If the act of 1897 is á valid one, we think it was the duty of the board of estimate and apportionment to include the
It is further objected that the act is void because an exercise of judicial, instead of legislative, power, in that it in effect vacates the extra assessments, which, from the manner in which they are imposed, are judgments, or have the force of judgments. It may be conceded that
The act is entitled “An act for the refunding of erroneous assessments in the city of Troy.” There is nothing in the body of the act declaring the assessments erroneous. The title of this act neither adds to nor detracts from the enabling and mandatory provisions of the act itself. The word “erroneous” is not used in the title in the sense that there was any error in law in laying the additional assessment, but that it was erroneous in the sense that it was inequitable that these property holders on River street north of Hoosick street should be compelled to pay, not only the assessment first levied, but also to pay one-half of that part of the first assessment from which the Troy & Lansingburg Railroad Company escaped. In this sense, the legislature has attempted no judicial function; it has simply employed an expression which seemed to it to embrace the subject of the act, which the constitution requires to be expressed in the title.
We have examined the other objections urged by the learned corporation counsel, and do not think they justify or excuse the board of estimate and apportionment in refusing to include in their estimate and apportionment the $6,384.02, which the act declares “shall be assessed and charged upon, and paid by, the city of Troy at large.”
Order reversed, with $10 costs and disbursements, and. the motion for a péremptory mandamus granted, with $10 costs. All concur.