Garratt v. . Trustees of Canandaigua

32 N.E. 142, 135 N.Y. 436, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 462, 90 Sickels 436, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1638
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 11, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 32 N.E. 142 (Garratt v. . Trustees of Canandaigua) 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
Garratt v. . Trustees of Canandaigua, 32 N.E. 142, 135 N.Y. 436, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 462, 90 Sickels 436, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1638 (N.Y. 1892).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

By chapter 658 of the Laws of 1886, the trustees of the village of Canandaigua were authorized to raise money and to take and appropriate lands for the purpose of constructing a system of drainage and sewerage for the village and also for the purpose of reclaiming wet and swamp lands in two of the adjoining towns. The act provided for the appointment of commissioners by the County Court to determine and award the damages sustained by any property owner whose lands were taken or injuriously affected by the improvement, and also to assess such portion of the expense of making the improvement upon the property benefited by the drainage in proportion to such benefits as would be just. The award of damages and the assessment for benefits were both subject to *441 revision, by the commissioners upon a rehearing and to a further examination upon appeal to the County Court. The plaintiff was awarded damages in the sum of $156.36 and assessed, on account of benefits supposed to follow from the improvement, $800. It does not appear that he raised any question with respect to the amount of the assessment before the commissioners or appealed to the County Court. The plaintiff’s general complaint is that while he was assessed and has paid a large sum as his contribution to the expense of the work contemplated by the statute, his lands have not been drained or reclaimed to the extent anticipated. The plaintiff’s grievance really grows out of what to him appears to be an improper exercise of the sovereign power of taxation delegated by the legislature to the officers and bodies designated in the statute. The main object of the enactment was to enable the authorities of the village to improve the sewerage system, one of the ordinary public objects for which municipal burdens are imposed. It appears that something over $26,000 was expended for-the purpose and of this nearly $23,000 was assessed upon the village at large. The plan that was finally adopted and carried out by the trustees was to dispose of the sewage through the outlet of the lake and what is called the feeder to this outlet, and this required the removal of certain obstructions in the stream, which constituted the outlet, in order to produce a more rapid flow of the water. One of these obstructions was a dam across the outlet, some four miles from the foot of the lake, which had been maintained for many years for manufacturing purposes. The power of eminent domain also delegated by the statute, was used to remove this dam, involving as it did, the obligation to make compensation, in comparatively a large sum, to the owner which was paid. The balance of the work in cleaning out the stream consisted mostly in the removal of bars and other obstacles to a free flow of the water, and in dredging and deepening the channel in some places. The statute content plated that the removal of these obstructions would inure to *442 the benefit of the owners of land along the outlet and near the foot of the lake, which had been before subject to overflow, and hence power was conferred upon the commissioners to charge some part of the 'expense upon thesé lands upon the basis of the benefits conferred. What the plaintiff complains of is that this power has been so exercised as to impose upon him a considerable burden without conferring all the benefits contemplated when it was imposed and paid. The learned trial judge who was evidently somewhat impressed with the merits of the plaintiff’s claim, has not found that the removal of the obstructions in the outlet is not in some degree beneficial to the plaintiff’s farm, but he hcs found that the removal of the obstructions and cleaning out of the feeder and outlet and taking down of the dam, have not drawn off the water from the plaintiff’s land to the extent that they expected and that they are still overflowed and unfit .for cultivation to a very great extent. He also finds that since the completion of the improvement the rainfall in the locality has been unusually heavy and that it does not appear precisely to what extent the land of the plaintiff would be free from water in ordinary times and under ordinary circumstances, but that it was expected when the plan for cleaning the outlet was adopted,1 it would, when carried out, sufficiently drain plaintiff’s lands to enable him to till them. It must be admitted that the trustees and the commissioners had under the statute power and jurisdiction to make the improvement and to impose the assessment. How the improvement in the drainage of the village was to be secured and how the wet lands along the outlet were to be reclaimed was left by the legislature, in a great measure, to the discretion and judgment of the village authorities. The statute does not prescribe the plan or details of the work by means of which the end was to be accomplished. That was left to the judgment of the trustees and, even though the plan that was adopted was faulty and a much better plan might have been devised, still as they acted in good faith, they could not be made responsible for the results or consequences of an erroneous judgment in that *443 regard. (Hines v. City of Lockport, 50 N. Y. 236; Urquhart v. City of Ogdensburg, 91 id. 67.)

The power to drain the lands near the village might have been conferred by the legislature for public purposes, to promote health or the like, and whether that was the motive that prompted the enactment of the statute, or some private interest is not now important. Jurisdiction was conferred upon the commissioners, with respect to assessments upon the lands along the outlet, for benefits to result from the drainage, subject to appeal by any party aggrieved to the County Court. If it be said that the plaintiff ought not to have been assessed at all or that he has been assessed for too large a sum, the answer is that upon this question he has had his day in court. He could have appeared before the commissioners and by evidence or argument satisfied them that the proposed plan would not, when carried out, result in reclaiming any of his wet lands, or certainly not to such an extent as to warrant the imposition upon him of so large a burden. He was entitled to a hearing and to show if he could that the improvement proposed would not result in any benefit to him, and to insist that until some plan was formulated upon the basis of which the work was to be done, that would result in draining his lands no assessment should be imposed upon him. He had as good an opportunity of forming an opinion as to the effect on his wet lands, of the improvement proposed as the trustees. He had the right to object to any assessment until the commissioners were convinced that what was proposed, with respect to clearing out the feeder and outlet, would result in improving his lands to the extent of the assessment proposed. In case the commissioners proceeded upon erroneous principles, or upon a basis that furnished no reasonable ground for the belief that any benefit to the plaintiff’s property would follow from the work proposed, or for any other valid reason, based upon the facts or the law, the plaintiff was entitled to a further hearing in the county court.' As the plaintiff neither objected nor appealed but allowed the award and assessment to be confirmed, we must assume that he, like *444

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Bluebook (online)
32 N.E. 142, 135 N.Y. 436, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 462, 90 Sickels 436, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garratt-v-trustees-of-canandaigua-ny-1892.