Tingue v. . Village of Port Chester

4 N.E. 625, 101 N.Y. 294, 1 N.Y. St. Rep. 9, 56 Sickels 294, 1886 N.Y. LEXIS 630
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 19, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 4 N.E. 625 (Tingue v. . Village of Port Chester) 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
Tingue v. . Village of Port Chester, 4 N.E. 625, 101 N.Y. 294, 1 N.Y. St. Rep. 9, 56 Sickels 294, 1886 N.Y. LEXIS 630 (N.Y. 1886).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

This is an equitable action, brought to restrain a sale of plaintiff’s lot in the village of Port Chester, for the non-payment of an assessment laid for grading a street in the village, called Irving avenue, and to vacate the assessment. Irving avenue was laid out and declared a public street by resolution of the trustees of the village, passed June 2, 1873, under proceedings initiated November 11, 1872, upon the petition of eight persons, recited in the petition to be residents and tax payers of the village. The charter of Port Chester (Laws of 1868, chap. 818, tit. 5) authorizes the trustees of the village, under the restrictions and limitations therein prescribed, to cause streets and avenues within the village to be laid out, opened and graded, and to assess the expense thereof upon the *298 property benefited. The proceedings for grading Irving avenue, were commenced June 2, 1873, the same day on which it was declared by the resolution of the trustees to be a public street. Commisssioners were appointed to assess the expense of the grading, bids were received for the work, and contracts therefor were let, and the report of the commissioners was made March 7, 1874, and confirmed March 9, 1874. The original assessment was subsequently set aside and held to be invalid for reasons stated in the opinion in Merritt v. Village of Port Chester (71 N. Y. 309). Afterward the legislature passed two acts amending the charter of the village, being chapter 227 of the Laws of 1877, and chapter 277 of the Laws of 1878. The trustees after the passage of these acts, took proceedings for a reassessment, and the report of the commissioners appointed to make the reassessment was confirmed September 8, 1879. This second assessment is the one assailed and sought to be set aside in this action.

The complaint challenges the validity of nearly every step taken in the proceedings in respect to Irving avenue, from their inception. It alleges that the avenue was never legally laid out, that the proceedings for grading were not in conformity to the charter and were void, and that if the street was legally laid out and graded, the reassessment of the expense of grading was unauthorized. The laying out proceedings are questioned upon various grounds, some jurisdictional, and others relating to the regularity of the procedure. It is claimed among other things that it does not affirmatively appear that the persons who signed the petition for laying out the street, were owners of lands situated thereon. The charter (Title 5, § 4) requires, as the initial proceeding in the laying out of a street, that a petition therefor shall be presented to trustees of the village, signed by one-third of the persons owning land on the line thereof. The petition for laying out Irving avenue did not show on its face that the persons who signed it were such owners. The plaintiff in support of this and other objections to the proceedings, invokes the well-set-tied doctrine, declared in numerous cases that where lands are *299 taken under statute authority, or an assessment is imposed thereon in derogation of the common law, no intendment is indulged in favor of the regularity of the proceedings, but that each step in the process prescribed by the statute must be shown to have been taken by the party asserting any rights thereunder. (Sharp v. Speir, 4 Hill, 76; Sharp v. Johnson, id. 92.) In other words the onus in such case, of showing the regularity of the proceedings, is upon the party claiming under them. The cases cited were actions of ejectment in which the defendants, admitting the original title of the plaintiff, set up a subsequently acquired tax title, as a defense to the action. The doctrine that the onus was upon the party claiming under the tax title, to establish its regularity, was appropriately applied in those cases. But the plaintiff in this case by the character of her action, assumed the burden of establishing the invalidity of the proceeding of the trustees. She comes into court asserting as a ground for equitable relief, that an illegal assessment has been imposed on her land, which, if followed by a sale thereof, and a conveyance as was threatened, will constitute a cloud on her title. The trustees of the village, as we have seen, are authorized to lay out and open streets under certain restrictions and conditions. There is no presumption that in undertaking to execute this authority they have acted illegally, or that conditions precedent have not been performed. The plaintiff, instead of awaiting an attack on her title by one claiming under the assessment, becomes herself the actor, and calls upon the court to interpose and prevent the sale of her property, alleging that the trustees never acquired jurisdiction by a proper petition, and that the proceedings are otherwise defective. She has tendered this issue, and according to the general rule the party holding the affirmative of an issue must prove it, or at least go as far as to make a prima faeie case, calling upon the other party to answer it. (1 Greenl. Ev., § 74; Brown, J., Bouton v. City of Brooklyn, 15 Barb. 375, 395; In re Ingraham, 64 N. Y. 310; Heinemann v. Heard, 62 id. 448.) The fact that the petitioners were not on the face of the petition alleged to be *300 owners of land on the proposed street, did not tend to negative the fact. The charter does not require that the fact shall be stated in the_ petition, or provide in what manner it shall be established. The plaintiff did not prove that the signers were not' qualified petitioners, and upon the issue as framed, the burden of establishing it was upon the plaintiff.

The laying out proceedings are also objected to for indefiniteness in the description of the proposed assessment district in the notice given by the trustees of the hearing of the matter of the petition (Charter, tit. 5, § 4), and for various irregularities in the proceedings of the trustees, and of the commissioners of estimate and assessment. These objections, so far as they relate to matters which might have been corrected on appeal from the report of the commissioners, are foreclosed by the final order of confirmation (Embury v. Conner, 3 N. Y. 511; Dolan v. Mayor, etc., 62 id. 472), assuming of course, that the parties interested had legal notice of the proceeding. But wo deem it unnecessary to consider the objections in detail, for the reason that upon the facts found it is to be inferred that the parties interested in the lands taken for the street, accepted the awards made, by the commissioners and acquiesced in the proceedings. This inference is especially strong in respect to the plaintiff’s grantor, who owned the' lot now belonging to the plaintiff, until 1877. Upon his request the course of the street over his land was changed from the line originally designated, and he paid an assessment for benefit, imposed by the commissioners, and presumptively was awarded, and received compensation for the land taken. The plaintiff is concluded by the acts of her grantor. The street has been open since 1873, and has been used as a public street since 1875, without objection on the part of the owners of the land taken for the improvement.

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Bluebook (online)
4 N.E. 625, 101 N.Y. 294, 1 N.Y. St. Rep. 9, 56 Sickels 294, 1886 N.Y. LEXIS 630, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tingue-v-village-of-port-chester-ny-1886.