147 N.Y. 675 | NY | 1895
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *679 We think the order in this case should be affirmed, and we shall briefly consider some of the questions not referred to in the elaborate opinion of Judge GREEN at Special Term.
(1) The claim that the district of assessment should have been fixed by the common council, and not by the assessors, depends upon the provisions of the charter. It was competent for the legislature to prescribe the public agency to which this power should be committed. It could have imposed this duty upon the common council, or on a board of commissioners, or on the assessors. (Spencer v. Merchant,
(2) The order directed that the assessment roll should be returned by the comptroller of the city to the common council to amend or correct the same according to law. The order sending back the assessment to the common council for amendment or correction was based on the finding of the court that the assessment of the relator's property was unauthorized and illegal in so far as it included the portion of its land not abutting on Buffalo river and lying south of the Buffalo Creek railroad, which portion, consisting of more than two hundred acres of land, was separated by the roadway of the Buffalo Creek Railroad Company from the portion of the relator's land, comprising about thirty acres, abutting on the Buffalo river. The court reached the conclusion that the portion of relator's land south of the Buffalo Creek railroad was so situated that it could not be benefited by the proposed improvement, and was, therefore, illegally embraced in the assessment. But the court decided that the thirty acres was properly assessable. There is in the evidence some color for the claim made in behalf of the city that the assessors in making the assessment considered only the benefit to the thirty acres, but included the whole tract in the assessment by inadvertence. It is contended in behalf of the relator that the council having decided that the assessment was illegal as to the larger portion of the land included therein, it was *681 the duty of the court to cancel and annul the assessment, and that it had no power to send it back for correction.
This question also depends upon the provisions of the charter. Section 101 regulates the review on certiorari of the legality of assessments for local improvements. The fifth subdivision of the section declares that if it is established in such proceeding that the assessment is illegal for any reason "the court may order that said assessment be canceled, and the same shall, therefore, be canceled by the comptroller or other proper officer of the city," and that "when it is alleged or established that the said assessment is irregular or defective on account of any imperfect description of the land sought to be assessed, or any defect or irregularity which can be corrected without prejudice to any of the parties interested therein or affected thereby, the court may order the assessment roll so corrected or amended, or may order that the assessment roll be returned to the common council to amend or correct it pursuant to law." The illegality found by the court did not go to the jurisdiction of the assessors to assess the thirty acres abutting on the river included with the other property of the relator. The so-called illegality was at most an error in judgment on the part of the assessors in including property of the relator in the assessment not benefited by the proposed improvement in connection with property belonging to the relator which was assessable. The absolute annullment and cancellation of the assessment by reason of this mistake would relieve the relator's land which was subject to assessment from bearing its proper share of the burden. This inequitable result is prevented by construing the inclusion in the assessment of non-assessable with assessable land as a defect, subject to correction under the fifth subdivision of section 101, and this construction should, we think, be given.
The court is authorized to send back an assessment roll, which is defective or irregular, to the common council to "amend or correct it pursuant to law." The only authority of the common council on the subject of annulling or correcting *682 an assessment roll is contained in section 154 of the charter, which relates to the ordinary jurisdiction of the common council on the hearing of objections in the first instance. The common council are to "hear the objections and confirm the roll or amend it, or refer it back to the board of assessors to make a new assessment," and, by section 155, the board of assessors, on an assessment being sent back by the common council to make a new assessment, are required to "forthwith proceed to make a new assessment in the same manner as is provided for original assessments." We think these provisions by analogy regulate the action of the common council in case an assessment roll is returned by order of the court under section 101. It may annul the whole assessment, or send it back for a new assessment of the relator's land. It does not appear what has been done, if anything, since the making of the order appealed from.
(3) The alleged irregularity in the resolution of the common council (subsequently rescinded) to let the contract for the work at a gross sum (the aggregate of the itemized bid based upon the plans and specifications for the work) did not affect the validity of the assessment. The assessment is, under the charter, to precede the contract for the work. (Section 408.) The original resolution for letting the contract was rescinded, and a new contract was authorized for the work at a specified price per yard for rock and earth excavation in accordance with the bid.
(4) The opinion below contains an elaborate and able review of the question whether the land of the relator abutting on the river, although above the point where the improvement terminates, could be deemed benefited by the improvement. The rock in the bed of the river, below the relator's land, prevented its navigation. Above the improvement along the relator's water front on the river there was little if any rock, and at a comparatively small expense the channel can be made navigable by dredging. It certainly cannot be said as matter of law that the removal of the rock below the plaintiff's land, which makes it possible for the extension of navigation *683 of the river, at small expense, along the relator's land will not add to its value. We concur with the reasons of the court at Special Term on this question.
There are some minor points raised in the brief of relator's counsel. We have examined them and are satisfied that they are without merit.
The order should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur.
Order affirmed. *684
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