People ex rel. More v. County Court

56 Barb. 136, 1867 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 266
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 1, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 56 Barb. 136 (People ex rel. More v. County Court) 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. More v. County Court, 56 Barb. 136, 1867 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 266 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1867).

Opinion

[141]*141By the Court,

Foster, J.

It is objected, on the part of the county court, that its judgment cannot be vacated, for the reason that the court had jurisdiction of the subject matter, and that upon this writ the court cannot review the decision of the inferior court upon the merits; and it is also insisted that the merits cannot be reviewed here, because the appellants, who are the persons interested, are not made parties to the proceeding.

These objections, in the view which I take of the case, are not very material, fpr I have come to the conclusion, not only that the act of 1865 conferred the power upon the county court, to review the assessment for the reasons alleged, but that the decision of that court, upon the merits, was correct.

The counsel for the relators insists, in substance, that as to all lands lying upon Black lake or its tributaries, their assessment was conclusive, so far as the right to assess them is concerned; and that whether they are really benefited or not, cannot be inquired into on the appeal.

The commissioners were, as before stated, authorized by the act of 1864, to excavate the channel of the Oswegatchie, on the head of Eel weir rapids, not. exceeding one hundred feet in width, and not exceeding two and a half feet below the debouche of Black lake, into the river, and so far dam said rapids, as they should adjudge necessary to the free flow and discharge, &c. They were to make such surveys, and to employ such engineers, &c., to perform the work, as they, should deem necessary. They were to cause a survey of all the lands on said lake and its tributaries, which in their opinion would be benefited by the work, &c., and they were to file a copy thereof, &c. They were to cause an estimate of the cost of the work, and the expenses and damages to be made; and they were to assess the whole upon such lands, “ which, in their judgment, will be benefited, and as they shall adjudge in proportion to the benefit and improvements received thereby; and to make them, [142]*142pro rata, according to the value of such lands, as they shall be appraised by the commissioners; and they were to collect the money so assessed. In all this the land owners, who are assessed, had no opportunity to be heard before the commissioners. Ho notices were required to be given; no hearing provided for; no witnesses to be sworn before them, and nothing, so far as the language of that act is concerned, to control their action in either of the matters ■before mentioned, upon which they were to determine.

While that act alone was in force, and .in the month of September, 1864, they made their surveys, maps and plans, for the excavation at Eel weir rapids. They caused to be made and filed, their survey and map of the lands, on said lake and its tributaries, and their assessments of them for 'the cost of the work, the expenses, and for damages, and commenced to excavate; and afterwards the amendment of 1865 was passed, authorizing the court to review such assessment on appeal, upon such proofs as might be presented at the hearing, and gave it power to affirm, reverse, -set aside or modify it, in any particular wherein it is not authorized by the act of 1864; and that, except where the method or rule of assessment had been erroneous, such decision of the-county court should be final; and that when such method or rule had been erroneous, the commissioners were to reassess, as adjudged by the court.

The cases cited for the relators are not very analogous to the one under consideration. In Walker v. Devereaux, (4 Paige, 229,) the question came up upon the distribution of the capital stock of.the Utica and Schenectady Bailroad Company, where the commissioners were authorized, in case of an excess of subscriptions to the stock, to apportion the same among the subscribers, in such manner as the commississioners should deem most advantageous to the interests of the corporation. There was a very large excess of subscriptions, and in the distribution many of the subscribers received no stock, and the question was whether [143]*143it must not be so distributed that each subscriber should have a portion of it; and the court held that the whole stock might be distributed to a part of the subscribers only.

It was a franchise granted by the legislature; and while they provided that no one of the commissioners or subscribers should receive more than a certain number of shares, in case there was an excess of subscriptions, yet that the object of the franchise was, not merely to give the benefits of it to any person who might subscribe, however great the number might be, but that the main object was to benefit the institution; and that the commissioners were clothed with absolute discretion in carrying out that object, except so far as specifically restricted by the act; and that no individual had any right to a portion of the stock, in ease of an excess of subscription, unless the commissioners chose to give it to him. But in the same case the court lay down the rule, that where a discretion is to be exercised according to fixed and legal principles, by a body acting as a court, if those principles have been mistaken or violated, it is a proper case for review and correction by the proper tribunal.

The case of Clarke v. The Brooklyn Bank (1 Edw. Ch. Rep. 361) arose under like circumstances. That was a case of the distribution of the capital stock of the Brooklyn Bank, and was like that of the Utica and Schenectady Bailroad; and the ruling of the court was also the same.

The King ex rel. Scales v. The Mayor and Aldermen of London, (cited from 3 Barn. & Adol. 255,) was a mandamus to the defendants to admit and swear in, as an alderman, M. Scales, who claimed to have been duly elected to that office. Among other things, the defendants alleged an immemorial custom on the part of the defendants, upon petition presented to them therefor, to examine into the election, qualifications and fitness of all persons claiming to be elected aldermen; and that upon such petition, in the case of the relator, they had decided and adjudged [144]*144Mm to be unfit for the office; and the court held the custom set out in the return to be valid in law.

In none of these cases were vested rights of any of the parties sought to be impaired or affected by the acts complained of; nor were proceedings in the nature of judgments obtained against them, ex parte, by the direction of the legislature, while in the last case the action of the defendants was in strict conformity to law; for that which has been the custom from time immemorial, becomes a right, and as much a legal right as though it was acquired in any other known manner. And while the extract from the manuscript opinion of Mr. Justice Hubbard, in Baldwin v. Kelly, is very good law, it has no application to this case, nor does it sanction the doctrine that the report of commissioners in partition is not, upon its coming in, to be examined and reviewed upon its merits; though it is true that it is impossible to review it as we would the report of a referee or the verdict of a jury. “ They are,” as Justice Hubbard says, “ carefully selected,” (and I may add, the parties are to be heard in such selection,) “ to carry into effect the judgment of partition.

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Bluebook (online)
56 Barb. 136, 1867 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-more-v-county-court-nysupct-1867.