3 Barb. 275 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1848
By the Court,
The first question to be examined is, whether the sale, made by the common council of the city of Hudson, of the premises in question, to Israel Platt was valid. It is contended that the assessment under which the sale was made was illegal and unconstitutional; that it was in violation of that provision of the constitution which declares that no person shall be deprived of property without due process of law. (Const. art. 7, § 7.) It is conceded that the assessment was made without any notice to the owners; and for the purpose of raising money to pay for land taken and appropriated by the common council for a public square. The city charter authorizes the common council to take lands for such purpose. “ And in order to provide for the payment thereof, the common council shall cause the same to be assessed upon the owners or occupants of lots intended to be benefited by such improvement, and collected in the same manner in which estimates and assessments are directed to he made and collected in and by the preceding sections of this act.” (§ 30.) The 28th section provides for the making estimates and assessments by five disinterested freeholders, appointed by the common council; but there is nothing in the act requiring any notice to be given to the owners of land assessed for benefits.
In the present case the property was not taken for private use. The assessment was made to pay for the public square; and if it falls within the section of the constitution referred to, at ail, it must be the last clause, which declares that private property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation. In regard to the owner of the land taken for the square, this clause is clearly applicable; and it cannot be pretended that the common council had a right to take his land without making just compensation. Bqt it is said that there is a distinction between taking the land for public use, and taking money to pay for the land ; and that the latter is a mere exercise of the taxing power. Such is the reasoning of Justice Beardsley in Striker v. Kelly, (7 Hill, 24,) and of the chancellor in Livingston v. The Mayor, &c. of New- York, (8 Wend. 101, 2,) and of Chief Justice Savage in Owners of ground, &c. v. The Mayor, &c. of Albany, (15 Id. 374.) I must, however, confess that this reasoning has never been satisfactory to my mind. I am unable to perceive why it is not as much faking property, to take $500 from a man in money, as to take the same value in land; and why it is not as much devoting it to public use, to apply the money in payment for land, as to use the land itself for public purposes. It seems to me that it would be better to say that in both cases the property is taken for public use. In the one case, the just compensation is made by payment of the value of the land; and in the other, by benefits equal in value to the amount of money taken, A
It is certainly somewhat difficult to draw the dividing line, between that taking of private property for public use which falls within the legitimate exercise of the taxing power, and that which requires a just compensation, within the meaning of the constitution. It may perhaps be doubted whether any such distinction exists. Why may not the ordinary tax payer be said to receive a just compensation in the security and protection which the state throws around him? He pays taxes to defray the expenses of government; of the administration of the laws; for the purposes of education; for the repairing and construction of roads and bridges. Why may not he be said to be justly compensated, by sharing in the benefit of these measures ? I see no greater impropriety in this, than in allowing land to be taken for public use and making a just compensation, by estimating the benefits which are to result to the owner’s remaining property, as was done in the case of Livingston v. The Mayor, &c. of New- York, by the court of errors.
Whatever view may be taken of this branch of the subject, it seems to me, that the assessment in this case must be deemed invalid, because no notice was given to the owners of
For these reasons the plaintiff cannot rely on the title set up under the corporation sale.
The submission to arbitrators was clearly a discontinuance of the suit commenced by Amelia Hyatt, in 1842. (Smith v. Barse, 2 Hill, 387. Towns v. Wilcox, 12 Wend. 503.) That suit therefore cannot be set up as a bar to the present suit.
The remaining inquiry is, as to the validity of the award made by the arbitrators on the 16th of April, 1842. It does not appear that the award was ever sanctioned or acted on by the parties. It seems to have b.een made without any appointment of a time or place for a hearing, without any notice to the parties ; and without their being present, or having an opportunity of being heard, before the arbitrators. An award made under such circumstances is void. It is in the nature of a judgment of an inferior court which has not obtained jurisdiction of the
The plaintiff’s claim is then left to stand upon the title derived through the assignment of Smith to Little, and his conveyance to the plaintiff; by which the latter became the owner of the undivided half part of the premises in question, as tenant in common with Amelia Hyatt, the defendant.
There must therefore be a reference to ascertain whether the premises can be divided, &c. unless the parties agree that a partition can be made; in which case a commission must issue for that purpose.