9 Daly 357 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1880
defendant, on selling a house to the plaintiff, gave her an agreement under seal in the following words: “ I do hereby covenant to refund to said Mary any moneys which she may pay for any assessments that may be confirmed against said property up to the date of these presents.” The date of the covenant is April 28, 1871. On the preceding day, to wit, on April 27, 1871, an assessment upon the property was confirmed, as plaintiff alleges in her complaint ; and the amount of that assessment she avers she paid.
It appears from the agreement itself that the defendant was selling the house to the plaintiff, and that it was not known whether or not a certain assessment had been confirmed. If it had been, it was an incumbrance upon the property, and the amount of it would have been deducted from the purchase money; but if it had not been confirmed, it would not have been an incumbrance. Under these circumstances, the agreement in suit was made. The meaning of it was that if the assessment was an incumbrance at the time the title passed, the defendant would pay it. No provision was made for testing the validity of the assessment, but yet it could not have been the intention of the parties that, valid or invalid, the assessment should be paid. It is true that the defendant as well as the plaintiff could apply for the vacation of it, but it is also true that if the plaintiff should pay it before the defendant had made application for setting it aside, the fact that it had been paid would defeat the application (Matter of Phillips, 60 N. Y. 21; Wilkes v. Mayor, 9 W. D. 334). It seems to me that the intention of the parties must have been to provide for such assessments as were legally and actually incumbrances upon the property, and not for assessments the invalidity of which appeared upon the record.
If this be so, there can be no doubt of the correctness of the decision of the court below. The assessment was for laying crosswalks where there were none before, and for relaying old crosswalks. Relaying cross-walks is repaving, within the meaning of the law (Matter of Burks, 62 N. Y. 224). No evidence was offered that the ordinance under which the work was done was ever published, as required by the Laws of 1857. Such proof was indispensable. Where a person seeks to set aside an assessment, he assmnes the burden of showing a neglect of duty, or a violation of law, on the part of the officials charged with the levying of the assessment, but the plaintiff was, in this action, bound to show.affirmatively that all the requirements of the statutes had been met, and that the ordinance, which was the foundation of the assessment, had been duly published. If there had been no publication, the assessment was wholly irregular, and could have been set aside (Matter of Douglass, 46 N. Y. 44; Matter of Burmeister, 76 N. Y. 174). Again: the ordinance provides that “ crosswalks be laid where not now laid, and relaid where those now laid are, in the opinion of the commissioner of public works, not in good repair, or are not upon a grade adapted to the grade of the proposed new pavement.” It will be seen that it is left to the commissioner of public works to decide how much relaying of crosswalks shall be done. He alone is to say whether any, and if any, what, crosswalks shall be relaid.
The common council does not exercise its judgment in the matter, but attempts to delegate its power to the commissioner. This abdication of power and violation of duty on the part of the common council rendered the ordinance null and void (Thompson v. Schermerhorn, 6 N. Y. 92; Hydes v. Joyes, 4 Bush [Ky.] 464, cited in note to section 617, Dillon Mun. Corp.;
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Charles P. Daly, Oh. J., and J. F. Daly, J., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.