153 N.Y. 370 | NY | 1897
On the 30th day of July, 1896, the board of supervisors of Queens county passed the following resolution: "An act to provide for the formation of a fire district within the town of Oyster Bay, Queens county, N Y
"The board of supervisors of Queens county, pursuant to section 37 of an act known as the County Law, do enact as follows:
"WHEREAS, a petition was, on the 30th day of July, 1896, duly presented to the board of supervisors of Queens county, praying that a district duly described in said petition be declared a fire district pursuant to section 37 of the County Law, and it appearing by the affidavit of Amos M. Knapp attached thereto that the said petition is signed by one-half of *373 the taxpayers appearing on the last assessment roll as assessed for property within said proposed district and representing more than one-half of the assessed valuation of the property included within said proposed district.
"Resolved, That the said petition be granted and that the district particularly described in said petition be and is hereby affirmed and declared to be a fire district in the town of Oyster Bay, Queens county, N.Y., pursuant to the provisions of said section 37 of the County Law, said district being described as follows:" (Then follows a description of the district.)
It appears that a petition was presented to the board of supervisors, verified by Amos M. Knapp, who was one of the petitioners, in which he states that he was the clerk of the town of Oyster Bay, and that he had compared the petition with the assessment roll on file in his office, and that the names signed thereto constituted more than one-half of the names of the taxpayers within the proposed district as appears upon the roll, and that the value of the property held by the persons so signing represents more than one-half of the value of the property within the district. He neglects, however, to state that the comparison was made with the last assessment roll and that the persons signing such petition owned more than one-half of the taxablereal property in the proposed district. Section 37 of the County Law, as amended by chapter 902 of the Laws of 1896, provides as follows: "Each board of supervisors may, on the written, verified petition of the taxable inhabitants of a proposed fire district outside of an incorporated village or city, and within the county, whose names appear on the last preceding assessment roll of the town within which such proposed fire district is located, as owning or representing more than one-half of the taxable real property of such district, or as owning or representing more than one-half of the taxable real property of such district owned by the residents thereof, establish such district as a fire district."
The writ in question was issued to review the proceedings *374 of the board. It is claimed on behalf of the relators that the defects in the verification, to which attention has been called, rendered the petition void, and that the board of supervisors did not acquire jurisdiction to pass the resolution establishing the fire district.
The Appellate Division neither vacated nor affirmed the proceedings of the board, but simply dismissed the writ upon the ground that it had no jurisdiction.
An order which quashes or dismisses a common-law writ of certiorari is not appealable to this court, unless it appears in the order that the quashing, or the dismissal, of the writ was made for want of jurisdiction, or upon the ground that the proceedings were found regular. (Code Civ. Pro. § 2127; Peopleex rel. Waldman v. Board of Police Commissioners,
In this case, as we have seen, the proceedings were dismissed for want of jurisdiction, and not in the exercise of the discretion vested in the learned Appellate Division. The order is, therefore, appealable to this court.
The serious question presented for our determination is as to whether the action of the board of supervisors in creating the fire district was a legislative or a judicial act. If legislative it would not be reviewable in this proceeding. The writ of certiorari issues in cases expressly authorized by statute, and in cases in which it was issued at common law by a court of general jurisdiction, except in those cases where the power to issue it has been taken away by statute. It is appropriate for the review of the judicial action of inferior courts, or of public officers or bodies exercising judicial functions. The writ will not issue to review a merely legislative, executive or administrative action, although it may involve the exercise of *375
discretion. (People ex rel. Vil. of Jamaica v. Board ofSupervisors of Queens County,
The Constitution empowers the legislature by general laws to confer upon the boards of supervisors of the counties of the state such further powers of local legislation and administration as it may from time to time deem expedient. Pursuant to this provision the legislature has conferred upon the boards of supervisors many important powers, among which is that of establishing fire districts. That these powers are in the main legislative in character was practically conceded upon the argument in this case, but it was contended that the provision for establishing fire districts contained a requirement for a written, verified petition of the inhabitants of the district owning or representing more than one-half of the taxable real property thereof as a condition precedent, and that the board of supervisors had no power to act until jurisdiction had been conferred upon the board by the presentation of such a petition. It may be that the power of the board to act was dependent upon the presentation to it of such a petition. It is possible that the action of the board was unauthorized and void, but this question cannot be determined in this proceeding if the action of the board was legislative and not judicial. Under the statute the supervisors could only act in a body, as a board, and the district could only be established by a majority vote of the supervisors. Each supervisor, in recording his vote, must of necessity act upon such information as he possessed bearing upon the subject and in the exercise of his judgment and discretion. The power devolved upon the board was purely legislative, unless it was made judicial by the provision requiring the presentation of the petition. Whilst the presentation of the petition may have an important bearing upon the question of the validity of the action of *376 the board, we are not now able to see how it affects the character of the act. The statute provides that the petition shall be verified. It was verified as to the persons signing it. Proof as to the requisite number of signers could only be made after the petition was completed, and as to the manner in which this proof is to be presented the statute is silent.
