Reilly v. . City of Albany

19 N.E. 508, 112 N.Y. 30, 20 N.Y. St. Rep. 560, 67 Sickels 30, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 798
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 19 N.E. 508 (Reilly v. . City of Albany) 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
Reilly v. . City of Albany, 19 N.E. 508, 112 N.Y. 30, 20 N.Y. St. Rep. 560, 67 Sickels 30, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 798 (N.Y. 1889).

Opinion

Ruger, Ch. J.

The plaintiff, as assignee of the contractor, brought this action upon contract, to recover the stipulated price for grading, paving and flagging Knox street, in the city of Albany. The evidence fully sustained the verdict of the jury, that the contractor had substantially performed his contract in accordance with its terms, and such finding entitled the plaintiff to recover, unless the provisions as to the time and mode of payment, specified in the contract, presented a defense to the action. It is contended by the appellant that the conditions upon which the defendant agreed to become responsible were not complied with, and that, therefore, no liability had attached to it at the time the action was commenced.

The contract provided, among other things, that the work should be done and materials furnished, “ under such directions, plans and methods as shall be given from time to time by the street commissioner, city surveyor and engineer of said city, or either of them,” and that “the amount and extent of such work to be ascertained by the said city surveyor and street commissioner, and their determination in the matter to be conclusive between the parties, and the work to be in all things approved of by the said street commissioner before the payment of any moneys under this contract shall be demanded, of shall be due. * * * And the said party *39 of the second part does further covenant and agree with the said party of the first part,' that payment for the above-mentioned work is not to be required or to be due until the same shall have been fully completed * * * and until the lapse of thirty days after due apportionment and assessment of the expense of the same shall have been duly approved and confirmed by the common council of said city, according to the statute in such case made and provided; and until the same shall have been collected by the chamberlain from said assessments, * * * and when the same shall be due and payable as above provided, the said city of Albany, the party of the first part, doth agree apd bind itself and its successors.”

The contract was dated June 27, 1881. On August 2, 1882, the street commissioner duly filed certificates that such work had been fully completed and performed in all respects, pursuant to the terms of the contract, and the board of contract and apportionment thereupon caused to be prepared an apportionment and assessment of the expense of such work, which it duly ratified, approved and adopted. In accordance with the provisions of the charter the board gave notice, by public advertisement to all persons interested in the improvement, of the completion of the apportionment, and that it would be open for inspection and applications for review and correction, for fifteen days. Certain interested parties filed notices of protest against the confirmation of such apportionment ; some of them upon the ground that it was unequal and unjust, and others that the work had not been performed in accordance with the specifications of the contract. On ¡November 27, 1882, the common council confirmed and approved the apportionment. On proceedings subsequently instituted by some of the parties interested, the action of the board of apportionment, and of the common council in approving its action, was removed into the Supreme Court by certiorari^ and the contractor having been made a party thereto, that court pronounced judgment in ¡November, 1883, setting aside the confirmation and approval of the apportionment by both the board of apportionment and the common *40 council, upon the sole ground that the board of apportionment had not granted the hearing required by law, to the parties protesting against the confirmation, before making the apportionment. After such judgment no effectual proceedings were taken either by the common council or the board of apportionment, for a hearing of the protesting parties upon the justice and equality of the apportionment, or towards the making of a new assessment or the collection of the expense of the work from the persons liable to pay for it, until October, 1884, when the board of apportionment instituted proceedings to investigate the character of the work performed, and, after taking evidence upon these questions from the lot owners interested, and also from the contractor, determined that the work performed and materials furnished were not in accordance with the contract and specifications, and rescinded the certificate of performance previously given by their street commissioner, and refused to make any further apportionment and assessment.

The present action was in February thereafter brought to recover the contract-price for such work. Upon the trial the court practically held that the refusal of the board of apportionment to make any further apportionment or assessment was the act of the lawful agents of the city and constituted a refusal by the city to take proceedings to raise funds to perform the obligations of its contract. It therefore submitted to the jury the question whether the plaintiff’s assignor had duly performed his contract, and in the event of a finding that he had, directed them to render a verdict in his favor We think there was no error in the rulings of the trial court. In view of the theory upon which the case was disposed of by it, we may properly eliminate any consideration of the effect of the determination of the certiorari proceedings by the Supreme Court, except to assume, for the purposes of this decision, that it affected the annulment of the action of the board of apportionment and of the common council in making and confirming the apportionment and assessment. iSTo other question was adjudicated by the court except that the city *41 officials had committed an irregularity in the proceedings to confirm the apportionment and assessment, and that left them in a position and under a duty to proceed as though no previous apportionment and assessment had been made.

The general scheme of the charter, in relation to the subject of improvements in the streets and sidewalks of the city, contemplated them initiation by an ordinance of the common council authorizing - them. The subsequent control of the work then passes into the hands of the board of contract and apportionment, whose authority, as the name implies, extended to the power of letting the work, making the contract therefor, and, after its performance was certified by the proper officers, to apportion its expense among the parties benefited, and to assess them for the sums for which they should be found liable.

According to the provisions of the charter, as amended by section 29, title 9 of chapter 298 of the act of 1883, the necessity of obtaining a confirmation of the action of the board of contract and apportionment in making apportionments and assessments, by the common council, had been dispensed with and the acts of the board of apportionment in making them were thereafter made final and conclusive upon the lot owners. It, therefore, appears that after the annulment of the former apportionment by the Supreme Court, the whole power and duty of making a new apportionment and assessment devolved without let or hindrance upon that body.

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Bluebook (online)
19 N.E. 508, 112 N.Y. 30, 20 N.Y. St. Rep. 560, 67 Sickels 30, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 798, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reilly-v-city-of-albany-ny-1889.