Pooley v. . City of Buffalo

26 N.E. 16, 122 N.Y. 592, 34 N.Y. St. Rep. 541, 77 Sickels 592, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1641
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 9, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 26 N.E. 16 (Pooley v. . City of Buffalo) 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
Pooley v. . City of Buffalo, 26 N.E. 16, 122 N.Y. 592, 34 N.Y. St. Rep. 541, 77 Sickels 592, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1641 (N.Y. 1890).

Opinion

Bradley, J.

The action was brought to recover moneys paid by the plaintiff and others, whose claims were assigned to him, upon an assessment made upon their lands by the defendant, and to vacate such assessment for the'alleged reason that it was illegally made, and was invalid. In Juiip, 1874, proceedings were taken to grade and pave Forest avenue, between the easterly line of Niagara street and the westerly line of Delaware street, in the city of Buffalo.' The petition, by which they were instituted, was referred to the assessors, who returned it to the common council with a certificate that the petition was signed by a majority of the persons residing in the city whose lands were liable to be assessed to defray the expense of the improvement. Thereupon, the common council, by resolution, ordered the work to be done; and the engineer advertised for sealed proposals to do it. He afterward reported to the common council the proposals received by him, one of which was that of Isaac Holloway for $79,000, and they, by resolution, directed that, when the assessment was confirmed, the engineer enter into contract with Holloway at his bid to do the work; and that the assessors proceed to make the assess *597 ment. Lnmediately after the adoption of such resolution, and before the assessment-roll was made and confirmed, Holloway entered upon performance of the work and proceeded with it until restrained by injunction in an action brought by certain parties for that purpose. The proceedings resulting in the direction to enter into the contract with Holloway were void' for non-compliance with the provisions of the statute. It is unnecessary to mention the particulars in which they were so. Afterward, and on April 24, 1875, an act was passed by which the. common council ivere authorized to grade and pave Forest avenue from the easterly paved line of Hiagara street to the westerly line of Delaware street in accordance with the plans and specifications deposited in the office of the engineer of the city “ in the proceedings to grade and pave the same in the year eighteen hundred and seventy-four, and to assess the expenses of such improvement upon the parcels of land to he benefited thereby; such assessment to he made in the manner provided by law for the making of local assessments for improvements of like character in said city. Ho preliminary proceedings need be taken before the ordering of such grading and paving by said common council, .and the same may be ordered as one work and. upon a vote of two-thirds of the members elected to said common council.

“ § 2. Hpon the assessment for such improvement being confirmed, the city of Buffalo may enter into a contract in writing for such grading and paving with Isaac Holloway, in •accordance with such plans and specifications, and at his bid for doing said work, and all work heretofore done by him for the grading and paving of said Forest avenue, shall be taken and deemed to have been done unaer such contract.

“ § 3. The common council may, in its discretion, by a like vote, order such grading and paving only from the easterly line of Hiagara street to Lincoln parkway. Id such case, equitable compensation shall he made to said Holloway for the work already done between Lincoln parkway and Delaware street and in like manner assessed upon the property benefited thereby.” (Laws of 1875, ch. 151.)

*598 Following the passage of that act, and on May 24, 1875, the common council, by resolution, ordered that Forest avenue, from the easterly paved line of Miagara street to the westerly line of Lincoln parkway, be graded and paved in accordance with such plans and specifications; and determined 'that the expense of it was $64,111, and directed the city assessors to make an assessment of that sum upon the real estate in the city benefited by the improvement. The assessment-roll was made accordingly, and filed with the city clerk, and the notice required by the statute published. (L. 1870, ch. 519, tit. 6, §§ 10,. 12.) And it appears by the minutes of the proceedings of the common council, that on July 7, 1875, .“the city clerk reported that objections had been filed to the confirmation of the following assessment-roll, the same having remained on file in Ms office ten days since the first publication of notice in the official paper, that the same was so on file and that objections might be filed with him to the confirmation thereof, viz.: Mo. 4012, for grading and paving Forest avenue from the easterly paved line of Miagara street to the westerly line of Lincoln parkway, $64,111.” Then, as it there appears, a motion by an alderman was made and carried that interested parties be heard., Mo one .appearing, .the roll was, on motion, confirmed ; and the report of the committee on streets was made and adopted “that the city engineer be and he is hereby directed to contract with Isaac Holloway for grading and paving Forest avenue from the easterly paved fine of Miagara street to the westerly line of Lincoln parkway for the sum of $64,111.” These proceedings of the common council are particularly referred to, because questions are raised-upon them.

The trial court found that the payments in question were made under a mistake of facts and under fear of the parties making them that their lands would be sold unless the payments were made; and that they would lose their lands; and directed judgment for the plaintiff. The proceedings were taken under the act of 1875, which .was effectual for their support, so far as its provisions authorizing them, were pursued. (Spencer v. Merchant, 100 N. Y. 585.) It is contended, on *599 the part of the plaintiff, that the provisions of the first section of the act, that no preliminary proceedings need be taken before ordering the work, has no application to the third section, which provided for ordering it upon a less and specific portion of Forest avenue, for doing which-the assessment in question was made. But it is quite evident that the legislative intent was to give the same facility to the action of the common council in ordering the work on that as on the greater portion mentioned in the first section, and such is its fair construction. Any other view would render the provision of the third Section substantially nugatory. The apparent purpose of this statute was to relieve, as far as practicable, the city and the contractor from the embarrassment in which they were placed by the invalidity of the proceedings of 1874, and to give the latter the benefit of the work he had performed,- and to enable the city to include the requisite sum to pay it in the assessment to be made, as effectually as if the prior proceedings had been valid.

The only thing essential to the ordering of the work was a vote to that effect of two-thirds of the members elected to the common council. The trial court found that it was not ordered by such a vote. In the case as originally printed, the vote on that resolution was represented as “ ayes, 21; noes, 10.” It appeared by the charter that there could be and were no more than twenty-six aldermen or members of the common council. (L. 1870, elf 519, tit. 2, § 3.) The statement as so printed evidently was, for some reason and in some respect, a mistake. It represents the essential number of affirmative votes, but if there were ten in the negative, there could not have been two-thirds in support of the resolution.

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.E. 16, 122 N.Y. 592, 34 N.Y. St. Rep. 541, 77 Sickels 592, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1641, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pooley-v-city-of-buffalo-ny-1890.