Chapman v. . the City of Brooklyn

40 N.Y. 372, 1869 N.Y. LEXIS 34
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 11, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 40 N.Y. 372 (Chapman v. . the City of Brooklyn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chapman v. . the City of Brooklyn, 40 N.Y. 372, 1869 N.Y. LEXIS 34 (N.Y. 1869).

Opinion

Daniels, J.

It is not necessary that certain minor objections to the validity of the defendant’s proceedings should be noticed, for they were utterly and entirely void on account of the omission to institute and carry them on against the owner or occupant of the lands intended: to be affected by them. It was an attempt to sell and divest the property owned and occupied by one person, by means of proceedings taken and carried on against three other persons. The statute providing for these proceedings, did not permit that to be done. By that statute the expenses of grading and paving streets in the city of Brooklyn were required to be apportioned and assessed by one or more commissioners, not exceeding three, to be appointed by the county judge of Kings county, or a justice of the Supreme Court. After taking the oath prescribed for them, they were required to view the premises and assess the expense of the improvement upon the lots, or pieces of land benefited, in the proportion to the benefit .to be derived, or that, in justice, should be assessed on account of the improvement. They were then required to make a report of their assessment, give five days public notice of the time and place when parties interested in it might be heard, and, after hearing them, to complete the report and return it, with the objections made to the assessments, to the common council of the city. After its examination and confirmation, and after the proceedings for laying the assessment were examined and certified to be correct by the street commissioner and attorney and counsel of the city, a warrant for the collection of the assessments made was required to be issued by the common council to the collector of the city; and by such warrant he was to be required to collect the assessments from the several persons mentioned in the assessment roll annexed thereto. When *376 the time mentioned in the warrant for the collection of the assessments expired, the collector was required to make and deliver to the comptroller of the city an account of such as remained unpaid. This account was to he verified by the affidavit of the collector, who was also required to show that he had not, upon diligent inquiry, been able to discover any goods or chattels belonging to or in the possession of the persons charged with, or liable to pay the sums unpaid, wheron he could levy the same, and that he did, within forty days after receiving the warrant, cause notice to be served personally, or left at the residence of the person or persons charged with, or liable to pay the assessment, if residing ' within the city of Brooklyn; and that he also caused a notice to be published, for six successive weeks in the corporation paper, prior to the expiration of the warrant, containing the ñame or title of the improvement, the names of the persons who had not paid the amount due from each, the time when the warrant would expire ; and that, unless the amount, with the expenses and percentage, should be paid at or before the time when the warrant would expire, judgment would be entered in the Supreme Court in Kings county for the same, besides costs. Upon filing a copy of the warrant, assessment roll, affidavit and account certified by the comptroller, in the clerk’s office of the county, the county clerk was authorized thereupon to enter judgments acpording to the terms of the published notice against each of the persons named in the collector’s account for the sums stated to be due, with five dollars costs. Executions were then to be issued against the personal property, only, of the defendants. It was then declared that in no case should any of the real property of the defendant be sold or affected by the judgment or execution, other than that which was originally assessed. If the execution was returned unsatisfied, the county clerk was to deliver the street commissioner a certificate of that fact, who, after giving six weeks notice of sale in the corporation newspaper, was required to proceed to sell the real estate of the defendant or defendants, which was *377 liable for and subject to the original assessment. (Laws of 1850, 271, § 22; 272, §§ 24, 25, 27; 277, §§ 10, 11; 278, §§ 12, 15; 280, § 23; 281, §§ 24, 25, 26; 282, §§ 27, 30.)

From this statement of the provisions of the statute, it will be seen that it contemplated and required that the assessment for the improvement of this avenue, should be made upon the land itself, so far as it was deemed to be benefited by it. And that proceedings for its payment were to be taken against the person who, as owner, became Bable to pay it. These proceedings were required to be taken and carried on against him by name, and in case they proved ineffectual for the collection of the assessment, then and then only was the land assessed to be sold for the purpose of procuring payment. To authorize the sale, it was not only required that the land should be assessed; but, in addition to that, the statute equally as explicitly required, that it should also be the land of the defendant or defendants in the judgment entered up for the non-payment of the assessment. The commissioner was given authority to sell such lands, and no authority was conferred upon him for seBing any other lands. (Laws of 1850, 282, §§ 27, 29, 30.)

The judgment, as well as the previous proceedings, taken for the making and coffeetion of the assessments upon the lots referred to, were not taken! against the owner of them; but against these persons having no interest whatever in them. And they could not, therefore, within the terms of the statute, be sold for the non-payment of the assessment by the street commissioner. Before the property assessed could be sold, the law required not only that the owner should have an opportunity to pay the assessment, but beyond that, that proceedings should have been taken against him for its collection. The right to sell, depended upon the taking and consummation of those proceedings in the manner prescribed by the statute. The omission to take them against the owner of the lots, was jurisdictional in its nature, and it rendered the commissioner powerless to affect them by the sale which he attempted to make of them. (Sharp v *378 Speir, 4 Hill, 76.) Ho consideration therefore existed entitling the defendant to the money it received from the purchaser upon the sale of these lots.

When the sale was made, the street commissioner making it announced to the purchasers that the money would be refunded to them, with.interest, in case the sale, on account of the invalidity' of the proceedings leading to it, should be rendered ineffectual. But this notice was not in writing, and was not afterwards, in any manner, incorporated or referred to in the certificates given by the defendant. These certificates were in the nature of contracts, and for that reason they could not be legally extended, enlarged or modified by anything which had previously been announced, and was totally excluded from them. In this.respect the case differs from that of Bennett v. Mayor of New York (1 Sand., 485), where the announcement and the promise were in writing. The plaintiff’s right to recover therefrom, must depend not upon what was stated by the commissioner to the purchasers at the sale, but upon his legal rights under the other circumstances of the case.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

County of Saratoga v. Saratoga Harness Racing Ass'n
8 Misc. 2d 700 (New York Supreme Court, 1957)
Mercury Machine Importing Corp. v. City of New York
1 A.D.2d 337 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1956)
County Securities, Inc. v. Warwick Properties, Inc.
176 Misc. 272 (New York Supreme Court, 1940)
Southern Service Co. v. County of Los Angeles
97 P.2d 963 (California Supreme Court, 1940)
Rosenwasser v. Blyn Shoes, Inc.
159 N.E. 84 (New York Court of Appeals, 1927)
Traktman v. City of New York
149 N.E. 838 (New York Court of Appeals, 1925)
In re Donner-Hanna Coke Corp.
212 A.D. 338 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1925)
Mitchell v. Reitz
269 S.W. 279 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1924)
Wright v. Smith
13 A.D. 536 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1897)
Flandrow v. . Hammond
42 N.E. 511 (New York Court of Appeals, 1895)
Elling v. Harrington
42 P. 851 (Montana Supreme Court, 1895)
Pennock v. Douglas County
27 L.R.A. 121 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1894)
Hayes v. County of Los Angeles
33 P. 766 (California Supreme Court, 1893)
Richardson v. City of Denver
17 Colo. 398 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1892)
Walradt v. Phœnix Ins.
19 N.Y.S. 293 (New York Supreme Court, 1892)
Hoag v. Town of Greenwich
15 N.Y.S. 743 (New York Supreme Court, 1891)
Budge v. City of Grand Forks
10 L.R.A. 165 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1890)
White v. . City of Brooklyn
25 N.E. 243 (New York Court of Appeals, 1890)
Clarke v. Mayor of New York
19 N.E. 436 (New York Court of Appeals, 1889)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 N.Y. 372, 1869 N.Y. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chapman-v-the-city-of-brooklyn-ny-1869.