Sondley v. City of Asheville

14 S.E. 514, 110 N.C. 84
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 14 S.E. 514 (Sondley v. City of Asheville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sondley v. City of Asheville, 14 S.E. 514, 110 N.C. 84 (N.C. 1892).

Opinion

Clark, J.:

The facts were found by the Court, and upon the facts found the Court dismissed the appeal. The exception to the judgment therefore presents for review the correctness of the order of dismissal upon such state of facts. It appears therefrom that the report of the jury to assess damages was filed on the 18th of February; that at the regular meeting of the Board of Aldermen, to whom the report was. required by law to be made, held on February 20th, “the report of said jury was taken up and considered by said board,” but though the plaintiff’s counsel urged a decision that night, the board adjourned their final determinatibn of the matter till the next regular meeting, which was on February 27th. At such meeting the Board of Aldermen approved the report, except as to the item of $2,000 assessed as damages in favor of the plaintiff, and ordered notice to issue to the plaintiff that on behalf of the city of Asheville an appeal was taken as to that item of damages. The notice was issued and served on March 2d. The next term of the Superior Court began on March 9th. The Court dismissed the appeal on the ground that “ no sufficient reason, indeed no reason at all, has been shown why the board adjourned the consideration of the report from the 20th to the 27th of February, 1891. The Mayor might have called a meeting of the board for a day early enough to have afforded ample time to act finally upon said report, and give ten days’ notice of appeal to the next term of the Superior Court as required by the city charter. Upon the foregoing facts, the Court is of opinion that the city has been guilty of laches and has lost the right of appeal from the item of damages assessed in favor of the plaintiff, and it is therefore adjudged that the said appeal be dismissed, and for the reasons that have moved the Court to dismiss the appeal, the application of the city, *86 at this term for a recordari in respect to said item of damages, is denied.”

The charter of the city provides: “ As soon as practicable after receiving the report of the jury, the Mayor shall call a meeting of the Board of Aldermen and submit the report to them, and if the Aldermen shall conclude that the damages assessed by the jury are excessive, they may decline to pay the same and discontinue the proposed improvement; * * * or if the Aldermen be dissatisfied with any item in the report, then and in that case, either party may appeal on the item with which they are dissatisfied to the next term of the Superior Court of Buncombe County, by giving the adverse party or parties ten days’ notice in writing.”

When the report of assessment was made on the 18th of February, and a regular meeting was to be held on the 20th of February, there was nothing in the act or in the circumstances of the case or the nature of the proceedings, which required that an extraordinary meeting should be called prior to the regular meeting which was to be held on the next day but one. No reason is shown why the city should be put to the extra expense or the aldermen to the inconvenience, nor does it appear that the plaintiff suffered any damage by the extraordinary meeting not being called. At the meeting on the 20th the report was submitted to the board as required by the act. The act did not require that a decision should be reached at such first meeting. Something must be left to the intelligence, discretion and presumed fair dealing of the Board of Aldermen of the city. The case states that they “considered” the report, but decided not to come to a final conclusion of the matter that night, and adjourned it for further consideration to another meeting, held a week from that date. This was no negligence, but on its face would show care and desire to arrive at a proper conclusion. It was not an unreasonable delay. There were many items in the report affecting many parties, and *87 the case states that some of the other parties affected by the report were not present, and that the board adjourned, after a suggestion of their absence and presumably to give them an opportunity to be heard, to the next meeting, a week later, though the plaintiff’s counsel, representing one of the parties affected by the report, insisted on an immediate decision. It is true the Judge finds as a fact that no good reason was shown to him for the postponement. But surely the Board of Aldermen, chosen by the people of a city to administer their affairs, .upon the receipt of a report of this kind affecting many persons, after considering it and finding some of the parties concerned not represented, are vested with the discretionary power, for that or aüy other reason deemed good by them, to adjourn its consideration for a week, that they may be more fully advised. The Board of Aldermen were not the opposite party to the plaintiff. They were a judicial body vested with the duty of. scanning the report and of saying if, in all its items and in all respects, it was fair and just to the taxpayers of the city, and to the parties immediately interested in the report. Should they refuse to confirm any item of the report, the party affected or the city could appeal. If the city appealed, the board would order notice of appeal to be given on its behalf, which was done here in due time. The duty devolved upon the board was a serious one. • Had they been forced to decide hastily that night without full consideration, and had held that the $2,000 assessed in favor of the plaintiff was just and proper, the taxpayers of the city would have been saddled with the payment of that sum without any opportunity of redress, however exorbitant or unjust the amount might prove to be. While the act requires prompt consideration of such reports of assessment, there is nothing in the act nor in the authorities, nor in the reason of the thing, which debars a postponement of a final decision, for so short a period for fuller consideration. We cannot see .the sur *88 roundings and learn the reasons which prompted the board to take a short postponement of the matter. We can see, however, on the record, that before the. next meeting and during the week of postponement, the board had secured a deposit by parties interested, which, no matter how the action eventuates, will save the taxpayers from payment of any part of the assessment, provided the city, by taking an appeal, would give an opportunity to have the amount of the assessment reviewed by a Superior Court and before a constitutional jury. If it were law that when such reports of assessments are made, and they are necessarily frequent, the Board of Aldermen must at their first sitting, in hot haste and before rising, dispose of the matter, however desirous they may be of a short adjournment for further consideration, the result would be that, as a matter of safety, either the intended improvement must be abandoned, or an appeal would have to be entered for the city in every case. Such was not the intent of the law, which contemplates a consideration of the report by the aldermen who are charged with doing justice between the parties whose lands are condemned and the other taxpayers. Their decision as to any item is binding and conclusive if against the city, and it is only when they think that the amount assessed is too great that the city has opportunity to have the assessment reviewed on appeal by a Court and a jury of twelve men. There is no suggestion of any detriment which the plaintiff received or could have received by the adjournment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 S.E. 514, 110 N.C. 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sondley-v-city-of-asheville-nc-1892.