Martin v. Mayor of Brooklyn

1 Hill & Den. 545
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1841
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Hill & Den. 545 (Martin v. Mayor of Brooklyn) 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
Martin v. Mayor of Brooklyn, 1 Hill & Den. 545 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1841).

Opinion

By the Court, Cowen, J.

As to the first Count: If, as is suppossed by the plaintiff’s counsel, the duty of the trustees to file the report was absolute; if they had no discretion, but their duty was ministerial, then indeed there is a good deal of plausibility in this action. The plaintiff shews a neglect on their part, which was -with intent to injure him, and which has had that effect. All this .is admit[547]*547ted by the demurrer. But the question of duty was examined by the late chief justice, in The People, on the relation of this plaintiff, vs. The President and Trustees of the then village of Brooklyn, and he inclined strongly that the trustees had a discretion to go on or not, until the final act of confirmation by the common pleas. I lately held, also, in respect to street proceedings in the city of New-York, that the corporation there had such discretion till the final confirmation by this court. I am strongly inclined to think there is no substantial difference in the two cases. In both, the officers of the corporation had a public duty to discharge. And in general, where such a duty is imposed by statute, whether by words peremptory in themselves, as here, or merely permissive, as in the case of Néw-York, they have no discretion to refuse its ■ performance as against a party having an interest in such performance. (Malcom v. Rogers, 5 Cowen, 188, 193, 4, and the cases there cited. Holroyd, J. in Bolton v. Crowther, 4 Dowl. & Ryl. 197. Rex v. Mayor, &c. of Hastings, 1 id. 148. Rex. v. Eye, 2 id. 172,176, and note.) It will be seen by these cases, however, I apprehend, that whatever the words of the statute may be, we must look to the party for whose benefit the proceeding is to be had. In the case at bar, for instance, the statute says that, if there .be no appeal, the trustees shall cause the report to be filed at the next term, and the common pleas shall, by order, confirm it. For whose benefit is this ? Clearly for that of the public, more immediately for the benefit of that portion of the public who were residents of the village of Brooklyn. Neither make any complaint that nothing was done. In that respect, so far as the public interest and public duty of the trustees were in question, every thing is right. Did they owe any public duty, as officers, to the plaintiff? Can he complain that they have omitted to lay out streets which the public do not want? This court have already refused to put the trustees in motion, on his application for a mandamus, strongly intimating that his rights were not absolute till confirmation. As an individual, he can have no interest ex[548]*548cept in obtaining payment for his land; and he accordingly complains that the trustees would not put the corporation in such a position that he could compel them to pay. They say: “ We prefer, for reasons satisfactory to ourselves, to stay proceedings, at least for the present.” It is the same thing to the plaintiff. He does not, to be sure, get the money for the land; but he holds an equivalent, the land itself. He is deprived of nothing in this respect, and can have no such interest as to give the statute a mandatory operation in his favor as a mere individual.

But he complains that a cloud has been brought over his title, that he has been prevented from raising money on his land, and incurred other disadvantages by the delay. Truly, as the plaintiff’s counsel said, the action is one of the first impression, at least in this respect. He avers, that on the faith of the proceedings being consummated, he had pulled down his rope-walks and stone building on the land, and built in another place; that he has erected three new buildings in reference to one of the contemplated streets; and that the opening of the streets would have benefitted his other lands, &c. The speculative disadvantage arising from such proceedings being kept pending for a long time may be considerable; but we cannot recognize them as the subject of an action against the officers commissioned to prosecute such proceedings, or the corporation which they represent. In the nature of things, such officers must exercise a discretion on the question whether the public shall be finally committed; and courts must hold such consequences as are here complained of to be damnum absque injuria. A contrary rule would be ruinous to all those who engage as commissioners in carrying through this sort of improvement. It is said, the trustees should at least have decided one way or the other, within a reasonable time. Such is, no doubt, the duty of every officer who. is required by law to decide. But can an action be brought by a party for unreasonable delay, when the officer has a discretion to decide one way or the other? and that too in respect to a public improvement, the complainant having no individual [549]*549right demand that the officer shall decide oneway or the other? I think not.

As to, the second count, I do not perceive that it adds any thing material to the ground of action in the first. It states that the plaintiff agreed to waive all his rights under the proceedings, including the appointment of commissioners, and their assessment; in consideration of which the trustees agreed to raise a committee to treat with him as to the damages, they having finally resolved to go on with the streets under this new arrangement. But though requested, they refused even to raise the committee. If by this count it be intended to claim for the violation of a contract, it is improperly joined with the first count, which is in case for a tort. Beside, as the plaintiff waived no perfect right—nothing more, as we have seen, than the corporation had a right to insist on—there was no consideration for the promise. But independently of this, the whole was no more than the waiving of what I suppose the trustees thought to be an extravagant assessment, and an agreement to attempt another mode of' ascertaining the plaintiff’s claim, should the streets be finally laid out. Certainly, it added nothing to the general obligation to the trustees. They might, as before, still refuse to go forward, on the ground of the improvement being injurious or unprofitable to the public. In this respect I think that they enjoyed a discretion which individuals have no power, as such, to control; and the' trustees no power to part with. To allow that commissioners of streets and highways may bind themselves by contract to subserve the interests of individuals, would be a clear violation of public policy. They are officers of municipal corporations or quasi corporations, and in respect to the laying out of streets and highways are primarily bound to consult the interests of the community at large. Individuals can acquire no rights under their proceedings except in a certain form, and at a fixed stage; and then their rights must be enforced, not against the commissioners, but the community which they represent.

I am of opinion, therefore, that if the injury complained [550]*550of by the plaintiff were imputable to the village as a corporate act, to the liability for which, if any, the' city would succeed, this action is not sustainable. The plaintiff was bound to await the confirmation. But even if a right vested independently of that, an action on the case for a tort would not be the proper remedy. If .the award of damages be absolutely due, the trustees have done their duty to the plaintiff, on his showing.

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1 Hill & Den. 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-mayor-of-brooklyn-nysupct-1841.