Village of Tonawanda v. Price

64 N.E. 191, 171 N.Y. 415, 9 Bedell 415, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 870
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 10, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 64 N.E. 191 (Village of Tonawanda v. Price) 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
Village of Tonawanda v. Price, 64 N.E. 191, 171 N.Y. 415, 9 Bedell 415, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 870 (N.Y. 1902).

Opinion

Bartlett, J.

This is an action of ejectment to recover the possession of real estate, located in the village of Tonawanda, under a tax title.

The plaintiff is a municipal corporation in the county of ' Erie, organized under the general act for the incorpóration of villages, passed in the year 1870, and the acts amendatory thereof.

The legislature in 1892 (Laws of 1892, chap. 191) enacted “ An act authorizing the village of Tonawanda, Erie county, to take lands necessary, and to lay out and improve or alter and improve public parks, grounds, streets, lanes, alleys and places therein.”

Under this act the plaintiff, in the year 1892, paved Main street in the village of Tonawanda and assessed a portion of the expense upon abutting property.

The defendants were abutting owners and their property was duly assessed in the year 1893. The assessment not being *419 paid in the year 1896 the property was sold under the provisions of this act, and in due time a deed was executed to the plaintiff.

This action was defended upon various grounds, the learned trial judge resting his decision upon two of them only, as follows : (1) The failure to specify the particular place where the trustees of the village would meet on May 10th, 1892, pursuant to the resolution adopted by them on April 27th, 1892, to hear and consider objections to the proposed improvement in the notice of such meeting. (2) That the Tona wanda Herald was published in the village of Tonawanda when the notice of sale on June 18th, 1896, was published in the Buffalo Courier.

As to the first ground, the notice of this meeting was to the effect that the board would meet to hear persons interested in the improvement at the usual place of meeting of the board of trustees on the 10th day of May, 1892, at 7 : 30 o’clock in the evening, to consider such objections, etc.

The specific ground of objection is that the notice should have indicated accurately the building and place in which the meeting would be held.

bio testimony is printed in this record, both parties standing on the findings which are in the form of findings of fact and conclusions of law.

It appears from the findings that in another notice served, the validity of which is not now questioned, the trustees met at the council chamber in the post office building.

From the fact that there was a council chamber, in which the board of trustees met, it is fair to assume that in a country village persons interested in these proceedings could not be misled by the general character of the notice. Even if the notice is to be regarded as defective, it is a mere irregularity, which was cured by the delivery of the deed given under the tax sale to the plaintiff.

TJie act of 1892 provides, in section seven, that the deed “ shall be conclusive evidence that the proceedings were regular and valid.”

*420 It is undoubtedly true that the legislature would have no power to provide that the deed should cure jurisdictional defects, but it is a common form of legislation to validate irregularities at the close of lengthy and complicated statutory proceedings.

We are of opinion that this notice was sufficient.

As to the second ground, that publication of the notice of sale on June 18th, 1896, was made in the Buffalo Courier, while the act of 1892 required it to be printed in a paper published in the village of Tonawands, if there was one, is invalid on the ground that such paper was published in the village of Tonawanda.

The notice of April 27th, 1892, for persons interested to appear before the board of trustees and make objections, if they had any, to the improvement, was published in a paper called the Tonawanda Herald. At that time this paper was published in the village of Tonawanda. In 1896, when it became necessary to publish the notice of sale, the situation was materially changed in regard to the place in which this newspaper was published.

The finding on this point in substance is, that prior to the time of this publication the Tonawanda Herald had discontinued its business in the village of Tonawanda and removed all type and forms to North Tonawanda, which is no part of the village of Tonawanda, and having a separate post office. The papers for the village of Tonawanda subscribers were brought over from North Tonawanda and mailed in the village.

It is further found as follows : Said newspaper was dated at both Tonawanda and North Tonawanda, but the newspaper was completely prepared for distribution in North Tonawanda.”

The trial court held that notwithstanding these facts the paper was, as matter of law, published in the village of Tonawanda, and the notice of sale should have been published therein and not in the Buffalo Courier.

"We are of opinion that this decision was erroneous, and that the newspaper in question was not, as matter of law, published in the village of Tonawanda.

*421 This point was decided in Leroy v. Jamison (3 Saw. 386, 9th circuit), in an opinion written by Mr. Justice Field of the United States Supreme Court. That was an action to recover the possession of certain real property in the county of Santa Barbara. The statute required that a certain notice must be published in a paper where the place of its publication was nearest the land involved in the litigation. It was as matter of fact published in a paper called the Santa Barbara Gasette. It appeared that this paper was printed in the city of San Francisco, several hundred miles distant from the county of Santa Barbara, and was sent down into that county for dis-. tribution. It was held that the place where a paper is first issued, that is, given to the public for circulation, and not the place where it is subsequently distributed, is to control in determining where it is published.

Mr. Justice Field said: “ In one sense, a paper is published in every place where it is circulated, or its contents are made known. But it is not in that general sense that the language ‘ place of publication ’ in the statute is used. That language refers to the particular place where the paper is first issued, that is, given to the public for circulation. Hearly all the great dailies published in the city of Hew York are distributed in different parts of the country. Large packages of these papers are daily made up and immediately transmitted to California, where the packages are opened, and the papers distributed. A large number of them in this mode, no doubt, find their way to the county of Santa Barbara; yet it would do violence to our apprehension of the term to say that these papers are published in Santa Barbara in the sense of the statute. Ho one so understands the term in ordinary parlance and it is not used in the statute in any technical sense.”

We regard this as a correct exposition of the law of publication, and hold that the notice of sale, as published in the Buffalo Oourier, was regular.

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Bluebook (online)
64 N.E. 191, 171 N.Y. 415, 9 Bedell 415, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 870, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/village-of-tonawanda-v-price-ny-1902.