In re Gillespie

180 Misc. 139, 44 N.Y.S.2d 424, 1942 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2410
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 29, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 180 Misc. 139 (In re Gillespie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Gillespie, 180 Misc. 139, 44 N.Y.S.2d 424, 1942 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2410 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1942).

Opinion

Bergan, J.

This proceeding is h consolidation of eight former proceedings for the appraisal of land taken by the City of New York in condemnation. It involves the taking of land in Ulster and Sullivan Counties on claims that were not disposed of in the former proceedings.

The Commissioners appointed by the Special Term reside in New York, Albany and Ulster Counties respectively. They have reported. Objection to the report is made by the claimants who are owners of the Sullivan properties. The objections are laid upon the grounds that the Commission was not properly constituted as to the Sullivan owners; that it was without jurisdiction; and, upon constitutional and statutory grounds, its report is void. These questions, conformably with the understanding of the parties on the argument, will be disposed of [141]*141separately before any of the report is considered on the merits.

The statute (Administrative Code of the City of New York, § K41-9.0; L. 1937, ch. 929) provides that the court shall appoint as commissioners three disinterested and competent freeholders, at least one of whom shall reside in the city of New York and at least one of whom shall reside in the county or one of the counties in which such real estate shall be situated.” It is argued by the objecting claimants that the use of the words or one of the counties ” in the statute has application only where an integrated parcel oí: a claimant lies in more than one county, and that it has no application to a proceeding which may include groups of parcels located severally in more than one county.

So narrow a construction may not be given to the language. That the statute contemplates the taking and appraisal of real estate severally located in separate counties is apparent from the statutory context, and the appraisal of real estate located within several counties by a single commission is likewise within the statutory contemplation. The “ final map,” which may, of course, be the basis of a single proceeding, must be filed in the county clerk’s office of each county in which any of the land affected thereby is situated.” (§ K41-3.0, subd. c.) The maps further provided by section K41-6.0 must be filed by the Corporation Counsel “ in the office of the clerk of each county in which any real estate laid out on such map shall be located.” The lands or some part thereof shown on such maps ” become the basis of the application to appoint commissioners of appraisal. (§ K41-7.0.) All the lands, in several counties, could be appraised in one proceeding within the frame of such a statute.

With this language leading in sequence to section K41-9.0 the use of the words ‘1 county or * iS * counties ’ ’ in "which “ such real estate shall be situated ” can have no other meaning than to apply equally to parcels severally in more than one county as shown by the maps, as well as to parcels which may, perchance, lie in more than one county. If this is a valid construe tion of the statutory words, the statute itself gives the rest of the answer, for at least one commissioner shall be appointed from the county or one of the counties,” which was done in this case. Therefore the order of appointment was-entered in conformity with the statute. See discussion in Matter of Board of Water Supply of City of New York (157 Misc. 842, 843).

It is argued, further, that this portion of the statute is invalid, since the Constitution [N. Y. Const., art. I, § 7, subd. (b)J vests the power of appointment of commissioners in the court and [142]*142the legislative prescription of residence of commissioners was a gratuitous and improper intrusion into a judicial power resting directly on a constitutional grant. The logic of the argument applies equally to the requirement that one of the commissioners be a resident of the county where the real estate is located. If the premise of the argument be agreed to, the Legislature could give no direction in respect of qualifications of commissioners not found in the Constitution, and the court could act with entire freedom within the constitutional language in its appointments. It may well be that the words as shall be proscribed by law ” appearing at the end of the constitutional subdivision were not designed to qualify the appointment of commissioners, but were designed only to authorize a legislative choice among the three methods of fixing compensation.

Still, it is within the legislative power to prescribe the qualifications of commissioners, as it would be to prescribe the qualifications of jurors or official referees who would make appraisals under the alternative methods provided by the Constitution. Moreover it has long been the practice of the Legislature, in one way or another, to prescribe qualifications of commissioners to be appended to the constitutional language. All the Constitution says is that there shall be three and they shall be appointed by the court. Almost every statute providing for appraisal by commissioners adds some further qualification. The Condemnation Law is a good example. Section 13 provides that the commissioners shall be disinterested; that they shall be competent freeholders; that they shall be residents of the judicial district or a county adjoining the judicial district; and in certain judicial districts that they shall not have certain official connections with judges. It is reasonably accurate to say that all appraisals in condemnation made in this State by commissioners are made in pursuance of legislative direction as~ to qualifications superimposed on those provided by the Constitution, and I think this is a proper exercise of the legislative power.

In Matter of City of Rochester (184 App. Div. 369) it was held, among other things, that the constitutional power of the court to appoint commissioners was plenary and could not be circumscribed by a legislative requirement that at least one commissioner should be a resident and freeholder of the city of Rochester. Upon the ground stated in the opinion of De Angelis, J., in this case there was decided concurrently Matter of City of Rochester v. Holden (184 App. Div. 925) which was considered by the Court of Appeals at 224 New York 386. The order of the [143]*143Appellate Division was affirmed, but the affirmance turned upon grounds other than this one.

The Court of Appeals did not find that the statutory provision intruded upon plenary judicial power. It discussed the merits of the argument that a legislative “ suggestion in providing for residence qualification that one commissioner be expected to guard the interests of the condemning party without a like suggestion for the protection of the property owners might not afford equal protection of the laws. (Pp. 393, 394.) It expressly declined to hold that the statute did deprive the property owners of equal protection under the laws. (P. 394.) It held that the statutory scheme was not commendable and, in view of other parts of the statute, upon which the case was decided, that it was not negligible. The appellate treatment of the sweeping condemnation of any legislative prescription of the plenary constitutional power of the court to appoint commissioners contained in Matter of City of Rochester (supra, 184 App. Div. 369) makes it clear that this part of that decision is no longer to be followed. The facts in Matter of Simmons (166 App. Div. 752) have no analogy here.

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Bluebook (online)
180 Misc. 139, 44 N.Y.S.2d 424, 1942 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-gillespie-nysupct-1942.