they should state the grounds of their decision and the rule of law adopted by them in making the same, and the motion was opposed upon affidavits on the part of the railroad company, and was denied.
The land-owners then appealed from the three orders of the Special Term above mentioned to the General Term, and there *494 they were all affirmed, and then they appealed from the orders of affirmance to this court.
The point is made that these orders are not appealable to this court, and we are of that opinion. The order made at Special Term refusing to set aside the report of the commissioners on the ground of their misconduct was one resting in the discretion of the Supreme Court, and is not reviewable here. (In the Matter ofthe N.Y.C. H.R.R.R. Co.,
The order, denying the motion of the land-owner to have the report sent back to the commissioners with directions to them to state the grounds of their decision, was one resting in the discretion of the Supreme Court. It was at most mere matter of practice. The report contained all that the statute requires, and, even if the court could have properly granted *496 the motion, the land-owners had no absolute right to have it granted.
We are now brought to the main appeal — that from the order confirming the report of the commissioners. The act of 1850 provides, in section 17, that the report of the commissioners shall, upon notice to all the parties interested, be presented to the court for confirmation, and that the court shall confirm the same. And then it is provided in section 18 that either party may appeal to the Supreme Court from the report and appraisal of the commissioners, and that the court, upon such appeal, may order a new appraisal before the same; or new commissioners, and that the second report "shall be final and conclusive." If the second report does not increase or diminish the amount awarded by the first report, it need not be presented to the court for confirmation or any further action. If it increases or diminishes the amount awarded by the first report, then the further action of the court is needed, not for the confirmation of the report, but for the purpose of regulating the difference between the awards by the first and second reports.
This was a second report, and the amount awarded to each land-owner was the same as by the first report. The order of confirmation at the Special Term was, therefore, entirely useless and harmless, and nugatory as well; and so the order of the General Term, affirming that of the Special Term, so far as I can perceive, served no purpose, and decided nothing. The appeal to the General Term brought there no question for review. The report of the commissioners, as to the amount of damages, was of itself final and conclusive. If the land-owners, in such a case, claim that there was any irregularity, fraud or mistake in the proceedings of the commissioners, or back of such proceedings, their remedy is by motion to set the award and proceedings aside, and not by appeal from the award, or the order confirming the same; and, from orders made upon such motions, appeals may be had, even to this court, if they involved substantial rights, and do not rest in discretion.
But if we assume that, by this appeal, the report and award *497
of the commissioners are brought before us, yet we are of opinion that there is nothing for us to review. The commissioners are to determine the amount of compensation to be made to the owners of land taken, and in making such a determination, they must decide all the questions involved. They may err in their judgment and yet the statute makes a second report "final and conclusive." That cannot be reviewed by appeal or certiorari. Here the first commissioners, after hearing the evidence and viewing the lands, awarded one dollar to each of the land-owners. The Supreme Court, upon appeal to it, thought that the amount awarded was not large enough and ordered the new appraisal. The new commissioners heard the parties and the evidence, viewed the premises, and had before them for their guidance the law as laid down by the General Term, and they again determined that the land-owners were entitled to but nominal damages. They may have erred in their judgment, but the law gives no other tribunal the right or power to correct the error, if one was committed. In the Matter of the New YorkCentral Railroad Company v. Marvin (
It is further claimed that the construction which holds the second report of the commissioners final and conclusive renders the act of 1850 in that respect unconstitutional, because it deprives the Supreme Court of its constitutional jurisdiction, and denies to the land-owner due process of law. A decisive answer to this is that the commissioners are the tribunal provided by the Constitution to ascertain the compensation to be made to land-owners in such cases. (Constitution, art. 1, § 7.) The compensation is to be ascertained by a jury or by commissioners appointed by a court of record. When commissioners have been appointed, no other tribunal can ascertain the amount of compensation or increase or diminish the amount which may be awarded by them. The whole question is submitted to them. Without any violation of the Constitution, the legislature could have made the first report final and conclusive, and that would have been the very "process of law" provided by the Constitution. The commissioners may err like any other tribunal of final resort, and for such error there is no remedy. If their proceedings are fraudulent, illegal or irregular, they may undoubtedly be set aside, or they may be reviewed upon the first appeal authorized. Here the only allegation made is that the compensation awarded is merely nominal when it should have been substantial. No fraud is alleged and no irregularity, and no other illegality is claimed. We do not know that the amount awarded is not all the damages which the commissioners found the land-owners suffered. They proceeded regularly, heard the parties and their evidence, viewed the premises and made their decision. The law says such decision shall be final, and that ends it.
The appeals must be dismissed, but without costs of appeal to this court.
All concur, except FOLGER, Ch. J., absent.
Appeals dismissed. *500