82 N.Y. 196 | NY | 1880
The statutes assailed in this case (chap. 347, Laws of 1866, as amended by chap. 85, Laws of 1879) are not unconstitutional. They do not authorize the taking of water for a merely private use. While the title of the act indicates that the water supplied is for both public and private purposes, it must be construed to mean only such private purposes as are incidental to the public use and more or less involved in it, since the act itself contains no provision for other than a public use and is framed for that alone. It does not purport to benefit individuals, save and except as they share in the public use. We may resort to the title of an act for aid when the statute itself is doubtful or ambiguous, but not where the language is apt and the construction plain. (Cumines v. Supervisors of Jefferson, 63 Barb. 287;Pumpelly v. Owego, 45 How. Pr. 219.) We are not to adopt a rigid interpretation for the purpose of invalidating a law or resort to the title for aid in the effort. (Kerrigan v.Force,
The objection raised to the amendatory act of 1879 that it is void as amending an unconstitutional act by title is practically already answered. The act amended was not unconstitutional, and the title of the amending act is sufficient. (People v.Bridge,
It is next objected that no efforts to agree with the owners affected by the power conferred upon the corporate authorities were sufficiently shown. The petition alleged that fact. The inquiry here is confined to Norbury and Deckers, who are the only appellants before us. As to Norbury, the petition alleges that when called on to fix a price he named $8,000, a sum which the trustees claim to be more than ten times the value of his right. As to Deckers, they assert that when applied to to name a sum they declined to do so, and that their property is so incumbered by mortgages and judgments as to make it difficult, if not impossible, to fix a price in which all would concur. On the other hand, Norbury admitting that he named $8,000 claims that it was before the first application for commissioners, and that no proposition was at any time made on behalf of the trustees, except that by letter they stated to him how, and to what extent, they proposed to divert the water. Deckers made no affidavit in opposition. It is quite evident that negotiations had gone far enough between the trustees and these parties to indicate that an agreement was impossible. The former were not called upon to name a price, when that fixed by Norbury was so extravagant as to amount practically to a refusal. An effort to agree is all that is required; not a series of efforts or a negotiation prolonged into a debate. We think, upon the facts, the conclusion of the Supreme Court was, at least so far, sustained by evidence as to justify the appointment of the commissioners. That the effort to agree *201 with Norbury preceded the act of 1879 is made immaterial by section 3 of the act, which provided that an effort already made need not be repeated. We do not think the objections taken to this provision were well founded.
It is further suggested that the act is unconstitutional, because beyond appraising the compensation to be made; it authorizes the commissioners to fix and limit the maximum amount of water to be taken, and the times and periods when it should be drawn. The argument is that under the Constitution compensation is to be made by a jury or not less than three commissioners, and that the legislature can confer on them no other power. We find no such prohibition in the instrument. It is not our duty to put one there by an unnecessary inference. Indeed, the power conferred might well be deemed to be involved in the power to make compensation. The maximum amount of water to be taken, and the times or occasions, such as to draw on the stream only for surplus, are essential elements of the damages to be awarded without fixing which a just compensation could not be ascertained. The power to determine these questions must be lodged somewhere, and we know of no constitutional provision which forbids conferring it upon the commissioners.
It was objected that the act is unconstitutional because it does not provide that notice of the application for the appointment of commissioners should be given to the land-owners or parties interested. It is undoubtedly true that the latter are entitled to such notice of the proceeding as enables them to appear and be heard, but it is not essential to the validity of the act, however proper and appropriate it might be, that they should have notice of the formation of the tribunal which is to determine the damages. The act provides for notice of the hearing and gives ample protection in that regard to the rights of parties. If opportunity to appear and be heard is secured, it is wholly within the power of the legislature to determine the form and time and manner of notice to be given. (Matter of the EmpireCity Bank,
The further objection that there were owners whose rights would be affected by a diversion of the water, and upon whom no notice of the application had been served, amounts in the end to a claim that all damages suffered by all owners must be assessed in one proceeding, for if it may be done in several, the other owners may be proceeded against hereafter, and until then are not bound. Their damages are not assessed nor their rights affected by the proceeding before us, to which they are in no sense parties. We do not think the statute contemplates or requires a single proceeding. It nowhere imposes that condition. On the contrary, its language that if the trustees cannot agree with "any owner or occupant," they may apply for commissioners to make compensation for the damages suffered by "any person or persons," seems very plainly to leave to the trustees the option of one proceeding or many. At all events, in the absence of express directions in the statute to the contrary, we ought not to require that all proceedings under the act should be massed in one.
It is claimed, also, that the provision of section 4 of the act of 1866 providing that on appeal from the award of the commissioners the court may increase or diminish the amount of compensation is unconstitutional. That must be admitted. The Constitution provides (art. 1, § 7) that the compensation to be paid when private property is taken for public use shall be ascertained by a jury or by commissioners. To allow the court, on appeal, to increase or diminish the award is to take the question from the constitutional tribunal and so violate the fundamental law. But it does not necessarily follow that this unconstitutional provision destroys the whole act. Where a part of a statute is unconstitutional, that fact does not authorize the courts to declare the remainder void, unless the provisions are so connected together in subject-matter, meaning, or purpose, that it cannot be presumed the legislature would have passed one without the other. (People ex rel. City of Rochester v.Briggs,
A section of the Normal School Act of 1866, which appropriated $12,000 annually to the support of such schools out of *203
the common-school fund, we held to be unconstitutional in that respect, but sustained the validity of the remainder of the act, on the ground that so long as the legislature had the requisite power to carry into effect the general designs of the act, though it may have erred in matter of detail, yet as this error was capable of an easy remedy it should not be held to defeat the whole act. (Gordon v. Cornes,
The order appealed from should be affirmed.
All concur, except ANDREWS and DANFORTH, JJ., dissenting.
Order affirmed.