People Ex Rel. Howlett v. Mayor & Common Council

63 N.Y. 291, 1875 N.Y. LEXIS 43
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 30, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 63 N.Y. 291 (People Ex Rel. Howlett v. Mayor & Common Council) 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
People Ex Rel. Howlett v. Mayor & Common Council, 63 N.Y. 291, 1875 N.Y. LEXIS 43 (N.Y. 1875).

Opinion

Andbews, J.

The proceedings for assessing the expense incurred in opening and extending the alley upon the property of the relators and others benefited by the improvement are assailed and their validity is questioned upon several grounds: 1st. That one of the two commissioners who made the assessment was at the time of his appointment and of the assessment a trustee of the Presbyterian church, a religious corporation owning a lot on which a church edifice was erected which was liable to assessment, and that he was therefore incompetent to act by reason of interest. 2d. That the power to make the assessment is, -by the charter, vested in three commissioners, and that it did not survive to and could *295 not be exercised by two commissioners upon and after the death of their associate. And 3d. That the commissioners erred in the principle upon which they proceeded in making the assessment.

It is a fundamental principle in the administration of justice, that no man can be a judge in his own cause, and the exercise by a judge of judicial functions in a case where he is a party, or in which he is interested, is contrary to natural justice and is inhibited by the common law and in this State by statute. (2 R. S., 375, § 2.) But the statute applies to judges of courts only (21 N. Y., 86), and the fact that one of the commissioners was a trustee of a religious corporation liable to assessment, did not make him interested within the general principle adverted to. It does not appear that he was a pew owner or had any pecuniary interest which would be affected by an assessment of the church property. The title was vested in the corporation. The trustees are charged with the control and management of the temporalities of the church, but are not subject to personal liability for its debts or assessments.

In Dimes v. Proprietors of Grand Junction Canal (3 H. L. Cas., 759) the chancellor had affirmed a decree of the vice-chancellor in favor of the canal company, in a suit brought by the corporation affecting its rights and property, in which corporation the chancellor held shares both as an individual and as trustee. The House of Lords, after an elaborate discussion and consideration, held that the chancellor was incompetent to sit in the ease by reason of interest, but it was admitted on the argument that if his interest had been that of a trustee only he would not have been disqualified.

The duty imposed upon the commissioners of assessments in this case required the exercise of judgment and discretion. This is true, to a greater or less extent, in- most cases of boards appointed for the discharge of duties connected with the administration of the local affairs of municipalities, but it has not been supposed that a remote' interest in the subject to which the appointment relates would disqualify a member of the board *296 from acting under his appointment. Great public inconvenience would result from establishing such a rule. There are many town and city officers who are called upon to discharge public duties which may remotely affect their pecuniary interests. Assessors are officers of this kind, but they are not incapacitated from assessing the property of other citizens by the fact that they own property also liable to assessment, the taxation of which may be affected by the rate of assessment of the other property within their jurisdiction. In the proceeding under consideration the parties were the public and the owners of the property liable to assessment. The commissioner who was trustee was not the owner of or interested, in a legal sense, in the property of the religious corporation of which he was an officer, and was not disqualified from acting as commissioner.

The objection is also taken, that the two surviving commissioners could not act after the death of their associate. The charter (tit. 8, § 1, Laws of 1857), provides for the appointment by the .County Court, upon the application of the common council, and upon notice to the persons owning property proposed to be taken for a street, highway or alley, of three commissioners to “ ascertain and report the just compensation to be paid to the person or persons owning or having an interest ” therein; and no further or other power is conferred upon the court in respect to the appointment of commissioners, except the power to appoint a commissioner in place of one who declines to serve, and to appoint new commissioners when the court shall modify or disapprove the report of the commissioners first appointed, assessing the damages to the owner of the land taken for the improvement.

The only power of appointment conferred on the County Court is to appoint commissioners to appraise the damages, and this can only be exercised before proceedings are taken for the assessment of benefits. By section 4 it is provided that, upon the completion and final confirmation of the award, the common council “ shall direct the commissioners *297 making the award ” to assess the amount awarded for damages upon the property benefited, etc. But no provision is made for filling a vacancy in the commission, or for appointing a new commissioner, either by the court or the common council, after the award of damages shall have been made.

Power is given, by section 10, title 6, to the common council to order a reassessment when any tax or assessment shall be void, or have failed for want of jurisdiction, or for irregularity, but this section does not authorize the council to fill a vacancy or appoint new commissioners to make the assessment. The evident intention of the statute is, that the commissioners making the award of damages shall make the assessment for benefits. In this case, the three commissioners united in making the award of damages for the property taken, but one of them died before the final assessment for benefits was made. Unless the two surviving commissioners could act, there would be a failure of justice. The proceeding would be suspended, and new legislation would be required before further steps could be taken. The case is brought within the principle of The People v. Palmer (52 N. Y., 84), that a power conferred upon three or more persons for a public purpose is not extinguished by the death of one, where no provision exists for filling the vacancy, but vests in the survivors. The case is not in conflict with the previous decision in The People v. Nostrand (46 N. Y., 375). The statute under which the proceedings in that case were taken provided for filling a vacancy in the commission.

The objection that no part of the damages was assessed upon the city is not well taken. The' principle upon which the assessment is to be made is declared in section 4, title 8, as follows : The commissioners shall proceed to assess such amount upon the property benefited by the improvement in a just and equitable manner, as near as may be, in proportion to the benefits received. Such assessment shall be made in the same manner as the assessment for building sewers, except that such commissioners shall direct such part of said expenses to be assessed upon the city, and such part locally, as they shall *298

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Bluebook (online)
63 N.Y. 291, 1875 N.Y. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-howlett-v-mayor-common-council-ny-1875.