2 N.Y. 140 | NY | 1854
Neither the act of 1787, regulating the buildings, streets, wharves and slips in the city of New-York, or that of 1801, with the same title, conferred the power to take lands for the purpose of altering streets; and the authority granted was consequently limited to those cases which did not require the exercise of the right of eminent domain. The assessments made by virtue of those statutes for sums expended for streets, &c., were to be imposed by commissioners, subject to the approval of the common council by whom they were appointed, and might “be sued for and recovered, in like manner as if the houses and lots assessed were mortgaged for the payment.” By the act of 1812, § 1, the authority to take lands for the purpose of enlarging, straightening, altering or otherwise improving the streets of the city was granted to the common council; the commissioners of assessment to be appointed and their proceedings to be supervised and approved by the supreme court. The laws above mentioned were in force in 1813, when “the act to reduce the several law's relating particularly to the city of New-York into one act” was enacted. (2 R. L., 342, 433.) The provisions of the acts of 1787 and 1801, so far as they relate to streets unconnected with wharves, were embodied .in the law of 1813, under the head “of paving and regulating streets, &c;” and the provisions of the act- of 1812, upon the same subject, under the head “ of opening and laying out streets, &c.” The remedies given by the act of 1813, for the collection of the assessments for “ paving, and regulating, and the opening of streets,” by those sections found under those captions respectively, are: First, that the assessment is declared a lien upon the lots benefited. Second, it may be enforced by distress and sale of the goods of the owners and occupants, who are made liable for its payment; and in case of opening streets, an action of debt or assumpsit could be maintained for its recovery. (§§ 175, 186.)
With this general reference to the law of 1813, and to
It may be conceded that regard should be had to the headings in this act, which were adopted as a matter of convenience in the compilation. But they can claim no more respect than we are accustomed to yield to the fonnal title of a statute. Now, it is notorious that the discrepancy between the headings and subjects of our laws was so frequent, that a constitutional provision was deemed necessary to guard against imposition upon a class of legislators whose knowledge of bills was supposed to be gathered principally from the title. Again, it was not the design of the legislature that the provisions under the respective captions should each form a complete system. ’For example, the authority to sell lands for assessments, which the appellant insists was the appropriate remedy in. this case, is not found under the head “ of paving and regulating streets,” or that of opening and laying them out, but in section 459, under a distinct caption. In a word, the act of 1813, though compiled from a large number of statutes relative to the city of New-York, was intended to supersede them, and to form a-system of regulations capable of being interpreted and administered in most instances without reference to previous enactments. In effecting this object, it was natural that subjects between which there was only a specific difference should be grouped under appro
(2d.) There is no force in the suggestion, that by the sale of the assessed premises, and the payment of the money by the purchaser, the debt was satisfied. The sale was one step in a series of proceedings, all of which were necessary to divest the appellant of the absolute ownership and control of his property, and to furnish the only consideration for which the purchaser advanced his money. In consequence of a misapprehension of the law, those proceedings were defective in an essential particular, and the sale, in consequence, became utterly void. The owner lost nothing, the purchaser gained nothing, and the corporation received nothing which they could legally retain. Such a result is anything but a satisfaction of a preexisting debt. If the corporation have lost their claim, it is a forfeiture incurred for misconstruing the law. But I do not understand that this penalty is inflicted in any case of a judicial or quasi judicial sale, where the creditor has acted
And finally, if the hen continued, and it has not as I think been discharged, it was in the nature of a judgment. The assessment and its confirmation were judicial acts, and the statute makes the sum thus found a lien upon the premises assessed, when the report is filed. The analogy is certainly strong between the two ; and as the legislature have not fixed the time when this incumbrance shall cease to bind the lands charged, it will work no injustice to the appellant, who has continued to be and is now the owner of the premises, to apply the limitation prescribed by the law to judgments to this lien also. The judgment of the superior court must be affirmed.
The court below considered the sum assessed upon the defendant by the commissioners of estimate and assessment, whose report was confirmed on the 3d day of April, 1839, as a lien in the nature of a mortgage upon the lot of land in respect to which it was assessed; and the judgment appealed from consequently contains the usual provisions in a decree of foreclosure of a mortgage. The defendant maintains that the provision of law, giving to certain assessments in the city of New-York the effect of a mortgage lien, does not embrace this assessment; that if it should be held to embrace it, then that the lien was 1 extinguished by the sale of the lot and the payment of the purchase money to the corporation in October, 1841; and finally, if there were no other defence, that the plaintiffs are bound by the limitation of six years, which it is insisted is applicable to this demand.
(1.) The two hundred and twenty-third section of the statute entitled “An act to reduce several laws relating particularly to the city of New-York into one act,” passed April 9, 1813 (2 R. L., 433), contains the provision relied upon by the plain
(2.) I am of opinion that the lien was not extinguished by ihe sale of the premises for a term of years, which took place in 1841. Should it be admitted that the statement in the conditions of sale, to the effect that if irregularities were discovered which should prevent the sale from being effectual the purchase money and interest should be returned, was unauthorized by law, it would not aid the defendant. It would perhaps prove that the sale was illegal. But having made such a proposal to the purchaser, and it turning out that by reason of a formal defect the sale had -become inoperative, returning the money was only fulfilling the bargain which had been made. The whole proceeding authorized by the acts of 1813, 1816, 1840 and 1841 was necessary to be gone through with, in order to divest the title of the person assessed and to confer title upon the purchaser. Until the last step had been taken, nothing had been done to disturb the owner in his possession or his title, and before that step was had the inchoate proceeding was abandoned with the consent of the purchaser, and pursuant to one of the terms upon which the property was offered for sale. The proceeding thus became void from the beginning. Although the corporation at one time had the purchaser’s money in their hands to the amount of the assessment, it was a conditional and not an absolute payment; and though, until default was made in perfecting the title, the remedy for the assessment was probably suspended, it was never
(3.) The statute of limitations relied on, is that contained in the Revised Statutes, by which it is declared that “ all actions of debt founded upon any contract, obligation or liability, not under seal, excepting such as are brought upon the judgments or. decrees of some court of record of the United States, or of this or some other state,” shall be commenced within six years next after the cause of such action accrued, and not after. (2 R. S., 296, § 18, subd. 1.) There is a difficulty in holding this assessment to be a judgment of a court of record; for, although the supreme court acted in the matter by making an order confirming the report of the commis
The result of the foregoing positions, if they are correctly laid down, is, that the judgment of the superior court was right and should be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.