100 N.Y. 585 | NY | 1885
Two objections to the constitutionality of the act of 1881, which authorized the assessment in dispute, lie at the foundation of this appeal; and are in substance that the statute gives no hearing to the land-owner as to the amount to be realized and paid; and that the assessments are levied irrespective of benefits to the lots assessed. By the act of 1869 (Chap. 217) as amended by that of 1870 (Chap. 619), Atlantic avenue, *587
was opened through the town of New Lots, and the compensation for the land taken, and the expense of grading and regulating were imposed by two separate assessments upon a designated district determined by the legislature to have been specially benefited by the improvement. The assessment for grading and regulating gave no notice or hearing to the land-owner and for that reason was held to be invalid. (Stuart v. Palmer,
The act of 1881 determines absolutely and conclusively the amount of tax to be raised, and the property to be assessed and upon which it is to be apportioned. Each of these things was within the power of the legislature whose action cannot be reviewed in the courts upon the ground that it acted unjustly or without appropriate and adequate reason. (Litchfield v.Vernon,
These views furnish also an answer to the objection that the only hearing given to the land-owner relates to the apportionment of the fixed amount among the lots assessed, and none is given as to the aggregate to be collected. No hearing would open the discretion of the legislature, or be of any avail to review or change it. A hearing is given by the act as to the *589 apportionment among the land-owners, which furnishes to them an opportunity to raise all pertinent and available questions and dispute their liability, or its amount and extent. The precise wrong of which complaint is made appears to be that the land-owners now assessed never had opportunity to be heard as to the original apportionment, and find themselves now practically bound by it as between their lots and those of the owners who paid. But that objection becomes a criticism upon the action of the legislature and the process by which it determined the amount to be raised and the property to be assessed. Unless by special permission that is a hearing never granted in the process of taxation. The legislature determines expenditures and amounts to be raised for their payment, the whole discussion and all questions of prudence and propriety and justice being confined to its jurisdiction. It may err, but the courts cannot review its discretion. In this case it kept within its power when it fixed, first, the amount to be raised to discharge the improvement debt incurred by its direction, and second when it designated the lots and property which in its judgment by reason of special benefits should bear the burden, and having the power we cannot criticise the reasons or manner of its action. The land-owners were given a hearing, and so there was no constitutional objection in that respect. Nor was that hearing illusory. It opened to the land-owner an opportunity to assail the constitutional validity of the act under which alone an apportionment could be made, and that objection failing, it opened the only other possible questions, of the mode and amounts of the apportionment itself. We think the act was constitutional.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur, except RAPALLO and EARL, JJ., dissenting.
Judgment affirmed. *590