Mansfield v. City of Lockport

24 Misc. 25, 52 N.Y.S. 571
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 24 Misc. 25 (Mansfield v. City of Lockport) 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
Mansfield v. City of Lockport, 24 Misc. 25, 52 N.Y.S. 571 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

Laughlin, J.

This is a suit in equity to vacate an assessment on plaintiff’s lands in the city of Lockport, levied to defray part of the expenses of a local improvement.

The improvement was the grading, curbing and paving of West avenue, East Main street and East avenue, which form one continuous street from Transit street on the west, through the principal business and residence part of the city to the easterly city line, a total distance of nearly one and a half miles. The plaintiff owns a tract of lánd situate on the northerly side of East avenue which is used as a family residence and for agricultural proposes.. It consists of twenty-nine and thirtyrseven one-hundredths acres, and has a frontage of 372 21/100' feet on that part of the avenue so improved, and is bounded easterly by the city line, but lies wholly within the city limite.

The total cost or contract price of the improvement was $84,930.13) of which $2,066.25 was assessed- on plaintiff’s said lands..

[27]*27The plaintiff asks to he relieved from paying this assessment and to have the lien thereof canceled, upon the following grounds: (1) that the local authorities never acquired jurisdiction to order the improvement; (2) that the common council wilfully, wrongfully and fraudulently omitted from the district of assessment abutting lands which were necessarily benefited; (3) that the common council wilfully and wrongfully failed to include all of certain indivisible parcels, part of which were included and the assessor omitted to assess the same; (4) that the specifications and plans or some of them were not filed as recited in the ordinance and no opportunity given interested parties to inspect or object thereto; and (5) that the assessor did not assess according to benefits or on a uniform rule.

This action purports to be brought for the benefit of all others assessed upon this roll who' may come in and contribute to the expense thereof, but no other person assessed has come in and asked to be made a party or to be-given the benefit of any judgment that may be entered herein, and, therefore, we are only called upon to consider these questions so far as they affect the plaintiff. Knell v. City of Buffalo, 54 Hun, 80.

These objections and the grounds therefor will now be considered in the order stated. The claim of want of jurisdiction is twofold; first, that sufficient property-owners did not petition for the improvement, and, secondly, that the determination of the common council as to such sufficiency was wilful, wrongful, fraudulent and unlawful. Section 202 of the charter of Lockport confers jurisdiction on the common council to determine that the expense of such an improvement shall be defrayed by an assessment upon the real estate which it deems benefited thereby, and to order such improvement by adopting an ordinance in the form therein prescribed, specifying the portion of the city which it deems will be benefited thereby, after, there shall be filed with the city clerk a petition or petitions to the common council for such improvement, signed by persons owning at least one-third of the street frontage on the street or streets wherein such assessment is to be laid, of the lands to be assessed for the improvement.” Section 203 of the charter provides as follows: “ The decision of the common council as to whether any petition or petitions for a local improvement is or are signed by persons owning at least one-third of the frontage of the lands to be assessed for such improvement shall be final and conclusive and not subject to question or appeal, but it shall not base its action on signatures on more than one petition, if such petitions [28]*28ask for different improvements; said decision shall be by resolution, wherein the vote shall be taken by yeas and nays, and entered in the minutes, and it shall require an affirmative vote of two-thirds of the aldermen in office to make such decision, or to. pass any ordinance for a local improvement, except as herein otherwise provided.” Petitions for this improvement, a brick pavement with Medina sandstone curbing, in due form and signed by many of the owners of the ■ land fronting on these streets between Transit street and the easterly city line, were duly presented to the council on July 31, 1893, and referred to its committee on streets, which was the appropriate committee. This committee advised with the city engineer as to the sufficiency of th,e petitions and consulted the general tax-rolls and official maps as did also the mayor and most of 'the aldermen not on the committee, and on the 7th of August, 1893, the committee reported to the council in favor of granting the prayer of the petitions and directing the city clerk to prepare an ■ordinance, and the engineer to prepare specifications, and such re-, port was unanimously adopted, the twelve aldermen, being all .of the members elected to the council, voting in the .affirmative. At the same- session of the common council a resolution determining that such petitions were signed by persons owning at least óne-third of the frontage of the lands to be assessed for the improvement, was adopted by a like vote, the ayes and noes being called and recorded. On August 14,1893, pursuant to such-direction the clerk prepared and reported a draft of a. proposed ordinance for a brick pavement with Medina sandstone curbing, according to specifications which it recites were filed with the city clerk by the engineer on August 14, 1893, and determining that the expense, when determined and entered on the minutes, be defrayed by local assessment, to be made by Assessor William J. Gold, and determining and describing the lands deemed benefited and determining the sufficiency nf the petitions. Thereupon a resolution was offered, directing the city clerk to publish the ordinance and in .and with the minutes of the council a notice to all owners or occupants of or other persons interested in any of the real estate in said ordinances described, that the question of the adoption or rejection of such ordinance, would be considered by the common council at a meeting thereof on August 21, 1893, and that all persons interested therein would be heard at that time, as to the adoption or rejection, of said ordinance. Section 205 of the charter requires such a notice and expressly provides that it [29]*29símil be sufficient notice to all such owners, occupants and persons-interested, of the facts therein stated. The proposed ordinance and resolution were referred to a committee of the whole, which met and after considering them, rose and reported in favor of the adoption of the resolution, and the same was adopted unanimously. Such notice in due form was embodied in the minutes of the common council, and it and the proposed ordinance were duly published more than three days before the time set for the hearing as required by the charter. At the same session of the council the plans and specifications filed by the engineer were referred to the committee on streets and notice was published in the council minutes, inviting-interested parties to be present at the committee meeting on the-evening of August 18th, when the same would be considered, and they were considered at such meeting. I do not find that the charter required such notice or hearing with respect to the specifications. On August 21st a hearing was duly given by the common council on the question of the adoption or rejection of the ordinance pursuant to the published notice, and after such hearing the ordinance was-adopted unanimously, all of the aldermen being present and voting-in the affirmative.

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Bluebook (online)
24 Misc. 25, 52 N.Y.S. 571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mansfield-v-city-of-lockport-nysupct-1898.