Prosecutor questions the finding by the Essex Circuit Court that the city of Newark may be heard, under section 3, chapter 72, Pamph. L. 1925, to object to an assessment allowed him, a property owner, by the board of commissioners of assessments for incidental damages growing out of a local improvement. The argument is that the commissioners are the agents of the city and that the principal may not be heard to object to that which it, through its agent, has done. *Page 340
It is first said that the board of commissioners are officers of the municipality and that therefore the action taken by them was the action of the municipality, and Allen et al. v. Cityof Plainfield et al., 9 N.J. Mis. R. 246; Hoboken Land andImprovement Co. v. Hoboken,
It is assumed in the briefs, and we shall assume, that the members of the board of commissioners of assessments for all local improvements of the city of Newark are appointed by the governing board of the city, though the effective statute in that respect is not indicated to us. However, it is quite clear that, although the members of the board are so appointed and are compensated from the city treasury, the making of the assessments by the board involves the exercise of judicial functions (Peckham v. Newark,
It is next said that there is no legal authority for the appearance of the city of Newark as objector to the confirmation of an award certified by "its own" board of commissioners for local improvements. Montclair v. Brewster,
We find no record of the taking of testimony to which prosecutor's third point may apply.
The writ of certiorari will be dismissed, with costs. *Page 343
