People ex rel. Lehigh Valley Railway Co. v. City of Buffalo

57 Misc. 10, 107 N.Y.S. 689
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 57 Misc. 10 (People ex rel. Lehigh Valley Railway Co. v. City of Buffalo) 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
People ex rel. Lehigh Valley Railway Co. v. City of Buffalo, 57 Misc. 10, 107 N.Y.S. 689 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

Brown, J.

. Some years ago the city ship canal, extending from near the mouth of the Buffalo river southerly to the private canal of the Buffalo Creek Railroad Company, was dredged to the depth of twenty-three feet and, annually thereafter, the city of Buffalo maintained that depth by dredging and removing the annual deposit of mud and silt therefrom, assessing the expense thereof, one-half upon the assessable property in the city at large and one-half by local assessment upon the properties benefited by such expenditure; no part of such local assessment, however, has heretofore been levied upon the properties of either of the relators herein. On May 7, 1906, the common council of the city of Buffalo, [12]*12under the authority of the provisions of the charter empowering it to put and maintain in navigable condition the city ship canal, voted that it intended to order the dredging of the canal to the completed contract depth for the maintenance of its channel, in accordance with plans and specifications which were then on file in the bureau of engineering; on June 11, 1906, the commissioner of public works reported to the common council that the lowest hid received by him for the doing of the work was that of Buffalo Dredging Company at twenty-nine and oue-half cents per cubic yard; on July 30, 1906, the common council directed the commissioner of public works to contract with the Buffalo Dredging Company for doing such work at that price; and, on said July 30, 1906, the same body ordered the hoard of assessors to spread a local assessment of $12,500, being one-half of the contract price of such work, upon the real estate benefited by such improvement in proportion to the benefits resulting therefrom. In pursuance of such authority, the board of assessors prepared an assessment roll in which the property of the relator the Buffalo Creek Eailroad Company was assessed at the sum of $1,114.33 and the property of the relator the Lehigh Valley Eailway Company was assessed at the sum of $1,952.14. The properties of the relators upon which such assessments were levied abut on a private ship canal, constructed and operated by them, being about 5,000 feet long and connecting with the southern end of the city ship canal of approximately the same width and depth; these abutting properties are now and for many years have been used and occupied by the relators for commercial and transportation purposes by railroad, dock and-storage facilities, access thereto by lake vessels and other craft from the great lakes and the Buffalo harbor being solely had -through the waterway of the city known as the city ship canal. This assessment roll was, on February 25, 1907, filed in the office of the city clerk. The relators objected to their assessments; the common council duly confirmed the same; on July 2, 1907, the roll was delivered to the comptroller who gave it the number of 12,568; and within the proper time the relators instituted these proceedings to test its validity.

[13]*13The writs of certiorari were issued upon the petitions of the relators, in each of which it is alleged: “ That said assessments are illegal, incorrect, erroneous and void for the reason that they were not made * * * in compliance with the statutes of the State of ¡New York nor in compliance with the general or special provisions of law for the levying of assessments for required improvements in the city of Buffalo.”

It is also alleged that the assessments are illegal because the properties of the relators are assessed at greater sums than the benefits received; that the assessments are unequal and that a large amount of property benefited by said improvement has been omitted from the assessment roll.

The return of the defendant denies these allegations and alleges that the assessments are valid and legal.

The issues thus raised were brought on for trial at the Erie September Equity Term, trial, being commenced on October 31, 1907, and. causes submitted on ¡November 26, 1907. At the commencement of the trial, counsel for the defendant moved to dismiss the writs upon the ground that the petitions do not allege that the assessment roll is void for the reason that the contract to do the work of dredging was entered into before the roll was confirmed, and that, if the relators rely upon that ground for alleging the invalidity of the roll, the court had no jurisdiction to issue the writs and the trial court had no jurisdiction to try the validity of the rolls upon such an alleged reason. The relators then introduced evidence tending to establish that the contract between the Buffalo Dredging Company and commissioner of public works was entered into on the 27th day of September, 1906; that, in pursuance of that contract, the dredging company actually did the work shortly thereafter, which was inspected and supervised by the city authorities and all work was completed under the contract before the assessments complained of were made and confirmed by the common council on July 2, 1907. These facts were claimed by the relators to be admissible under the allegations of their petitions above quoted, and that they establish the illegality of the assessments, for the reason that it is provided by sec[14]*14tion 408 of defendant’s charter that no contract for any improvement costing more than $500 shall be entered into until the assessment therefor shall have been made, confirmed and rolls delivered to the treasurer. The receipt of these facts in evidence was objected to by the defendant, upon the ground that the petitions did not allege that the assessments were illegal for any such reason; that no grounds of invalidity were set forth in the petition and, particularly, that it is not averred in the petition that the assessment roll is void for the reason that the contract was entered into before the roll was confirmed. The evidence relative to making the contract before assessments were levied was received upon the statement of the court that the ruling upon its admissibility would be disposed of upon the submission of the case.

While it is true that the commissioner of public works did not in fact sign the contract until July 6, 1907, the fact is that the contract was drawn and dated on September 27, 190'6, signed and acknowledged by the dredging company on that date; the bond of the dredging company for faithful performance of the work was executed September 27, 1906; contract was approved by the corporation counsel of the defendant on September 28, 1906, approved by the comptroller of the defendant on September 29, 1906, and also approved by the bureau of engineering of the defendant on October 9, 1906, by the deputy engineer commissioner and by the assistant engineer, and, immediately thereafter, the dredging company .began the work of such dredging and such work was prosecuted under the inspection of the proper officers of the defendant and in accordance with plans and specifications prepared by the bureau of engineering. If such facts constitute “ the entering into a contract ” in September, 1906, it is certainly established that the contract was made in violation of section 408 of the defendant’s charter, in which case the assessments are illegal; for the charter specifically forbids the entering into such a contract until after the assessments upon property benefited by such work are completed, confirmed and delivered to the treasurer. It is idle to argue that this section does not mean precisely what it says, under this statute, for it is the act of the Legislature [15]

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Related

People ex rel. Radeziwon v. City of Buffalo
62 Misc. 313 (New York Supreme Court, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 Misc. 10, 107 N.Y.S. 689, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-lehigh-valley-railway-co-v-city-of-buffalo-nysupct-1907.