78 N.Y.S. 942 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
The writ of certiorari was issued to review an award made to Nelson Smith, Jr., by commissioners appointed under chapter 537 of the Laws of 1893 and chapter 567 of the Laws of 1894. The claimant is the owner of premises fronting on the easterly side of Brook avenue between One Hundred and Sixty-first and One Hundred and Sixty-second streets and known as block No. 1348 and ward Nos. 3 and 24. The damages were caused by the elevation of the grade of Brook avenue in front of these premises. We are not asked to review any question with respect to the admission or rejection of evidence.
The first question to be considered relates to the validity of the writ. The respondents claim that it is void because not issued by the court. The Code of Civil. Procedure (§ 2127) provides that the writ of certiorari must be granted at the Appellate Division or at Special Term ; but in the first district it is provided that motions that elsewhere must be made in court may be made to a judge out of court except motions for new trials on the merits. (Code Civ. Proc. § 770.) The writ does not expressly show on its face that it was granted at Special Term; but the clerk certifies that it was issued “ by the court ” and it is indorsed as allowed by one of the justices of the Supreme Court. We think the application for the writ in the first judicial district might be made to a judge at Chambers ; but it is the act of the court nevertheless and it should be entered in the minutes of the clerk. The failure to make such entry, however, would not invalidate the writ.
The only question which the relator presents relates to the jurisdiction of the commissioners to act upon this claim, his contention being that the claim was not filed within the time required by law.
Section 2 of the act of 1893 required that claims for such damages should be filed with the comptroller and a duplicate thereof with the corporation counsel “ within six months after the first public meeting of” the commissioners appointed thereunder. The first public meeting of the commissioners appointed under that act was held on the 7th day of June, 1893. The claim was not filed with the comptroller and corporation counsel until the 18th day of December, 1894. It was too late, therefore, if the act of 1893 governs. The act of 1894 took effect on the 9th day of May, 1894. It was in form an amendment of the act of 1893; and re-enacted all of its provisions with additional provisions incorporated therein. The clause relating to the time of filing claims was re-enacted without change. The commissioners published a notice dated September 2, 1893, in the Gity Record pursuant to the requirements of the statute (§ 5) stating that they would hold regular meetings three times a week on the days and at the hour and place specified “ until further notice.” At the time the act of 1894 became of force the commissioners were holding regular sessions pursuant to this notice, which was republished from time to time in the Gity Record. Such sessions were held on the 9th, 11th, 14th, 16th, 21st, 25th and 29th days of May and the 1st and 11th days of June, 1894. The commissioners were reappointed by the mayor, under the act of 1894, on the 8th day of June, 1894, and on the fifteenth of the same month new oaths of office which they had taken were filed with the county clerk. On the last-mentioned day they caused a notice signed by them dated June 13, 1894, to be published in the Gity Record that “ pursuant' to the provisions of chapter 567 of the Laws of 1894, entitled (quoting title in full),’ notice is hereby given that public meetings of the commissioners appointed under said act” would be held on Monday,
Counsel for the relator contends- for the construction that the Statute of Limitations speaks, from the date of the original act, and ..he cites as authority for this proposition the case of Ely v. Holton, (15 N. Y. 595), and kindred cases following and applying the doctrine of that case, wherein the rule is laid down with reference to statutes re-enacted “ so as to read as follows: ” that “ the portions of the amended sections which are merely copied without change, are "not to be considered as repealed and again enacted, but to have-been the law all along; and the new parts or the changed portions are not Jo be taken to have been the law at any time prior to the passage of the amended act. * * * The portions of the section which are repeated are to be considered as having been the law from the timé they were first enacted, and the new pro visions, are to be understood as enacted at the time the amended act took effect. In short, we
This decision was cited with approval in People v. Wilmerding (136 N. Y. 363, 368), where Judge Peokham, speaking for the court and referring to it, says: “ It was there distinctly decided that an earlier statute, which was amended and re-enacted in the shape of an amendment, so as to read as prescribed in the later
Under the ordinary rules of construction, therefore, the Statute of Limitations. would not commence to run until the time the amendatory act ■ took effect. It is always, however, a question of legislative intent; and in this case it is quite clear, from the nature of the amendments, that the Legislature intended to authorize the filing of new claims. The material additions to the law were provisions enlarging the powers of the commissioners and enlarging the grounds upon which claims for damages might be made. The title and 1st section of the act of 1893 limited the claims for damages to those caused by “ changes of grade of streets or avenues made pursuant to chapter seven hundred and twenty-one of the laws of eighteen hundred and eighty-seven, providing for the depression of railroad tracks in the twenty-third and twenty-fourth wards in the city of New York.” The claims were also thereby limited to damages already sustained.
The work of depressing the railroad tracks and changing the grade of the streets pursuant to the act of 1887 referred to, had apparently all been completed prior to 1893, the time of the enactment of the law authorizing claims for damages. The 2d section of the original act also limited the jurisdiction of the commissioners to the damages sustained by “ each owner of land or land and building fronting on any such street or avenue and extending back therefrom not more than one hundred feet.” Section 1, as amended in 1894, expressly authorizes the claims for future as well as for past damages, and section 2 was amended ■ so as to remove the limitation as to the. depth of the lots. It is ■evident that if the construction contended for by the relator be sustained, no force or effect can be given to these amendments, for the claims authorized to be filed under the original act did not cover future damages and did not apply to that part of premises fronting upon a street which lies in depth more than 100 feet therefrom. It would seem plain, therefore, that the Legislature
The provisions of the amendment to which attention has been drawn demonstrate that the jurisdiction of the commissioners was enlarged and that the law was extended to • claims and items of damages for which awards were not authorized under the original act. The conclusion is irresistible that the Legislature intended to authorize the filing of new claims after the enactment of the amendment. The remaining question to be considered is whether the six months commenced to run from the time of the first meeting of the commissioners held after the amendment took effect or from the meeting held on June 18, 1894, pursuant to the formal notice given under the amended law. It is significant, as. bearing upon this question, that the Legislature did not see fit to prescribe that the statute should run. from the date of the enactment of. the amendment or from any time fixed by the Legislature itself, but left it to be. determined by the commissioners in fixing and advertising the time and place of their first public hearing. Those and the other provisions of the law rendered the notice quite important. The notice that the commissioners had previously given was that they would hear claims under the act of 1893. It was no notice that they would hear claims presented under the amended law. We think, therefore, that the fair construction of the statute is that the limitation did not commence to run until the public meeting of the commissioners held on the 18th day of June, 1894. These views are not in conflict with the decision in People ex rel. Purdy v. Fitch (147 N. Y. 355). It was there held that' it was unnecessary, for the commissioners to qualify over under the'amendments of 1894, but it does not follow that it was unnecessary for them to give notice of the time and place of their first public meeting to hear claims for the first time authorized by the amended law.
It follows, therefore, that the award should be confirmed, with fifty dollars costs and disbursements.
Patterson, O’Brien and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred; Van Brunt, P. J., dissented.
Order affirmed, with fifty dollars costs and disbursements.
Sic.— See chapter 339.— [Rep.