Summary
In Newell v. Wheeler (48 N.Y. 486) the assessment had been made for local improvements against a person not the owner, and it was held invalid.
Summary of this case from Cottle v. CaryOpinion
Argued January 5, 1872
Decided May term, 1872
Samuel Hand for the appellant.
D.P. Barnard for the respondent.
The main question to be considered in this case is, whether the assessment was legal, inasmuch as it was made against Terrett, and not the plaintiff who was the owner, and the solution of this question depends upon the construction of various provisions of the "Act to consolidate the cities of Brooklyn and Williamsburgh and the town of Bushwick, into one municipal government, and to incorporate the same," passed in 1854. (Chapter 384, Laws of 1854.)
By section thirteen of title two of the act, the common council is authorized to cause sidewalks to be flagged; but before any ordinance can be passed for that purpose, ten days' notice of the application for or the intention to pass such ordinance is required to be given to every person to be affected thereby, either personally or by publication in the corporation newspapers.
All assessments for improvements in the city, including flagging sidewalks, are made a lien upon the property assessed, and the expense of the improvements is directed to be assessed by the assessors on the several lots or parcels of land benefited in proportion to benefits received. (Title 4, §§ 21, 22, 23.) And by section thirty it is provided that "land occupied by a person other than the owner may be assessed in the name of the occupant," clearly implying that, when land is occupied by the owner, it must be assessed to him.
A form of warrant to collect the assessments is provided for in section eleven, title five, which directs that the warrant shall require the collector "to collect, from the several persons named in the assessment roll annexed thereto, the several sums mentioned in the last column of such roll opposite to their respective names." Section fifteen provides that if any assessments remain unpaid at the expiration of one hundred and twenty days, and the collector shall not be able to collect the same, he shall deliver to the comptroller of the city an account of the assessments so remaining due, with an affidavit; and section twenty-three provides that the affidavit shall state, among other things, that the sums mentioned in the account remain unpaid, and that he has not upon diligent inquiry been able to discover any goods or chattels belonging to or in the possession of the persons charged with or liable to pay such sum whereon he could levy the same, and that he caused a written or printed notice to be served personally on or left at the place of residence of the person charged with or liable to pay the assessment, if a resident of the city, or, if not a resident of the city, that he has deposited a notice in the post-office addressed to the persons assessed; and that he has also caused a notice to be published in the corporation newspapers, which notice, among other things, shall contain the names of the persons who have not paid, and the amount due from each; and section 24, requires a further notice to be published, which shall specify, among other things, the name of the person to whom the assessment was made, and the name of the present owner, when known to the collector. Section 26 provides that if the assessment shall remain unpaid on the day specified in the last notice, then the collector shall proceed to sell the property on which the assessment shall have been imposed.
These are the principal provisions of the act to which it is important to call attention in order to solve the question under consideration. It will be seen that the assessments are made liens upon the real estate upon which they are imposed, and that they are also made claims against the owners of the real estate, as the collectors are directed, in the warrants given to them, to collect the assessments from them. The lien upon the real estate can only be enforced by a sale thereof, after it has been shown that the collector has not, upon diligent inquiry, been able to discover any goods or chattels whereon he could levy the assessment. It is clear that an assessment roll must be made, in which the name of the owner must be inserted as the person liable to pay the assessment, unless the land be occupied by another, in which case it may be assessed to the occupant. No assessment can be legal or valid, unless it be made against the owner or occupant, and such owner or occupant is the person named in the statute as liable to pay the assessment, to whom all notices are to be directed; and the land can be sold only after the proper steps have been taken to collect the assessment of the owner or occupant, by voluntary payment, or by levy upon personal property.
The assessment, therefore, was illegal and invalid, because it was made against Terrett, and not the plaintiff, who had, for about two years, owned the land, and had her title upon record. This conclusion is reached by giving to the provisions of the statute their plain and obvious meaning, and is strengthened by the well-known rule that when lands are taken under a statute authority, in derogation of the common law, every requirement of the statute, having a semblance of benefit to the owner, must be strictly complied with. ( Sharp, v. Speir, 4 Hill, 76; Sharp v. Johnson, 4 id., 92.)
The case of Chapman v. City of Brooklyn ( 40 N.Y., 372) is an authority sustaining the conclusion I have reached. It is true that the assessment in that case was made under the law of 1850. (Laws of 1850, chapter 144.) But that law, like the law of 1854, made the assessment a lien upon the land assessed, but provided for its collection, first, against the person liable to pay; and the land could not be sold until the other proceedings authorized to collect the assessment of the person assessed had failed to produce payment, and the assessment and sale in that case were held void, because the assessment was not made against the owner of the lots sold.
By section ten, title five, of the act of 1854, it is provided that no warrant for the collection of any assessment shall be issued by the common council, until all the proceedings had in levying the assessment shall have been examined and certified as correct by the street commissioner and the attorney and counsel of the city, which certificate shall be entered upon or annexed to the assessment roll, and shall be conclusive evidence as to the regularity of the proceedings. The defendant claims, therefore, that the regularity of the proceedings could not be brought in question in this action, and that the question above discussed cannot be raised to invalidate the sale.
The law of 1850, which was under consideration in the case of Chapman v. City of Brooklyn, had precisely such a provision in section ten, title five, of that act, and yet the certificate was not held conclusive in that case. The certificate does not reach the defect here complained of. It was only intended to cover the formal proceedings. The officers named were to examine to see if all the necessary steps had been taken, and whether the proper records and other formal proceedings were regular. But I do not think, according to the spirit and letter of the law, they were expected to go back of all the papers and records and ascertain whether the persons named as owners in the assessments were in fact the owners. Hence I am of opinion that the certificate was not conclusive as to the defect here complained of.
I entertain no doubt that this action upon the facts appearing is maintainable to cancel and annul the certificate of sale as a cloud upon plaintiff's title to her land. ( Crooke v. Andrews, 40 N.Y., 547.) It does not appear upon the face of these proceedings that the assessment and sale were void. To avoid the sale, it might be necessary for plaintiff to show, by evidence, not contained in the assessment proceedings, that Terrett, against whom the assessment was made, was not at the time either the owner or the occupant of the land; and hence this is, within the well established rule, a case where a court of equity will intervene to remove or set aside the sale and certificate as a cloud upon title.
There was no error, as to costs, which calls for or authorizes an interference. If the defendant claimed nothing by virtue of his certificate, he should not have defended the action and subjected the plaintiff to costs. Having litigated the case through all the courts to the Court of Appeals, he cannot well complain if the court, in the exercise of its undisputed discretion, imposes the costs upon him.
I have thus considered all the grounds upon which the defendant has asked us to reverse this judgment which I deem important, and reach the conclusion that it must be affirmed, with costs.
All concur; LOTT, Ch. C., not sitting.
Judgment affirmed.