In Matter of Petition of Burmeister

76 N.Y. 174, 56 How. Pr. 416, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 480
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 4, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 76 N.Y. 174 (In Matter of Petition of Burmeister) 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
In Matter of Petition of Burmeister, 76 N.Y. 174, 56 How. Pr. 416, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 480 (N.Y. 1879).

Opinion

Church, Ch. J.

The ordinance authorizing the work Avas adopted by the board of aldermen, October seventeenth, and by the board of assistant aldermen, November tenth, and approved by the mayor November 15, 1870. •

*176 The petitioner claims the benefit of the exception contained in the seventh section of chapter 580, of the Laws of 1872, upon the ground that the work was a repavement of the street which had once been done and paid for, and rests the motion to vacate principally upon the ground of a failure to publish the ordinances as required by law.

The right of the petitioner to the benefit of the exception, is denied, and also that any irregularity occurred in advertis- ' ing. The question of irregularity will be first considered.

I have examined the statutes, and all the decisions bearing upon the question, and find some difficulty in reconciling the decisions both in the Supreme Court, and this court, but the apparent conflict in some of them arises from a difference in the facts and points presented, rather than from a difference of opinion as to the law.

The statutes in force at the time this work was authorized, were contained in chapters 137 and 383 of the Laws of 1870. By section 20 of the former act, it was made the duty of the clerks of the respective boards to publish all resolutions and ordinances of the common council, and prohibited any vote to be taken in either board upon the passage of a resolution or an ordinance which contemplated any specific improvement, or the levying any tax or assessment until after the same should have been published three days, and also required that such resolution or ordinance should after its passage by each board, be published with the ayes and nays thereon. As this section does not specify, the question occurs how and when the publication was to be made. This question is answered by section 1, of chapter 383, which declares that “ all advertising for the city government hereafter, including the legislative and executive departments, and in street and assessment proceedings, shall be published in not more than seven daily, and six weekly newspapers printed and published in said city, to be designated from time to time by the mayor and comptroller of said city,” and prohibited any payment for such advertising to any other paper than those designated. It appears now that at this *177 time, there had been no designation of papers under this act, and that no selection was in fact made until during the year 1871. It is suggested, and I infer that this was the view taken by the learned judge who delivered the opinion at the General Term, that in the event of no designation of papers, the clerk might publish the proceedings in any paper. I am unable to concur in this view. The two statutes should be read together. In effect they require the clerk to publish the proceedings in the papers to be designated, and all action of the common council is prohibited, until such publication. The clerk has no discretion to exercise, and no authority to publish in any other than the designated papers. Such a discretion has never been vested in the clerk or any other officer of the city, and such a power would destroy the protection which a publication was designed to secure. It would enable the clerk to insert the proceedings in any obscure sheet in the city. The object of requiring publication is to give notice to taxpayers of proceedings which may affect their interests. It is a substantial requirement and should not be frittered away. If papers arc designated by some officer or body the citizen knows Avhcre to look for these proceedings, but if it is left to the discretion of some subordinate all the beneficial purposes of publication might be defeated, and it Avould be as avcII to say that if no designation Avcre made, no publication need be made. This court held In re Smith (52 N. Y., 526), that if there Avere no corporation papers, no proceedings could be instituted, and that the publication according to the statute Avas a condition precedent to any right of the common council to act. The same decision was made In re Levy (63 N. Y., 637), in Avhich this court adopted the opinion of Beady, J., reported in 4 Hun, 501. These decisions are authoritative that if there are no corporation papers, the common council cannot act. The statute is prohibitory. In In re Folsom, (56 N. Y., 60), this court held from the facts appearing in that case, that certain designations made under the act of 1868, might continue as official papers, until designations should be *178 made under tho act of 1870, and that by not changing such designations the officers which were the same in the act of 1870, as in the act of 1868, acquiesced in tho designation of such papers, and a publication therein was good. In In re Anderson (60 N. Y., 457), the question was whether tho Hew York Leader, was a corporation paper. It had been designated in 1867, but that selection was limited to that year, and it was held that as it did not appear that the designation under the act of 1868, had been communicated to tho common council as required by that act, no legal employment or selection for 1868, of that paper had been made, and hence proof of a failure to publish in that paper did not invalidate the proceedings. These decisions arc not in conflict, but were made upon the facts appearing in each case. The doctrine in tho two cases before cited of Smith, and Levy, that in tho absence of corporation papers the common council has no authority to pass an ordinance for a local improvement, or to lay an assessment has not been denied, or its soundness questioned. In In re Folsom, it was not disputed that papers had been duly selected in 1868, and it was held that they continued by adoption as corporation papers until a new selection was made under the act of 1870. In this case tho evidence tended to show, and without explanation was sufficient to establish that no legal designation of papers was made under the act of 1868, because upon tho authority of Anderson’s Case, supra, such designation was not communicated to the common council nor was any evidence produced which would obviate the force of that requirement, in that act, or from which an inference could bo drawn, that it had been complied with. Wo cannot go back of 1868, because the selections in 1867 were limited to one year. (In re Burke, 62 N. Y., 224.)

As the case stands we must assume that at the time this ordinance was passed, there were no papers designated either according to the act of 1870, or 1868, in which these proceedings could have been published, and this being so the *179 common council were expressly prohibited from passing the ordinance in question. We feel bound to adhere to the previous decisions of this court upon this point, and we entertain no doubt of their correctness.

It is insisted however that the contract for this work was validated, and the alleged irregularities cured by the certificate of the commissioners under the act chapter 580 of the Laws of 1872, and that the exception in the seventh section of that act applies only to cases in which the commissioners failed to certify that the contracts were free from fraud. The only countenance for this position from any decision of this court is found in

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Bluebook (online)
76 N.Y. 174, 56 How. Pr. 416, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-matter-of-petition-of-burmeister-ny-1879.