Matter of Petition of Roberts

81 N.Y. 62, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 198
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 1, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 81 N.Y. 62 (Matter of Petition of Roberts) 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 Petition of Roberts, 81 N.Y. 62, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 198 (N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

Folger, Ch. J.

The common council passed an ordinance that Eighty-second street be regulated and graded. It recited *65 that it was deemed necessary for speed in execution of it that the work be done at the expense of the city, but on account of the persons on whom the same might be assessed. It, therefore, further enacted that the board of assessors make an assessment thereof on the owners of property in proportion to the advantages acquired from the work.

It is claimed that the board of assessors have no authority by law to make an assessment in such case; and the illegality of the exercise of power by them is said to consist in the doing of the work by the city before the assessors have made an estimate of what it will cost, and have laid an assessment thereof. This point has been adjudicated against the appellant in this court. In Manice v. The Mayor (8 N. Y. 120), it was held that by statute the city had the power to determine to grade a street, or to do public work of that kind, and to execute the work at its own expense, and after it was done, to assess the costs and charges and collect the same, as in the case of an estimate and assessment before the work was begun. That case arose about the year 1850 and was decided in 1853. The learned counsel for- the appellant cites to us no statute that takes away the legislative authority then said to have been given to the city. If or do we find that the case has been questioned in this court. This disposes of the first point made in this court.

It follows that if the city can lawfully take that course, there can be no estimate and assessment before the work has been begun; and that there need not be any, as a legal requirement, until after it has been done. Indeed, such are the words of the opinion in the case just cited. This disposes of the second point made by the appellant in this court. '

The third point of the appellant hinges upon the same matter. It is that the board of revision and correction has no jurisdiction to confirm such an estimate and assessment of the board of assessors, because the latter is unofficial and unauthorized. As it appears from the case cited that it is official and authorized, the former board has the jurisdiction to revise, correct and confirm it.

*66 The learned counsel for the appellant claims that the true point of the decision above cited is this: that the city may begin, proceedings for a street improvement by a preliminary estimate and assessment in a regular way, yet may give up and abandon them; and that having done some work at the public expense, the corporation may afterward tax the expenditure. The language of Gardiner, J., in delivering the opinion in that case, is almost of the tenor of what we have given above as decided therein. If we understand aright the point of the learned counsel, it is this: that in such case there must be, after the work is thus done, some action of the common council confirming the estimate and assessment made by the board of assessors; that the action of that board is unofficial and unauthorized, but may be adopted by the common council by resolution or ordinance; and that thereby the taxing authority of the city is legitimately exercised; and by that way alone. We do not so read that case. True, the common council did there confirm 'the estimate and assessment of the board of assessors. No stress is laid upon the fact that it was the common council that did it. In the reporter’s statement of the case it is said that it was confirmed by the corporation. No stress is laid in the opinion upon the fact that the common council made the confirmation. The common council was then the body by which the corporation acted in making confirmation of the action of the board of assessors. The pith of the decision in that case is not that confirmation was made by a particular body, but by the body having the lawful power to revise and correct, or confirm/ Since then, by legislative amendment to the charter, the power to revise and to confirm has been lodged elsewhere. It is still the common council that ordains that the work shall be done, that a tax shall be levied, that the board of assessors shall make the assessment; but the board of revision and correction has been put in the place of the common council, to pass upon the action of the board of assessors, and to correct or confirm it. Action by the board of revision is action by the corporation. The authority to act is a corporate authority; the authority to act exists as and where it always did, in the muni *67 cipality; it is exercised through one subordinate body at one time, and through another such body at another time. We are not able to sustain the point of the learned counsel.

Another point of the appellant is that the ordinance is void because it purports to direct a tax for the expenditure, regardless of the question whether the benefit equals the expenditure. By this point it is asserted that it must be determined among the first things to be done, that the benefit of the proposed work to adjacent property will equal or go beyond the expense of the work; and that no body but the common council can determine that question. The principle that the amount of expenditure to be assessed upon an adjacent owner must not be more than the benefit he gets from the -work done we need not affirm, or question now. We do not perceive how the principle is brought into play in this case. The petitioner does not allege as a ground for relief that he is assessed more than he has been benefited. We have found no proof in the appeal-book that he is. The common council, in which was the authority, ordered the work to be done, and that the expense of it be assessed on the property benefited. In the absence of allegation and proof, we must assume that this legislative act was done with legislative prevision, and that the legislative judgment was that the benefit would be as great as the cost. Certainly we cannot say that it was not, without some facts on which to rest.

Another point of the appellant is that the power to tax, primarily in the State Legislature, may not be delegated to the three officers of the corporation who ex officio form the board of revision and correction. We have already treated the question in speaking of another point. That board does not tax. It fixes the amount of tax to be paid by each piece of property. When the common council passes an ordinance for the doing of such work, it thereby ordains a tax. The board of assessors and the board of revision only say what part thereof shall be paid by each one touched by it.

Another point of the appellant is that the act of 1861, which provides for the board of revision, is unconstitutional, be *68 cause it declares that if that board does not finally act -upon the report of the board of assessors in thirty days, the action of the inferior board shall be held confirmed by the lapse of time. We need not pass upon that question. In this case the board of revision confirmed the report of the board of assessors before ten days had gone by. The provision for confirmation by lapse of time is separable from that for confirmation by the board of revision; and even if the former be void, the latter will stand.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 N.Y. 62, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-petition-of-roberts-ny-1880.