84 N.Y.S. 341 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
The relators are the owners of property in the twenty-third and twenty-fourth wards, New York city, and claim to be entitled under chapter 537 of the Laws of 1893, as amended by chapter 567 of the Laws of 1894, to receive compensation for damages thereto caused by changes of grade of the streets in that locality with respect to the tracks of the Harlem railroad made by virtue of chapter 721 of the Laws of 1887, and other statutory enactments. They filed their claim with the commissioners appointed under the statutes ; but the commissioners entered in the comptroller’s office an order dismissing the claim, which order stated that the dismissal rested upon the ground that the commissioners had no jurisdiction to hear the claim as the lands described aré not within the area limited ; and it also recites that both parties were heard and due consideration given to •the motion to dismiss made by the corporation counsel. Thereafter the commissioners concluded that they had erred in the decision thus made and granted a motion by the claimants to reopen the dismissed claims, and entered an order to that effect.
Before anything further was done, however, the terms of the commissioners expired, and thereafter new commissioners were appointed. The new commissioners took up the question as to the propriety of gran ting, the relators any relief, and in opposition thereto the corporation counsel made two objections, first, that the claim of the relators having been dismissed by the order originally entered, the commissioners had no power to reopen such dismissed claim and that the present commissioners could not go into the matter, the contention being that the commissioners having exercised their authority once it had ceased to exist; and, second, that in any event the commissioners had no jurisdiction to award any damages to the relators for the reason that the property was not within the area as limited and designated in the acts.
After having these facts brought to their attention and listening to considerable evidence on the subject" of the area covered by the acts conferring authority upon them, and the actual location of the relators’ property, the new commissioners entertained a motion by the corporation counsel that no further testimony be received with respect'to the merits of the claim and a decision was so entered, the commissioners holding that there was no power to review the original order dismissing the claim and that certain of the property which they had been considering was without their jurisdiction. Thereafter the commissioners resigned and their resignations were accepted by the mayor. The claim of the relators having thus been rejected, they seek by certiorari to review the decision of the commissioners that no further testimony with respect thereto should be taken.
Two principal questions are thus presented, namely, as to whether it was proper and competent for the commissioners to review and recall the order first entered dismissing the claim of the relators and to .consider it upon the merits, and whether the jurisdiction of the commissioners extended to the claim made for the Belmont property. This latter question it will be unnecessary to discuss in view of the conclusion which we have reached that the commissioners properly refused to hear any further testimony with respect to the merits of the claim of the relators on the ground that the order first entered dismissing the claim was a determination which could not be recalled by the commissioners and was still subsisting.
In the case at bar we have to consider the act of a board of commissioners appointed by.special law with prescribed powers, náinely, the determination of claims brought before them for damages alleged to have been sustained by reason of the changes of grade' made under legislative sanction and direction. The position occu
That this rule obtains with respect to commissioners appointed to assess damages appears from the case of People ex rel. Mann v. Mott (60 N. Y. 649), wherein it was held, as stated in the head note, that “ When the assessment of the commissioners is completed and delivered to the commissioner of highways their power is exhausted. They cannot thereafter substitute another; and á paper purporting to be a revised or amended assessment subsequently filed has no legal force or validity.” So, too, in People ex rel. Luckings v. Railroad Commissioners (30 App. Div. 69 ; affd. on opinion below, 156 N. Y. 693) it was held where the commissioners had authorized, after a hearing, at which there was no appearance of the municipality or property holders, a street railway company to change its motive power, and the relator, a property owner, petitioned the board to reopen the matter, that the application should be denied, as the commissioners had no power to reconsider or review their action.
Our conclusion, therefore, in the case at bar is that the commissioners, having entered their order and made their decision dismissing the relators’ claims are as to them functus officio, and thereafter could not reopen the matter with respect to which they had thus already exercised their authority to consider and determine. Whether that determination was made erroneously and in conflict with the proof before the commissioners, or whether it was made by mistake
It but remains to consider the further point that there was nothing expressed in the statute defining their powers which required the commissioners to file with the comptroller an order or decision dismissing -the claim, and that such action was of no effect, and the subject-matter was, therefore, still within their power- and it might again be considered by the commissioners. The answer to this contention is that it is immaterial whether or not the commissioners in filing an order, or in otherwise recording their determination -in the Comptroller’s office, did so pursuant to or in the absence of a statute making provision for such filing, because it appears that they did make a determination of the relators’ claim, deciding that it should be dismissed; and having so determined, their power and authority over the claim was exhausted. - The question of whether such determination was filed is immaterial.
We think, therefore, that upon the ground that the. commissioners could' not, review the determination dismissing the relators’ claim, the decision of the new commissioners that no further testimony could be taken with respect to its merits was right, and that .the writ of. certiorari to review such decision- should be dismissed, with fifty dollars costs and disbursements.
Van Brunt, P. J., Patterson, Ingraham and Hatch, JJ., concurred.
Writ, dismissed, with fifty dollars costs and disbursements.