Parker v. Wallace

80 Misc. 425, 142 N.Y.S. 523
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 80 Misc. 425 (Parker v. Wallace) 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
Parker v. Wallace, 80 Misc. 425, 142 N.Y.S. 523 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1913).

Opinion

Sawyer, J.

This is an action for conversion. Defendant concedes that he seized and sold the property described in the complaint, and pleads in justification a warrant for the collection of an unpaid assessment against the property of plaintiff issued by the treasurer of the city of Auburn. A jury was waived and the action tried by the court.

The streets of the city of Auburn appear to have been for some years lighted by electricity, and the cost thereof included in the general tax budget of that city and collected in common with other taxes from the various property holders upon the basis of the assessed valuation of their respective properties.

By an amendment to the city charter adopted in 1910, known as section 131 (Laws of 1910, chap. 678), its common council was “ authorized and empowered, in its discretion, to create and alter a lighting district or districts within such city as it may fix and determine, with full power to order such construction and installation of lighting or additional lighting as it may prescribe, the cost of which shall be fixed, apportioned, assessed and collected in the manner and at the time as may be designated by the common council. ”

Thereafter, such proceedings were had by the common council as resulted in the creation of an inside lighting district (so-called) in said city, comprising substantially the principal business portion of the city, with provision for its lighting with sixty-watt tungsten lamps mounted upon ornamental standards about ten feet in height, each lamp inclosed in a translucent globe, and each standard surmounted by five lamps; the system adopted being a modern equipment considerably used in cities, particularly in the business sections thereof. The cost of this new system, was by the common council, after a public hearing to all persons interested therein, pursuant to notice thereof duly [428]*428given, directed to be paid, as follows: Twenty-five per cent, thereof by the city to be added to and included in the tax budget of each year, and the remaining seventy-five per cent, by assessment upon the real property abutting and fronting upon the streets in the inside district in proportion to the frontage or number of lineal feet of the various properties upon the streets; such assessment to be made and collected in the manner provided for in sections 7, 8, 9 and 10 of chapter 352 of the Laws of 1905.

The system of lighting so provided for the inside district was installed and put into operation and, in November, 1911, upon an assessment roll therefor, theretofore made, the common council, by resolution, levied against the property of this district according to its lineal frontage an assessment for seventy-five per cent, of the cost thereof and directed the giving’ of the notice and the collection thereof by the city treasurer, as specified in section 8 of said chapter 352 of the Laws of 1905.

In this proceeding an assessment was laid against certain property of plaintiff located within the boundaries of such district, for its proportion of the cost of such lighting system. This he refused to pay and, upon such default, the treasurer of the city of Auburn issued to defendant, a constable in said city, a warrant for the collection thereof, and under the authority of that warrant defendant seeks to justify, as stated.

.Assuming that this method of collection is lawful, the warrant itself, with its attached schedules, appears, upon its face, to be in the form and to contain the requirements prescribed by law and is sufficient, providing the assessment was authorized, based upon constitutional sanction and legally made, to protect defendant from personal liability for his actions done under its command. Norris v. Jones, 81 Hun, 304; [429]*429National Bank of Chemung v. City of Elmira, 53 N. Y. 49; United Lines T. Co., v. Grant, 137 id. 7-10.

Plaintiff urges that the notice prescribed in the act of 1905 was not given and that certain property located within the new district was omitted from the roll and hence his became subject to more than its true share of the total assessment.

As to both these claimed irregularities of procedure I think there is not sufficient proof. The presumption is that the officials performed their duty (D. H. Co. v. Buffalo, 39 App. Div. 333), and plaintiff’s testimony, that he has no recollection of having received the notice in question, is not sufficient basis for a finding that the notice was uot given.

As to the omission of taxable property from the roll, the only witness called to establish the fact professed lack of knowledge of the boundaries of the district, and whether, with one exception, the property which he specifies is within or without its boundaries does not appear. The city hall property is, however, within the district, and, as I understand the testimony, is located in the rear of a park having lineal frontage upon the street. The evidence seems to indicate that the property is separate from the park, but whether it also fronts upon a street, and, if so, whether its entire lineal frontage is not made the subject of assessment, does not appear at all certain.

The case must be disposed of upon the question as to the right of the common council to erect the inside district and adopt the method followed for payment of its cost.

If this action was without legislative sanction, or, if such sanction was prohibited by constitutional limitation, the assessment is null and void, and the warrant is no protection to defendant. That the action of the common council results in hardship for certain' [430]*430property owners, or that some other and better way of carrying their intent into execution is possible, or that a large number of taxpayers, or even all of them, are opposed to the creation of an inner lighting district with its additional cost, in the absence of fraud or similar wrongful intent, affords no ground for judicial interference at the suit of a taxpayer. Talcott v. City of Buffalo, 125 N. Y. 280; Ziegler v. Chapin, 126 id. 342.

The same principle governs here, and no matter howsoever applicable, as a criticism, may be the language of Chief Justice Church in Guest v. City of Brooklyn, 69 N. Y. 516, to which my attention is called, its force ends, nevertheless, in criticism.

It is, however, insisted by plaintiff that the amendment to the charter (§ 131, supra) contains no provision for local assessment; that its general language, that the cost “ shall be fixed, apportioned, assessed and collected in the manner and at the time as may be designated by the common council, ’ ’ contemplates only payment of that cost by general taxation upon the entire property of the city.

That if the statute be construed to authorize the assessment of such cost, or even a part of it, upon the property in the district created under its permission, it is then counter to article 12, section 1, of the State Constitution, which reads, that, “ It shall be the duty of the Legislature to provide for the organization of cities and incorporated villages, and to restrict their power of taxation, assessment, borrowing money, contracting debts, and loaning their credit, so as to prevent abuses in assessments and in contracting debt by such municipal corporations.”

The power to levy an assessment for a local improvement exists only where it is clearly and distinctly conferred by legislative authority and, if riot so conferred,. [431]*431the assessment is void.

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Guest v. . the City of Brooklyn
69 N.Y. 506 (New York Court of Appeals, 1877)
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53 N.Y. 49 (New York Court of Appeals, 1873)
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Talcott v. . City of Buffalo
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Bluebook (online)
80 Misc. 425, 142 N.Y.S. 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-wallace-nysupct-1913.