Pooley v. City of Buffalo

15 Misc. 240, 36 N.Y.S. 796, 71 N.Y. St. Rep. 817
CourtSuperior Court of Buffalo
DecidedDecember 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 15 Misc. 240 (Pooley v. City of Buffalo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Buffalo 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, 15 Misc. 240, 36 N.Y.S. 796, 71 N.Y. St. Rep. 817 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

Titus, Ch. J.

In the trial court the plaintiff obtained a judgment against the defendant for damages for assessments levied against, him and his .assignors, in paving and grading - Forest av.enue in this city. .Forest avenue was paved in 1814 . [241]*241at a large expense, and the assessment for the. improvement was ordered by the common council to pay the expense thereof under and by virtue of a special act of the legislature. ■ The questions involved in this case have been before the courts many times, and this case has been twice argued in the Court of Appeals. Pooley v. City of Buffalo, 122 N. Y. 592; 124 id. 206.

Objection is now taken that error was committed by the court in admitting parol evidence dehors the record to show that the objections to the confirmation' of the roll were not read to or heard by the common council. It is also claimed that the fair inference and legal presumption is that the objections were laid before the common council and read by the clerk, as the charter of the city required. Other questions are raised by the defendant’s counsel affecting the plaintiff’s right to recover. In disposing of this case all have not been considered, but we think, upon the record as it now- appears before us, that this judgment must be reversed.

In the case of Granger v. City of Buffalo, 6 Abb. N. C. 238, and again when the same case was before this court, not being reported, but made a part of this record, some of the questions’ here discussed were passed upon, but we do not regard them as settled so as to be controlling with any unanimity of opinion by the judges .of this court, if we except one, .to which I shall refer later.

The decision in the Granger case was practically the decision of one member of this court, Judge Smith writing a convincing argument appealing most strongly to my view of the law.

Judge Sheldoh did not take part in the last decision.

It is neither res adgudicata so as to bind this court by the conclusion reached in that case, nor should it on principle conclude us from passing upon the questions here presented, in view of the fact that the- Court of Appeals has intimated, when this case, was before that court, that the action of ■ the common council, as appears by the record, was a hearing and. passing upon the objections made to the confirmation of the [242]*242roll, if we are satisfied that the decision is not based upon sound rules of .law and of public policy.'

When the case of Granger v. City was before this court the last time, all of the judges of this court held that it was not competent to alter the record of the common council by parol evidence. The case was tried before Judge Sheldob, where the defendant offered to show, by the testimony of the deputy city clerk, that the objections and roll were in fact laid before • the common council and.read. The court ruled it out. Judge Beckwith, in his opinion in the General Term sustaining- the ruling of the court, cited many authorities, and in concluding, said : Upon grounds of public policy the rule is. laid down by the courts, as I understand it, that where the proceedings of municipal councils affect the rights and personal .interests of citizens, and are required by statute to be kept in writing, parol testimony cannot be received to vary or add anything to the written minutes, that is to say, the record, or to supply any alleged omission.” .

Judge Smith, in the 'same case, although dissenting from the general proposition decided by the decision of the court, in speaking of this question, says': “ i pass over the defendant’s offer to show by parol evidence that the objections were in fact read aloud by the clerk or his deputy to the common council at their meeting .when the roll was confirmed, both because I think,, as I have already said, that the record as-proved is sufficient, and because I concede the force of the plaintiffs objection that parol evidence is not competent to add to or supply defects or explain ambiguities in the official, record of such a body as a common council.” So that the ruling upon this particular question has been determined in. the Grmiger case by all of the judges who were then members of this court adversely to the plaintiff’s contention here.

On the trial of this action, notwithstanding both of -the' opinions- in the Granger case: were- before the court, the learned judge, when' this same deputy city cleric, who, in. the Granger case, was called upon by the defendant .toJ prove that the objections were laid before the common council and [243]*243read, was called upon by the plaintiff to explain and impeach the record of the common council, allowed him to testify under objection that “ So far as my recollection is concerned, I should state, they (the objections) were not read.” And in his twenty-second finding of fact the trial judge, upon the testimony of this clerk, predicates a finding as follows: “ That on the 7th day of July, 1875, the assessment roll in suit herein and ■ the objections thereto, before mentioned, were brought before a meeting of the common council by the city clerk, who notified said common council that objections had been filed to said roll, but did not state what said objections were, by whom they were made, or in any way read said objections to said council, nor did said council in any way read or hear the same.”

In the twenty-third finding of fact the court found as follows : That any presumption which might arise from the statement in the minutes of the common council- of the city of Buffalo, of the meeting of July 7th, 1875, in reference to the proceedings of the city clerk and of the council concerning said assessment roll and said objections, that said objections were read and were heard by said common council, has been overcome by sufficient proof given upon this trial that said objections were not read to or heard by said common council in any way.” Thus, by permitting what I conceive to be the erroneous admission of evidence, changing the official record of a public -legislative body and rebutting what in my . .mind would be -the legal presumption, that the assessment roll and objections were placed before the common council and . disposed of in the manner directed by the charter. The court then, in the fourth conclusion of law, after finding, that it was the legal duty of the common council to require said objections to be read and to hear the same, concludes “ that the failure of said common council to require said objections - to be read and to hear said objections constitutes. a defect in the proceedings confirming said assessment roll which renders said roll illegal, and invalid.”

There is, upon this incompetent testimony as a foundation, [244]*244built ■ a structure of fiction which enables the plaintiff to recover more than $25,000 of old assigned claims utterly without merit, and, as I believe, a fraud upon the, city of Buffalo, it appearing that these' taxes have since- been paid and the property upon which they were assessed having received the benefit .of the improvement.

Aside from, the' question of the admissibility of the testimony of the deputy city clerk, I do not think the finding is-sustained by. the evidence.

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143 Misc. 265 (New York Supreme Court, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
15 Misc. 240, 36 N.Y.S. 796, 71 N.Y. St. Rep. 817, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pooley-v-city-of-buffalo-nysuperctbuf-1895.