After the presentation of the petition the supervisors were left to exercise the same judgment and discretion with reference to their votes as they would have exercised in case the statute had not required a petition; their votes were taken and recorded and the result declared in the same manner as if no condition had been imposed upon their power; hence we conclude that the action of the board was legislative.
In the case of People ex rel. Vil. of Jamaica v. Board ofSupervisors of Queens County (supra) the supervisors passed an act for the improvement of certain highways in the town of Jamaica. The act provided for the raising of four hundred thousand dollars for the improvement, upon bonds to be issued by the county treasurer, which bonds were to be paid by taxes levied upon the town. The supervisors claimed to act under the authority of the Laws of 1869, chapter 855, section 2. It is true that the provisions of that act imposed no conditions upon the supervisors as conditions precedent to their power to act. The supervisors were left to determine the necessities of the town in their own way and to exercise their judgment upon the improvements which should be made. In that case EARL, Chief Judge, in delivering the opinion of the court, says this act of the supervisors "was purely a legislative act. Legislative power was devolved upon them under the Constitution by the legislature, and the act was as purely legislative as if it had been passed by the legislature itself. If this action by the supervisors can be reviewed by certiorari, then every act and resolution of the board of supervisors, every ordinance of the city board of aldermen, every ordinance and resolution of a village board of trustees, and generally all the acts of public officers involving the exercise of some discretion, could be reviewed in the same way; and thus there *377 would be a wide departure from the practice and procedure which have always prevailed in this state, and much embarrassment might attend the discharge of legislative, executive and administrative functions by public officers, local boards and state departments."
In People v. Carpenter (
In People ex rel. Hotchkiss v. Board of Supervisors ofBroome County (
In Whittaker et al. v. Village of Venice (
With reference to the proper remedy, see People ex rel.Kingsland v. Clark (
It appears to us that the rule adopted by these cases is decisive of the question under consideration. A preliminary question of fact was presented for the determination of the supervisors, but this requirement did not operate to change the character of their proceeding from a legislative to a judicial act. Its character being legislative in form, they are presumed to have determined that the petition was signed by the requisite number of owners of taxable real property of the district. This determination, however, may not be final, but the burden of showing the fact to be otherwise devolves upon those who attack the validity of the action of the board. This may be done in an appropriate action, but not in these proceedings.
We have not overlooked the rule adopted in the town bonding cases. Those cases may have some application if it should be found as a fact that the petition upon which the board of supervisors based its action was not in fact signed by a majority of the owners of the taxable real property of the district, but upon the questions now under consideration, as to whether the character of the action of the board of supervisors was legislative, and as to whether their proceedings can be reviewed by certiorari, they have no application.
It appears that nine petitions were circulated for signatures, but they were all alike, except as to the signatures attached, and were presented to the board as one petition. We see no harm in this, or any violation of the statute. The subject-matter *380 expressed in the petitions being the same, they are in legal effect one petition, although expressed upon different pieces of paper. Nor do we think the petitions defective in the matter of substance. It is true that the petitions do not assert that they are made by a majority of the owners of the taxable real property of the district described, but it does not appear to us that this was necessary to be stated in the petition. None of the subscribers thereto could correctly assert that fact until a majority of the signatures of the taxpayers on real property had been obtained. The fact that the petition was signed by a majority of the required taxpayers might properly appear by the affidavit accompanying the petition, but the affidavit of Knapp is silent upon this subject. In this respect the papers are not complete. There is nothing in the record before us from which we can determine whether the petition was signed by the requisite number of taxpayers. No issue has been raised upon this question. It is not even asserted by the relators in their application for the writ that it was not signed by the requisite number. We must, therefore, for the present, assume that the supervisors determined the fact upon evidence before them, and, for the reasons stated, their action cannot be reviewed by certiorari.
The order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur, except GRAY, J., absent, and MARTIN, J., not voting.
Order affirmed. *381