Menges v. City of Albany

47 How. Pr. 244
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 47 How. Pr. 244 (Menges v. City of Albany) 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
Menges v. City of Albany, 47 How. Pr. 244 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1873).

Opinion

Miller, P. J.

The questions to be determined in this case affect the-constitutional validity of chapter 77 of the Laws of 1870, which relates to the city of Albany, and of certain provisions of section 1 of title 7 of said act (S. Z. of 1870, pp. 159, 179). The section referred to first provides for proceedings to'.take the real estate belonging to any person or persons for the purpose of laying out, opening, etc., * * * “any street,” * * * “or for any other public purpose or use,” and for the publication of notice specifying the ground required, and the time and place at which the damages and recompense to -the owner or owners [247]*247will be inquired into, assessed and apportioned, and assessed among the owners and occupants of real estate to be benefited by the intended public use of the ground, and, among other things, enacts as follows :

“ And the said common council shall nominate twelve discreet and reputable persons, who shall be freeholders of the-said city and in no wise interested in the questions of damages and recompense and the apportionment and assessments thereof, and make application to the supreme court, or any judge thereof, or the recorder of said city, for the appointment of three commissioners from the persons so nominated as-aforesaid; and thereupon the said court, or judge or recorder,, shall proceed to draw from a box, containing, on separate ballots, the names of the persons so nominated as aforesaid,, the names of three persons, who, unless objected to or challenged on the ground of interest or qualifications, shall be commissioners for inquiring into and assessing and apportion*ing the damages or recompense of the owner or owners of the property required to be taken ; and in case any challenge,. which shall be taken as aforesaid, shall be deemed valid by. said court, or judge or recorder, or in case any person so ■ drawn shall fail to qualify or refuse to serve, another name or names shall be drawn from the said box in place of the person or persons so challenged and set aside, or failing to qualify or, serve.”

It is insisted by the plaintiff’s counsel that this enactment is in direct violation of the seventh section of the first article of the constitution of the state, which provides that,. “ when private property shall be taken for any public use, the. com* pensation to be made therefor, when such compensation is not made by the state, shall be ascertained by a jury, or by not less than three commissioners appointed by a court of record, as shall be prescribed by law.” According to the requirement of this provision of the constitution compensation must be made by means of a jury or by commissioners. Tinder the law in question the common council are to nomi[248]*248nate twelve persons; and upon an application being made to the supreme court or a judge' thereof, or the recorder of the city, for the appointment of three commissioners from the persons nominated, they are to be drawn from a box, and these or others, in case of challenge, selected in the same manner, are to constitute the commissioners.

It is plain, from a perusal of the statute, that the duty enjoined upon the court, judge or officer, in thus drawing the names of the persons selected, is ministerial, and does not require the exercise of any judgment or discretion in reference to the qualifications of the persons who are to be selected. The constitution provides for the appointment of commissioners, and it is difficult to see how the appointing power can be properly and lawfully exercised unless it is vested with complete authority in the selection of persons who are to be appointed. This is an essential and an indispensable element, and without it no appointment can be made. A drawing, by mere chance, from names which had been previously selected, in pursuance of other and different authority, would be entirely inconsistent with the design of an appointment. The former mode depends entirely upon chance alone, while the latter necessarily requires the employment of the faculties and the exercise of the judgment in making a choice as to the fitness and qualifications of the persons who are to be selected.

That the mode indicated by the law in question for the selection of commissioners is in violation of the constitution, has also been held in cases where the same provision has been presented for interpretation.

In House agt. The City of Rochester (15 Barb., 517), the charter of the city authorized damages to be assessed by three assessors, assigned by the common council, and it was held to be in conflict with the constitution and unauthorized and void. In the case cited, the common council selected the assessors, while here they nominate the persons from whom they are drawn. The difference is exceedingly slight between [249]*249the case cited and the one at bar; and the fact that a judge or court is to draw the three commissioners from the names selected does not, in my opinion, obviate the difficulty or give validity to the law in question.

In Clark agt. The City of Utica (18 Barb., 451), the charter provided that, when lands of individuals are taken for streets, the common council might appoint five disinterested freeholders to ascertain and report the recompense to be made, and it was held that the provision was in conflict with the constitution; that no appointment of commissioners by a court of record was provided for in the case, and that the persons designated did not constitute such a jury as the constitution contemplates. Both these cases are authority for the doctrine that commissioners must be appointed by the court, and cannot be chosen in any other manner.

The same principle is upheld in Cruger agt. The H. R. R. R. Co. (2 Kern., 190); and Johnson, J., holds, at pages 197 and 198, that appraisers provided for in the act amending the charter of the Hudson River Railroad Company (chap. 31, S. L. of 1847) are not commissioners appointed by a court of record, within the meaning of the constitution, and that the language employed implies that the commissioners are to be selected by the court, in the exercise of their discretion and judgment, in regard to their fitness to perform the duties which will devolve upon them. He remarks: “Providing for a selection by lot and an appointment thereon, would amount to an evasion of the object of the constitutional provision.” Having in view the object of the constitutional provision now considered, and looking at its plain import, it cannot, I think, be claimed, upon any rational hypothesis, ■that the persons chosen by lot in this case, and as provided in the section cited, were duly appointed commissioners, or had any authority to act as such, in accordance with tl^e requirements or within the spirit and meaning of the constitution.

Upon the part of the defendant it is also claimed that the [250]*250legislature had power to provide that the compensation shotid be determined by a jury of less than twelve, or even less than six, and may constitutionally provide that the assessment by a majority of such jury of six shall he valid; and hence it is argued that it is of no importance whether the persons drawn are called commissioners or jurors; and that the three commissioners named may he considered as a jury regularly selected within the constitutional provision cited.

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Bluebook (online)
47 How. Pr. 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/menges-v-city-of-albany-nysupct-1873.