In re Rector of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre

61 How. Pr. 315
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 61 How. Pr. 315 (In re Rector of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre) 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 Rector of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, 61 How. Pr. 315 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1880).

Opinions

Lawrence, J.

The witnesses should not have been allowed to express an opinion as to whether the drains were necessary or useful, and the objections taken to such testimony by the corporation counsel are sustained. In other respects, the case seems to fall within the decision of Qheesebrough and the cases in the court of appeals which that decision was designed to follow. The assessment must therefore be vacated.

From the order entered vacating the assessment, this appeal is taken by the mayor, aldermen and commonalty.

William C. Whitney, for corporation.

I. The construction of the drains was necessary for the preservation of the public health. This is shown in the manner provided by the statute of 1871 by the certificate of the sanitary inspector and the resolution of the board of health, and there is no evidence whatever to the contrary.

II. The lands of the petitioners were among those that required to be drained in this manner. The certificate of the sanitary inspector and the resolution of the board of health were prima fade proof that all of the lands included within the boundaries named were derelict, as containing surface water, stagnant and deleterious to the health of the vicinity, and it was necessary for the petitioners to overcome the prima faoie ease thus made out. The extracts from the assessment map and the map showing the old water courses, annexed to this brief, show that the petitioners’ lands did require draining and were drained in this manner. The presumption created by the action of the board of health was not overcome, and upon the case the petitioners’ lands were in a condition requiring drainage for the preservation of the public health.

III. The petitioners’ lands being derelict, as matter of law, the city was under no obligation to acquire from them the right to perform that work. In considering the proposition fully, it is necessary to discriminate this from other cases similar only in that they have been cases of drainage which may be pressed upon the court as bearing upon this case. As to the question whether the state has power to authorize a municipality to perform any official act, it is necessary to take the standpoint of the state in conferring the authority, in order to determine whether or not the act is legal. It is well-settled law that the state has the right to cause lands to be drained by the public authorities, and assessments to be imposed therefor upon the land benefited, and that the benefit to the public health is a sufficient public purpose justifying the interference of- the state in the performance of the work and the imposition of [318]*318assessments. Of course, in general, the performance of such a work as the drainage of lands necessarily involves the entrance upon and the use of some land not itself requiring to be drained, and it, of course, necessarily follows that the state has no right to enter upon such land, or construct a public work upon it, of any character, without first taking proceedings to acquire the right, and making compensation for the burden thus imposed upon the ' property by putting it to a public use. That was the point held by the court of appeals in the Matter of Gheesebrough, decided in September last.

It was one in. which the land before the court did not require draining, was not itself at fault, but was made to bear the burden of assisting to drain its neighbor’s land which was at fault. The court says, Earl, J.: “ He testified (and his evidence was not disputed) that his land was dry; that it had natural drainage; was in no way benefited by the drains.” “ It was a work not so much necessary for the lands of the petitioner as for other lands, and requiring drainage through his. It is believed that no case can be found justifying the permanent appropriation of land without compensation under such circumstances,” citing People agt. Nearing (27 N. Y., 306); People agt. Haines (49 N. Y., 587); Matter of Rhinelander (68 N. Y., 165); Matter of Ryers (72 N. Y., 1). , “ The statute of 1861, therefore, did not and no statute could confer authority to construct this drain through the land of the petitioner without his consent, and without compensation to him for the land taken. The construction thereof was therefore a trespass, a wrongful act upon his land,” &c. It is not claimed in behalf of the city in this case, that the state has any power to enter upon, construct any public work upon, or lay any burden upon any land not itself guilty of wrong, unless compensation is made for the public use. Wherever the public require the use of any land to carry out a necessary public improvement, it must be regularly acquired, and compensation made. But it has never yet been held that the city is powerless to abate a nuisance within its borders; that is, can[319]*319not interfere and remedy a condition of things dangerous to the health of its people, and charge the expense thereof to the owner of the derelict property, without first proceeding by the tedious method established by the law for acquiring the property, or an easement in it, in order to enable the work to be done.

It is admitted that where it is desired to assess property not itself derelict (by reason of benefits it is supposed to receive from the improvements of the neighborhood) or where it is necessary to enter upon land not itself requiring drainage, for the purpose of constructing any portion of the public work, that in both of those cases the source of the power, and the mode of its execution, must necessarily follow the courses well known to the law as those pursued in the performance of an ordinary public work or public improvement; but the necessity arises from the fact that you propose to lay a burden upon land not itself derelict, to assess owners whose land did not require drainage. But where the state simply proposes to enter upon land guilty of the perpetration of a wrong to the community, the creation and maintenance of a nuisance, for the purpose of relieving the community by removing the nuisance and making the property conform to the conditions necessary for the public health or safety, charging the expense to the property derelict, there is no case to be found denying the power, and the. long-established usage of the city, in the exercise of the power; and the many cases in which it has been sustained all support the proposition that it is a legitimate exercise of the police power possessed by the state. This case presents the question squarely, of property itself- derelict, and there being no point made that any portion of the drain has been laid upon property not derelict (and therefore where it would be a trespass for the state to enter and carry on work), has not the state a right to authorize local officials, for the sake of the public health, to enter and make the necessary improvements required, and charge the expense of the same to the owners ? The case of RJiinelcmder and other similar [320]*320cases, holding that the state was a trespasser, and that no assessment could be laid for a sewer thus constructed where the state had no right to construct it, and where the property owed no duty to the public to allow it to be constructed, were, without doubt, rightly decided; but the absurdity of applying the proposition to the case of an entrance by the state upon property guilty of a wrong to a community by maintaining a nuisance, is at once readily discerned.

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Bluebook (online)
61 How. Pr. 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-rector-of-the-church-of-the-holy-sepulchre-nysupct-1880.