30 N.J. Eq. 554 | New York Court of Chancery | 1879
The bill is filed against the corporation of Jersey City, under the act “ to compel the determination of claims to real estate in certain cases, and to quiet title to the same” (Lev. p. 1189). Under the act, such a bill may be maintained to quiet title as against alleged encumbrances. Holmes v. Chester, 11 C. E. Gr. 79; Bogert v. City of Elizabeth, 12 C. E. Gr. 568.
The city, in its answer, sets up a claim upon the premises •of the complainant described in the bill. It is the lien or encumbrance of certain alleged assessments for municipal Improvements therein mentioned, which, it alleges, “ were confirmed” by commissioners appointed by the justices of the supreme court, in accordance with the act entitled “An act to adjust unpaid assessments in Jersey City,” approved March 26th, 1873 (P. L. 1873, p. 442). It is not alleged in the answer, nor was it claimed on the hearing, that the complainant is barred or estopped in any way from denying the legality of the assessments. The original assessments are not set up in the answer, and they have not been proved or produced. Only the reports made by the commissioners, under the act of 1873, were set up and proved, and they alone were relied on by the defendants. The defendants rely entirely on the action of the commissioners in reference to the original assessments. It appears, by the reports of ■the commissioners, that, as to two of those assessments, they merely confirmed them, -without adjudging or determining that the amounts assessed on the property owners for benefits were not beyond the amount of benefit received, or even that the property was benefited at all. They merely declared what the true cost was, and confirmed the original assessment, whatever it may have been.
In the other assessments their adjudication was defective,, because, though it determined what the reasonable cost of the work was, and the part of it which ought to be borne by the city at large, it does not appear from it that the property was
It appears, then, that those assessments were made by the commissioners of 1873, on a principle which has been repeatedly and unequivocally condemned by the adjudication of the highest tribunal of the state—the assessment of the cost on the property without regard to the amount of actual benefit. No assessment upon the complainant’s land is made by any of the reports. It may be added (although, as before stated, no question was raised on that subject on the hearing), that the legislature cannot fix an unconstitutional assessment upon the property owner merely by fixing a limitation to his right to object to it, or by requiring him ■to object within a certain time, or in a certain way, under penalty of being regarded as having waived his objection.
The complainant is entitled to a decree that the defendants have no claim against the land described in the bill, for they have shown none whatever.