Bell v. City of Yonkers

28 N.Y.S. 947, 85 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 196, 60 N.Y. St. Rep. 208, 78 Hun 196
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 14, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 28 N.Y.S. 947 (Bell v. City of Yonkers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bell v. City of Yonkers, 28 N.Y.S. 947, 85 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 196, 60 N.Y. St. Rep. 208, 78 Hun 196 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

BROWN, P. J.

This action was brought to set aside an assessment made upon plaintiffs’ land for the construction of a sewer. Many defects in the assessment proceedings are alleged in the com[948]*948plaint, and the case before us contains 73 exceptions to the findings of the court, and to its refusal to find as requested by the plaintiffs. The grounds, however, upon which the plaintiffs have based their claim to relief upon the argument before this court are comprehended in three general propositions: (1) That the assessment district which, by the charter of the defendant, it was made, the duty of the common council to fix, included land omitted from the assessment; (2) that the notice of the time when the common council would act in relation to the proposed sewer did not correctly describe the assessment district as fixed by the common council; (3) that the assessors’ notice of the completion of their report, and of the time when they would meet to review the same, was not in the form required by the charter. The sections of the charter of the city to which we are referred, so far as they are important to be considered in connection with the questions presented, are contained in chapter 19, Laws 1887, and are as follows:

“Section 17. Prior to contracting for any such work a plain and accurate specification of the work proposed to be constructed must be prepared. * * * The common council shall then fix a district of assessment, beyond which the assessment shall not extend, and cause to be published in one or more of the official city newspapers a notice that on a day therein to be named * * * it will act in relation to the work proposed to be constructed. A description of such district shall form a part of such notice.” “Section 19. The assessors shall make a report in writing of the assessment so made, and deposit the same with the city clerk, and cause to be published * * * a notice that the report has been completed and so deposited and that they will meet at a time and place therein to be specified * * * to review their report”

It is not denied that plans and specifications were prepared, and an assessment district fixed, and the work of construction directed, by the common council in the manner provided by the charter. ■ The charge that the assessment district included land not assessed rests upon the following facts: The communication from the water commissioners, and the plans and specifications, were referred by the common council to the street committee. The report of that committee was prepared by the city clerk. The description of the assessment district to be recommended by the committee was on a printed slip pasted to the report. The clerk, in reading over this description, thought there was an error, and he drew a line with pen and ink through, and eliminated, one course of the description, and the effect of this was to add to the district the rear portion of a considerable number of lots. He then found that it was correct as printed. And he intended, before the report was presented, to attach a new slip to it, but omitted to do that, and the report as presented to the common council contained the lines stricken out in the manner stated. In reading the report to the committee, however, he stated to its members that the description should be as if no erasure had been made from the printed matter; and when the report was presented to the common council, it was read as if there had been no erasure, and, as so read, it was adopted on May 12, 1890, and a resolution passed fixing the assessment district. The description of the district, however, was not actually inserted in the resolution until May 17th, when a printed slip, cut from the notice, of the time when the [949]*949common council would meet to act upon the proposed sewer, was pasted into the minutes of the meeting. The description so inserted was not an exact copy of that in the report, but contained two errors which will be hereafter noticed. The appellants claim that the district as fixed by the common council was that described in the report with the erasures I have referred to, while the trial court has found that it was fixed as described in that report as if no erasures had been made. I have been referred to no provision of the charter that makes The report or the resolution of the common council conclusive evidence of what the council’s action was. Undoubtedly either the report in connection with the resolution adopting it, or the resolution fixing the district as it appeared in the minutes of the common council, would be prima facie evidence of the council’s action. But what that body did was a question of fact, and, as the evidence from the record was not consistent, parol evidence was admissible to show the fact; and it appears without contradiction, from the evidence of the city clerk, that the erasure was his act, and that neither the committee nor the common council adopted it. The description was read to the council as if no erasure had been made, and upon the report as read that body acted, and the legal effect of its action was to fix the assessment district according to the printed description, as if no erasure had been made on it. The argument that the common council must be presumed, in adopting the report, to have adopted it as printed, and not as read, has no force in the presence of competent and uncontradicted evidence showing a contrary result. The finding of the trial court was therefore in accordance with the evidence.

The changes from the description of the district as adopted and as printed in the official newspapers in the notice of the meeting of the common council to act upon the proposed sewer were immaterial, and deceived no one. They were errors, merely, that were obvious to any one reading the notice. In the district as adopted the description was, “to the southwesterly corner lot No. 145, Biverdale avenue; thence easterly on a line parallel with, and twenty-five feet southerly from, the southerly line of Harriot street” In the printed notice the words “twenty-five” were made to read “fifty” in one paper and “fifty-five” in another. But, as the course started at the southwesterly corner of lot No. 145, and ran “thence easterly on a line parallel with Harriot street, it was of no consequence what the distance of that line from Harriot street was stated to be. It was controlled by fixed monuments, and the description in the notice did not vary the district from that fixed by the common council, and did not have the effect to include in it additional land. The other change was of the same character. The description ran to the northwesterly corner of lot 73, Hawthorne avenue; thence along the rear line of lots fronting on the westerly side of Hawthorne avenue. In the printed notice it ran to the northwesterly corner of lot 72, Hawthorne avenue, which was upon the opposite side of the street, and from which the course along the rear line of lots fronting on the westerly side of said street could not be run. The error was obvious to anyone reading the description. But in considering the [950]*950legal effect of the error in the notice, assuming that they did change slightly the boundaries of the district, I fail to see how the error is available to the plaintiffs. The object of making a description of the assessment district a part of the notice was that every landowner within the district should know that his land was liable to be assessed. It was not a part of the proceedings to fix the district. It was addressed to every person within the district as fixed, and its-object was to afford to such persons the constitutional right of an opportunity to be heard before the assessment was imposed. Stuart v. Palmer, 74 N. Y. 183.

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Hassan v. . City of Rochester
67 N.Y. 528 (New York Court of Appeals, 1876)
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Stuart v. . Palmer
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Bluebook (online)
28 N.Y.S. 947, 85 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 196, 60 N.Y. St. Rep. 208, 78 Hun 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-v-city-of-yonkers-nysupct-1894.