Le Roy v. Mayor of New-York

20 Johns. 430
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1823
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 20 Johns. 430 (Le Roy v. Mayor of New-York) 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
Le Roy v. Mayor of New-York, 20 Johns. 430 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1823).

Opinion

Van Ness, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court. The objects of this application, as stated in the notice of the plaintiffs, are, 1. That the return on file be taken off the file. 2. That the rule entered to assign errors, be vacated for irregularity. 3. For a rule that the defendants make a further return, in the following particulars: (1) That the defendants set forth, state, and describe the district or section of the city of JYew-York, and the bounds and limits of the said district or section of the said city, from which the water runs, and is received, or, by the permanent or the existing regulation thereof, is to run and be received into the common sewer in Canal-street, to be conveyed and carried to the river. (2) That they state the time when such perma[434]*434ñent or existing regulation was adopted or made, and the nature au¿ cause thereof, with the maps, profiles, documents, or papers in the possession, custody, power, or control °f defendants, designating, describing, or showing such sa¡¿ district or part of the said city, or such said regulation. (3) That they set forth such matters and facts as they have omitted to return, and which, by the certiorari, they are required to return. 4. For the costs of this application. 5. For such other rule or order as the Court shall see fit to grant.

Sanford’s affidavit, which accompanies the notice, very fully explains the whole case ; and the necessity of compelling the defendants to return "all the papers, orders, regulations, and documents in their power or possession, according to the notice, is most apparent; and so the Court thought when they refused, at the last August term, to quash the certiorari, and ordered, a return to be made to it. The whole of the proceedings in relation to Canal-street, appeared to us to be one continued operation, from the original laying out of Canal-street, building the sewer, and covering it. And it is indispensably necessary, to enable this Court to determine, or settle a principle upon which an assessment of the expense ought to be made, that we should have before us the whole of the proceedings in the possession of the defendants, from the commencement.

It is to be observed, that the plaintiffs do not ask a return of any matter or fact which rests in the knowledge of the individual members of the Common Council; but of such matters and facts as are contained in written documents in the possession, power, or control of the defendants, as a corporate body, and which are records, or in the nature of records, of the proceedings of the Common Council, in relation to Canal-street.

As to the jurisdiction of this Court, in relation to the proceedings in question, I would remark, that that point is not now to be discussed, as we have already disposed of it, in refusing to quash the certiorari in August term last. We decided, and without hesitation, that this Court had a superintending and supervising power in cases of this description; and that the papers then submitted to us, entitled the plaintiffs to a certiorari, and to such a return thereto, as [435]*435would bring the merits of the question fairly before the Court. The whole of the proceedings relative to the original laying out of Canal-street, and the various acts, orders, regulations, surveys, Sic., were then, and now are exhibited; and we certainly considered them material to be returned. Without them, a case was not made out for our interference. These proceedings, in fact, according to the view we then took of the case, formed the basis of the complaint of the plaintiffs, and furnished the principal ground for the interposition of the superintending powers of this Court. Upon the merits of the question in dispute between the parties, we did not then, nor do we now, express an opinion. We supposed, then, as we still do, that it is a case of which we have undoubted jurisdiction, and that, prima facie, enough had been established to direct the proceedings to be brought before us, reserving our opinion upon the merits, when a full and complete return of them shall be made.

The certiorari recites, that, in the making of other sewers in the city of JYew-York, a principle of assessment had been adopted, and sanctioned by the Common Council, in conformity with that which the plaintiffs contend ought to have been pursued in this case, and it requires a return of the proceedings in such cases. To this, I am inclined to think, the defendants are not bound to make any return. Whether the Corporation has adopted a wrong principle of assessment in this case, is not to be determined by their practice, even in former analogous cases, but by the law under which they acted. The rule is justly stated by the defendants’ counsel, that nothing is to be returned but what can be legally required to be returned, without reference to the command of the certiorari.

We, therefore, direct a rule to be entered, that the defendants make a further return to the certiorari, as to the first and second points stated in the notice ; and that in the mean time, the proceedings on the rule for the plaintiffs to assign errors, be stayed, until twenty days after such further return is made. We give no costs of this application. They must abide the final event.

S. Jones, and D. B. Ogden, for the plaintiffs,

contended, that the defendants, and the commissioners acting under their direction, had not conformed to the authority and directions of the act, or to the rule of assessment given by it. The 175th section, (2 N. R. L. 407.) says, they are “ to cause estimates of the expense to be made, and a just and equitable assessment thereof among all the owners or occupants of all the houses and lots intended to be benefited thereby, in proportion, as nearly as may be, to the advantage which each shall be deemed to acquire.” They have no arbitrary discretion on the subject. The law is imperative. The only discretion to be exercised by them is in apportioning the amount of the assessment among the persons intended to be benefited by the improvement. This act, in regard to the powers given to the Corporation, is very similar to the English statutes relative to the Commissioners of Sewers, in regard to whom, it has been decided, that they are bound to exercise a legal discretion, that is, the exercise of given powers. (Callis on Sewers, 112, 113. 145. 223, 224. 3 Maule & Selw. 447. 2 Str. 11. 47. Then, who were the persons intended to be benefited by this common sewer ? Certainly, all those from whose grounds the water is carried off to the river, by means of the sewer. They are persons [437]*437intended by the Corporation to be benefited, when they directed the improvement to be made, not those intended by the commissioners.

[436]*436The defendants, accordingly, made a further return, which being objected to by the plaintiffs as insufficient, the counsel for both parties, to obviate the necessity of any further application to the Court on the subject, agreed to an additional statement, to be annexed to, and taken as part of the return. And in May term, 1822, the cause came before the Court, on the returns to the certiorari and the proceedings thereon, and upon a notice from the plaintiffs to the defendants of an application to the Court, that the estimate and assessment of the expense of making the common sewer in

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Bluebook (online)
20 Johns. 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/le-roy-v-mayor-of-new-york-nysupct-1823.