Guest v. . the City of Brooklyn

69 N.Y. 506, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 872
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 22, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 69 N.Y. 506 (Guest 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
Guest v. . the City of Brooklyn, 69 N.Y. 506, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 872 (N.Y. 1877).

Opinion

Church, Ch. J.

The apportionment made by the assessors under the act of 1869, chapter 383, against the plaintiff’s lot for the cost of widening and improvement of Third street, in the city of Brooklyn, was $4,854.95, one-nineteenth of which ($267.11) was, by virtue of said act, assessed upon *511 said lot in 1871, and added to the annual tax thereon of $284.89, making in all $552.73. The lot was sold for the' non-payment of this sum on the 1st day of July, 1873, and the same was bid off by one Mahoney. This action is brought to set aside the sale and for a perpetual injunction restraining the giving or receiving a deed, and asking that, upon payment of the annual tax included in said sum of $552.73, the assessment be canceled and the apportionment declared void. Mahoney did not appear in the action, and judgment passed against him by default, so that, as to him, the sale is set aside, and no conveyance can be executed to him.

The referee decided that the apportionment and assessment were void, and ordered judgment for the plaintiff, which was reversed by the General Term. The learned counsel for the plaintiff, in an able and elaborate argument, has discussed the whole subject of taxation, and the power of the legislature over the same, and'insists that all the acts of the legislature, from 1860 to 1869 inclusive, authorizing the improvement of Third street, and providing for the payment of the cost thereof, are unconstitutional and void, and that various irregularities have been committed under said acts which invalidate the assessment.

Whether a discussion and consideration of these various points are necessary to a proper disposition of this case depends upon the nature of the action and the legal principles which govern it.

An action in equity will not lie to review the proceedings of municipal boards and officers, or to correct irregularities and errors which may have been committed. The doctrine was distinctly laid down by Chancellor Kent in Mooers v. Smedley (6 Johns. Chy. R., 28). He said: “I cannot find by any statute or precedent or practice that it belongs to the jurisdiction of the Court of Chancery, as a court of equity, to review or control the determinations of the supervisors, but that the review and correction of all errors, mistakes and abuses in the exercise of the powers of subordinate public *512 jurisdictions, and in the official acts of public officers, belongs to the Supreme Court. That it has always been a matter of legal, and never a matter of equitable, cognizance,” and that “ in the whole history of the English Court of Chancery there is no instance of the assertion of such a jurisdiction as was there contended for.” That was an action to review the levying of a tax assumed to be illegal for the purpose of paying bounties upon wolves. In The Mayor v. Meserole (26 Wend., 132), the late Court of Errors expressly affirmed the same principle in a case where it was sought to restrain proceedings for widening'and laying out a street in the city of Brooklyn. Nelson, Ch. J., referring to the opinion in Mooers v. Smedly (supra), said: “My examinations have confirmed the truth and soundness of this conclusion,” and adds, in respect to the claim for the exercise of such -a jurisdiction, that it “ is a doctrine that would at once bring under review of that court all that immense mass of proceedings in opening and widening streets and avenues in our cities and villages; in laying out public and private roads in our towns; and,' in fine, the doings of every subordinate tribunal or public officer that might affect the title to real estate.”

The plaintiff was not without legal remedy. An appeal to the Supreme Court was authorized by the act of 1869, and if .that remedy was not exclusive, a common law certiorari might have been brought. It may be affirmed as a result of the authorities that there is no recognized head of equitable jurisdiction for reviewing directly the proceedings of subordinate tribunals and officers, in laying out, opening or improving streets and avenues, or in levying assessments and taxes therefor, nor to correct errors therein, or to modify or vacate assessments imposed. To establish such a jurisdiction would open the flood gates of premature litigation without substantial benefit to interested parties.

The action if maintainable at all must be based upon a right to invoke the power of the court to prevent an apprehended injury. In general the rule is that a party must wait until his rights have been actually interfered with *513 before he can implead another from whom he anticipates injury.

Courts have commonly occupation enough in determining controversies which have become practical, without spending time in hearing discussions respecting such as are merely speculative or potential, (14 N. Y., 13, per Denio, J.) There are recognized exceptions to this rule, but they are restricted within defined and established limits. These exceptions are : 1. To prevent a multiplicity of actions. 2. To prevent irreparable injury to the freehold. 3. To remove a cloud from the title, (14 N. Y., 541). The question is whether this case is within either of these exceptions. It is manifest that it is not within the first two. It does not appear that any other action will be prevented. The action is by the plaintiff in his own right and for his own benefit, and it does not appear that any other person is affected, or desires to litigate the questions involved. The fact that the assessment is divided into nineteen installments does not bring the case within this exception. A decision as to one installment would be effective upon all. The freehold is not injured, although it may be illegally assessed and sold for taxes. The plaintiff may suffer but the freehold remains unimpaired. (Story Eq. Jur., § 929.)

To bring a case within the third exception to authorize the court to intervene to remove the alleged lien or title as O a cloud, it must appear that the instrument or record is not void upon its face, and that the claimant would not develop the defects rendering the assessment, conveyance or other instrument invalid by the proof which he would be obliged to produce. In this case the plaintiff has already the benefit of a judgment against the purchaser, which, in effect, prevents him from enforcing any claim by virtue of the sale, but if all the proceedings, including the sale, remained unaffected they would not constitute a cloud upon the title within the adjudications. Scott v. Onderdonk (14 N. Y., 9) was sustained upon the ground that under the act of 1834, p. 108, which constituted the charter of Brooklyn, the conveyance *514 was prima facie evidence of certain facts recited, relating to the assessment and preliminary proceedings which would require proof aliunde to overcome, and hence that such conveyance constituted an apparent title, and a cloud which the party had a. right to ask a court of equity to remove, but this court, in Rathbone v. Hooney (58 N.

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Bluebook (online)
69 N.Y. 506, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 872, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guest-v-the-city-of-brooklyn-ny-1877.