In Re Canal and Charles Streets

25 A. 975, 18 R.I. 129, 1893 R.I. LEXIS 3
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 7, 1893
StatusPublished

This text of 25 A. 975 (In Re Canal and Charles Streets) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Canal and Charles Streets, 25 A. 975, 18 R.I. 129, 1893 R.I. LEXIS 3 (R.I. 1893).

Opinion

Matteson, C. J.

This is a proceeding under an act entitled, “An Act in relation to Laying out, Enlarging, Straightening, or otherwise Altering Streets in the C.ity of Providence, passed February 22, 1854, and the several Acts in amendment thereof, or in addition thereto.”

Counsel for several parties interested have entered their appearance and moved to dismiss the proceeding, alleging that it can go no farther, because of the failure of the city council of Providence to elect to make the improvement described in the report of the commissioners of estimate and assessment, heretofore appointed by this court, within sixty days after they had made their report.

Pub. Stat. E. I. cap. 991, § 1, of April 26, 1872, is as follows : “The City Council of the City of Providence shall, within sixty days after the Commissioners of Estimate and Assessment shall have made their first report to the Supreme Court, as provided in the act to which this is in amendment, elect whether they will make the improvement described in said report or not.”

The commissioners made their report to the court, September 12, 1892.

November 3, 1892, the board of aldermen passed the following resolution :

£ £ Whereas, the Commissioners of Estimate and Assessment *131 appointed by the Supreme Court at the October term, 1890, upon the layout, extension and widening of Canal street, from Smith street to Mill street and Charles street from Mill street to Eandall square under and pursuant to an act entitled ‘An act in relation to the laying out, enlarging, straightning, or otherwise altering streets in the city of Providence, and the acts in amendment thereof and in addition thereto,’ made their first report to said court, on September 12, 1892 : Now, therefore, within sixty days after the' making of said report to said court,
Resolved, That the City Council do hereby elect to make said improvement.”

November Y, 1892, the common council concurred in the passage of this resolution.

November 9, 1892, the resolution was presented to the mayor, who, without having taken any action on it, returned it November 23., 1892, to the city clerk.

The sixty days after the commissioners had made their report expired November 11, 1892.

Section II of the charter of the City of Providence, Pub. Laws E. I. cap. 598, of March-8, 1866, entitled “an act to revise, consolidate and amend an act entitled, ‘An act to incorporate the city of Providence and the several acts in addition thereto and in amendment thereof,’ ” is’as follows :

“ Clause 1. The administration of all the fiscal, prudential and municipal affairs of said city, with the conduct and government thereof, shall be vested in one principal officer to be styled the mayor; one council of eight persons to be styled the aldermen; and one council of thirty-two persons to be styled the common council; together with such other magistrates or officers as are hereinafter specified, or by the laws of this State or the ordinances of the said city are, or hereafter may be, authorized or prescribed.
Clause 2. The mayor, aldermen, and common council, in their joint capacity, shall be styled the city council.”

Section VII of said charter, clause Y, as amended by Pub. Laws E. I. cap. Y44, § 2, of March 10, 18Y9, is as follows:

‘ ‘ Every ordinance, resolution or vote to which the concur *132 rence of the Common Council and the Board of Aldermen may he necessary (except on a question of adjournment) shall be presented to the Mayor. If he approve, he shall sign it; but if not he shall return it to the Board in which it originated, with his objections; and if it shall then pass such board by a vote of three-fifths of all the persons elected thereto, it shall be sent, together with such objections, to the other board.; and if approved by a similar majority of that board, it shall become a law. If any bill shall not be returned by the Mayor before the end of the meeting holden next after a lapse of ten days subsequent to the presentation of the bill to him, the same shall be a law in like manner as if he had signed it.”

In support of the motion, it is contended that as the proceeding involves the taking, in invitum, of private lands for public use, the statutory requirements must be strictly observed ; and, hence, as the resolution was not approved by the mayor on or before November 11, 1892, the last of the sixty days next succeeding the filing by th'e commissioners of their report and the last day on which an election could he made by the city council under the statute, the election was not complete within the sixty days ; that it did not become complete by the non-action of the mayor until the end of the meeting of the board of aldermen holden next after the lapse of ten days subsequent to the presentation of the resolution to the mayor ; and, therefore, as the election did not become complete until after the sixty days, it was not a compliance with the requirement of the statute that the city council shall elect whether or not to make the improvement described in the report within sixty days.

In reply, it is suggested, that the mayor’s quasi approval of the resolution by his non-action may be regarded as relating back to the time of the concurrence in the resolution by the common council, or at least as dating from November 9, 1892, when the resolution was presented to him ; that his failure to act on that day may be treated as a constructive assent on that as on each succeeding day, and in this connection attention is called to the language of the last clause of *133 Pub. Laws R. I. cap. 744, § 2, that the same shall ££ be” not £ £ become, ” as in some other similar provisions in other states, a law, &c.

The difficulty with this suggestion is that so long as the mayor retains the resolution within the period limited for his action, he is at liberty to approve or disapprove it, and until the time within which he can act has expired, no one can know that he may not disapprove it, and, hence, his quasi approval to be inferred from his non-action does not, and cannot become complete until the- lapse of the period limited. McNeil v. Commonwealth, 12 Bush, 727; Sutherland on Statutory Construction, § 104.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 A. 975, 18 R.I. 129, 1893 R.I. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-canal-and-charles-streets-ri-1893.