People ex rel. Locke v. Common Council of Rochester

Mullin, P. J.

At a meeting of the common council of the city of Rochester on the 5th October, 1869, a resolution was adopted requiring the city surveyor to ascertain and1 report the expense of constructing a pipe sewer fifteen inches in diameter in -Savannah street, in said city. He reported in obedience to said resolution that the expense would be $1,450. "Whereupon at the same meeting a resolution was adopted declaring it to be expedient to construct said sewer, describing *13the lands benefited by and liable to be assessed for the expense of said sewer, and directing the clerk to publish notice requiring all persons interested in said improvement to attend before the common council on the 19th October, at halt-past seven p. m., to the end that they might give to the council their views in reference to such sewer. This resolution was adopted by a unanimous vote of the council.

The clerk, in obedience to said resolution, published the notice as required in one of the official papers of the city from the 14th till the 19th October inclusive.

At the time and place specified in the notice aforesaid, persons interested in the improvement appeared before the council at a meeting then held and opposed the construction of said sewer, and an ordinance directing said sewer to be made was presented to the council and a vote taken thereon, and it was lost, a majority of the members voting against it.

The meeting was adjourned until the next evening. At the meeting on the evening of the 20th October the vote of the previous evening, by which the ordinance was defeated, was reconsidered on the motion of one of the aldermen who voted with the minority on the question of adopting the ordinance.

Further action on the proposed ordinance was then postponed until the next regular meeting, which would be held on the 2d November, and the clerk was directed to give notice that persons interested in said sewer would again be heard at said meeting.

A notice was published by the clerk that persons interested would be heard at a meeting to be held on the 22d of November. This notice was published October 28th, 29th, 30th, 31st, November 1st and 2d.

The 2d November was the day on which the State election was held, and a majority of the members not appearing, no meeting was held; but one was held on the evening of the 3d of November, when, no one opposing, an ordinance, directing the construction of said sewer, and the assessment and collection of the expense thereof, was passed; twenty-three of the *14members voting in favor of and two voting against said ordinance.

By section 161 of the charter of the city of Rochester, the common council has power to cause sewers, &e., to be made in said city. The only limitation on this power is contained in section 164, which provides that no such work shall be ordered to be paid for by local assessment, unless requested by petition signed by a majority of the owners to be assessed for such improvement, or unless three-fourths of the aider-men shall concur in voting for such work. In this case there was no petition, but three-fourths of the aldermen voted for the work.

Jurisdietion was acquired by the common council to make the sewer, unless there was some irregularity in the proceedings prior to the passage of the ordinance, by which jurisdiction was lost, or by reason of which the proceedings should be set aside.

The irregularities relied on are:

1st. The reconsideration of the vote by which the ordinance was defeated at the meeting on the 19th October, on the motion of one not voting with the majority.

2d. Misdescription in the ordinance of the proposed improvement.

3d. The omission to afford to those interested an opportunity to be heard on the 2d or 3d of ¡November.

4th. The ordinance was not passed at either a regular or adjourned meeting of the common council, but at one held without complying with the charter or rules of the council.

The meeting on the 19th October was duly adjourned until the evening of the 20th, and any business that could legally be done on the 19th could be done on the 20th.

It was unquestionably competent for the board to reconsider the vote by which the ordinance was lost. Parliamentary law requires that the motion to reconsider be made by one who voted with the majority on the motion proposed to be reconsidered. But whether this shall be insisted on or dispensed with, and the motion made by one voting with the *15majority, rests exclusively in the discretion of the body whose action it is proposed to reconsider, and no other tribunal has a right to treat a reconsideration thus moved for as void. A majority could dispense with the rule requiring the reconsideration to be moved by one who voted with the majority, and if the majority treat the motion as regularly made, it is to be considered as a tacit suspension of the rule. The members of the body alone have the right to object to the violation of the parliamentary rule.

2d. The work to be done is sufficiently described in the notice published by the clerk, and in the ordinance. The depth under the surface it is proposed to lay the pipe is no necessary part of the description. If it is not low enough to admit an owner on the street to drain into it, he is not benefited, and no assessment should be made against him for it.

3d. Fair dealing required that notice should have been given of the intention to reconsider and to pass the ordinance for doing the work. The notice for the 22d of ¡November, misled the parties interested, and prevented them from- again presenting these objections to the common council against the sewer. But one opportunity had been afforded them; it must be presumed they then presented all the considerations which existed against the justice or propriety of making the sewer. The charter requires but the one notice, and it was purely a matter of discretion whether another hearing should be allowed.

4th. The proceedings returned to us are silent as to the manner in which the meeting held on the 3d of Hovember was called, whether by adjournment by a standing order of the council, or in pursuance of a call by the mayor pursuant to section 33 of the charter.

If there was any mode in which that meeting could be legally called, we must presume that it was adopted, and that the meeting was legally and regularly held.

It was held in the case of the Bank of the United States v. Dandridge (12 Wheat., 70), that acts done by a corporation, which presuppose the existence of other acts to make *16them legally operative, are presumptive proofs of the latter. (Nelson v. Eaton, 26 N. Y., 414, 415; Bennett v. Clough, 1 B. & A., 361.)

The provisions of the charter prescribing the length of notice that is to be given by the assessors of the day on which they will hear parties affected by assessments for local improvements, and by the treasurer, of the receipt of the assessment roll by him, and requiring those assessed to pay, are directory merely, and the failure to comply with the statute, does not invalidate the proceedings. (Hardman v. Bowen, 39 N. Y., 196, and cases cited; The People v. Supervisors of Ulster, 34 N. Y., 268; The People v. Village of Yonkers, 39 Barb., 266; U. S. Trust Co. v. U. S. Fire Ins. Co., 18 N. Y., 199; People v. Allen, 6 Wend., 486; Gale v. Mead, 2 Den., 160.)

It is possible that the proceedings of the common council have been both unjust and oppressive toward the persons assessed for the sewer in question. Yet the proceedings being regular, this court can afford them no relief.

The certiorari must, therefore, be quashed with costs.

Writ quashed.