Matter of Pennie

15 N.E. 611, 108 N.Y. 364, 13 N.Y. St. Rep. 790, 63 Sickels 364, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 592
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 28, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 15 N.E. 611 (Matter of Pennie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Pennie, 15 N.E. 611, 108 N.Y. 364, 13 N.Y. St. Rep. 790, 63 Sickels 364, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 592 (N.Y. 1888).

Opinion

Bug-er, Oh. J.

The reasons for upholding the order vacating the assessment m question, are so fully set forth in the opinions rendered in the courts below—that it is deemed unnecessary to do more — than state the conclusions reached by this court upon the questions involved. It is *369 argued by the appellant that proceedings by the municipal authorities, in letting contracts for work authorized to be performed under its charter upon the streets of Albany, are not proceedings “relative to any assessment” witíiin the meaning of section 2, title 11 of the charter (Chap. 298, Laws of 1883) authorizing the court to vacate an assessment for errors committed therein. It is also contended that the omission by the board of contract and apportionment, to publish one week’s notice of the time and place of meeting, to receive and consider bids for the work proposed to be let, does not constitute “ substantial error ” within the meaning of the same section. And further that the petitioner in this case was not a “ party aggrieved ” within the meaning of the section, inasmuch as he became the owner of the property assessed after the work had been commenced and before the assessment had been laid, under a deed which conveyed the land to him subject to any assessment to be made therefor, and by which the payment of such assessment was made the principal consideration of the conveyance. We will consider these objections in the order of their statement. First. We think the error alleged was in a proceeding “ l’elative to an assessment.” Any step which is required by law to be taken in a proceeding, which is designed to terminate in an assessment upon the property of the citizen and which is essential to the validity of such assessment, seems to us to come within the meaning of the statute. The objects intended to be attained by the statute were a cheap, simple and speedy remedy to the citizen, for injuries suffered by him through the imposition of an illegal tax upon his property and exemption for the corporation from the delay and expense of an action in equity, which would embarrass it in the prosecution of its public improvements. (Matter of Burke, 62 N. Y. 224; Jex v. Mayor, etc., 103 id. 536.)

,■ The remedy provided by this act is exclusive, and all suits or actions in the nature of bills in equity, or otherwise, to vacate assessments or remove clouds upon titles created thereby, were thereafter prohibited. (§ 3, tit. 11.) It was the obvious inten *370 tian of the act to afford a convenient substitute for the remedies theretofore provided in similar cases, and which consisted largely of actions brought to vacate assessments for irregularities in the preliminary steps, by which work was authorized to be done and assessments levied therefor.

We think no reason exists for holding that the legislature in creating a remedy against an illegal assessment intended to exclude from the benefits thereof, any errors committed in the prosecntion of the work culminating in an assessment, provided they were sneh errors as would have been formerly held to vitiate it under any form of proceeding. Any other construction would give the act a very limited effect and deprive it largely of the beneficial operation designed for it. bic reason for such a construction is advanced by the appellant, except that afforded by the provisions of section 3 of title 10, requiring the board of apportionment, to make reassessments in cases where any apportionment or assessment is set aside or vacated by the order of a competent court, and it is urged with much force that it could not have been intended that the court should exercise the power of vacating an assessment in any case, unless the board had legal authority to reassess the amount thereof. The provision for reassessments will necessarily have a large operation if applied to cases of reduction for fraud and defects in the performance of work, or of illegality in some of the items entering into it, or when the irregularity is of such a chartcter as to be remediable, or occurs after the work has been lawfully performed and liability incurred, and we think that it was the intention of section 3, title 10, to limit its operation to these and like cases.

We are referred by the appellant to Matter of Fulton St. (29 How. Pr. 429) as an authority for the position taken. That was, however, a' Special Term decision and does not seem to have been followed in any subsequent case. It involved the construction of a statute differing, so far as this question is concerned, in material respects from the one under consideration. It arose under chapter 338 of the Laws of 1858, as extended to .the city of Brooklyn in 1862, and before the amendment *371 thereof, by chapter 312, Laws of 1874. Such proceedings at that time had not been made exclusive, and the substitute for suits in equity to correct illegal and irregular assessments. It is obvious that the learned judge in that case laid great stress upon this circumstance, for the principal reason assigned by him for his decision was the assumption that the party aggrieved had an adequate remedy by action or certiorari”

It is a circumstance of great weight in the consideration of this question that among the very large number of cases in this court where the statute of 1858 has received interpretation no mention has been made of the attempted distinction '.between proceedings anterior to the assessment and those per-f aining exclusively to it, and they have generally proceeded upon the assumption that there is no such distinction, and jurisdiction has repeatedly been exercised where the only error alleged .related to proceedings anterior to those perfecting the assessments and apportionments. (Jex v. Mayor, etc., 103 N. Y. 536; Matter of Smith, 52 id. 526; Matter of Walter, 75 id. 354; Matter of Douglas, 46 id. 42; Matter of Phillips, 60 id. 24; Matter of Astor, 50 id. 363.) Many of these cases .arose under the same statute considered in Matter of Fulton St. and were not cognizable under that statute if the appellant’s present construction of the act be correct.

The cases cited above constitute but a few of those considered by this court since the enactment of the statute of 1858 and its amendments, wherein the question necessarily arose whether the law should have the restricted application ■claimed for it by the appellant, and the uniform construction put upon it by the courts must control us now in disposing of the question presented.

Second. We are also of the opinion that the meaning of the phrase “ substantial error ” under that statute has been definitely settled by the decisions of this court. The Matter of Anderson (60 N. Y. 460) was a case where an assessment was made for the cost of certain improvements authorized by a resolution of the common council of New York, which was not published as required by law. It was claimed that although the omission *372

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Sanford Fire Apparatus Corp. v. Board of Fire Commissioners
81 Misc. 2d 992 (New York Supreme Court, 1975)
General Realty Improvement Co. v. City of New Haven
50 A.2d 59 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1946)
Watson v. City of Salem
164 P. 567 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1917)
Helwig v. City of Gloversville
158 N.Y.S. 475 (New York Supreme Court, 1916)
Comstock v. City of Eagle Grove
111 N.W. 51 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1907)
Duffy v. Interurban Street Railway Co.
52 Misc. 177 (Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York, 1906)
Packham v. German Fire Ins., Co.
50 L.R.A. 828 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1900)
Tifft v. City of Buffalo
25 A.D. 376 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1898)
Watkins v. Griffith
27 S.W. 234 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1894)
Voght v. City of Buffalo
14 N.Y.S. 759 (New York Supreme Court, 1891)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 N.E. 611, 108 N.Y. 364, 13 N.Y. St. Rep. 790, 63 Sickels 364, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-pennie-ny-1888.