Konowalski v. City of Buffalo

131 A.D. 465, 115 N.Y.S. 467, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 837

This text of 131 A.D. 465 (Konowalski v. City of Buffalo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Konowalski v. City of Buffalo, 131 A.D. 465, 115 N.Y.S. 467, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 837 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinions

Spring, J.:

The court below has held that the laying of the new concrete walk in the place of the plank sidewalk was a repair of the walk. If so, the assessment is regular, and the question up for review mainly involves the construction of section 288 of the city charter (Laws .of 1891, chap. 105, as amd. by Laws of 1901, chap. 228). That section provides: “ It shall be the duty of the owner or occupant of any premises in the city, whenever such work shall be ordered by a resolution of the common council, to lay water, sewer and gas service pipes from the main pipes in the street in front of such premises to such point beyond the curb line as the commissioner of public works may determine. It shall also be the duty of such owner or occupant to lay and relay sidewalks in front of such premises whenever the same shall be so as aforesaid ordered, and to at all times keep and maintain the sidewalk in front of such premises in good order and repair, and to remove snow and ice therefrom within the time and as required by the city ordinances, The commissioner of public works shall notify the owner or occupant of any premises in front qf which any such work, excepting the removal of snow and ice, and repair of sidewalks, shall be required to be done, that if the same is not done by the owner or occupant within ten days the same shall be doné by the city and the expense thereof will be assessed upon such premises.”

There is the further provision that if “ such work shall not be done within the time specified in such notice,” and in case the owner shall fail to keep the sidewalk in front of the premises “ in good order and repair,” the commissioner of public works “may cause such work to be done” and the expense is made a lien on the premises, and the making of the.assessment roll for such expense is also authorized in the same section.

[468]*468The manner of designating the kind of work for which the particular tax is levied is prescribed, in said section as: follows : “ Assessment-roll for water, sewer and gas connections, constructing,'repairing, and cleaning sidewalks, and removing street obstructions.”

The assessment roll on which the tax of plaintiff appeared followed the form designated and contained three columns: (1) “ Repairs of Sidewalks; ” (2) “ Construction of Sidewalks; ” (3) “ Reconstruction of Sidewalks,” and the-assessment in controversy was under column 2, “ Construction of Sidewalks.” The scheme of the charter provisions is to distinguish between various sidewalk improvements. If a sidewalk has once been laid and becomes out of repair the commissioner of public works may cause the same to be repaired without notice, although the practice seems to have prevailed even in case of that improvement to serve the notice on the owner or occupant of the premises advising him that if the repair is not made within ten days the work will be done at his expense. 3STo resolution of the common council is essential for this repair work. The city may be liable for injuries caused by defective walks and the necessity of the situation requires that the body or person in immediate charge of the walks should possess the power to act promptly and upon his own motion where they are in need of repair. In such case it seems plain that no change of materials is to be made and no regrading or change of the surface line is contemplated. The existence of the walk implies the previous location of the grade line of the street and no change in that is permissible except by direction of the common council as will hereafter appear.

If, however, a walk is to be laid or relaid or a new walk constructed as-a substitute for an existing walk, the common council must direct that to be done, and ten days’ notice of such change must be served on the owner or occupant, and the commissioner of public works cannot act until the time has expired. The owner must lay and relay sidewalks * * * whenever the same shall be * * * ordered” by the common council. This distinction between the mere repair of a walk out of condition, and the. construction of a new walk is carried through the entire section, even in the provision as to the making of the assessment roll as already indicated. The system thus devised is wholesome and effective. The city is endowed with plenary authority in control of the streets and of the [469]*469sidewalks. In order to- facilitate speedy repair of a walk the commissioner representing, the city can remedy the defects immediately and the expense therefor is a lien upon the premises. The owner must submit to this penalty for his remissness for allowing his walk to get out of repair. If, however, the common council desire a new walk, if that body deem it advisable to replace a plank walk with a concrete, stone or brick walk, the owner is entitled to notice of such a purpose. This requirement is no burden upon the city. The notice is only for ten days, and the right to prescribe the kind of walk, whether of the same or different materials, and the width of the same, is vested in the common council. The owner or occupant, however, has notice of the duty to be imposed upon him. A lot owner, upon whom a notice to repair has been served, may be entirely willing to have the repairs made by the city officials, and then no question can be raised as to the work conforming to the notice. If, however, he is to be burdened with the expense of a new, vastly enlarged and far more expensive walk, he should receive notice of that radical change.

In the present case the owner, in pursuance to a notice to repair a plank walk five feet in width, the cost of which would probably have been trifling, has been subjected to the expense of a concrete walk seventeen and .one-half feet in width and across his lot of thirty feet. The just distinction in the statute has been entirely ignored.

Section 393 of the charter, in directing the general division of the streets, provides that they “ shall be suitably divided into carriageways and sidewalks.” It is also provided in the ordinances of the city (Chap, IV, §§ 8, 9) that the owner or occupant may be required “ to grade and level the sidewalk in front of said promises between the street line and the curb line,” and in case of his failure “to grade and level the sidewalk” for the period of ten days after notice, the commissioner of public-works may cause the same to be done at his expense. The claim, is' that the sidewalk is the dirt space between the curb and the exterior street line. Extending the argument, it is claimed as a deduction from this premise, and in elucidation of section 288 referred to, “ that the laying and relaying of sidewalks mentioned in that section mean work on a sidewalk in its creation or establishment which an abutting owner is bound to do, or the same kind of work after an alteration or change in the [470]*470street. * * * I think it may be fairly said, for the purposes of this case at any rate, that the laying or relaying of a sidewalk within the meaning of section 288 is the same thing as grading or regrading is within the meaning of section 8 of Chapter IY of the Ordinances. In each case the reference is to original' work on a sidewalk and not a repair of it, after it has been once laid or relaid.”

It is doubtless true that in the two general divisions of the street the sidewalk includes the entire space between the curb and the street boundary. The whole space may be used for the walk in the discretion of the common council. When a grade has been established and a walk for the actual use of pedestrians has been laid, that “ visible-used ” walk comprises the sidewalk to which the charter provisions and ordinances are limited.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 A.D. 465, 115 N.Y.S. 467, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 837, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/konowalski-v-city-of-buffalo-nyappdiv-1909.