Mayor of Jersey City v. Green

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Beasley, Chief Justice.

The defendants in error, who •were the plaintiffs in the suit, brought this action to recover of the mayor and aldermen of Jersey City certain sums of money, being the differences between first and second assessments against them for sundry municipal improvements. These original assessments were paid by the plaintiffs, and were then, after the lapse—in some instances—of more than six years, vacated and set aside ; and re-assessments had been thereupon made, which latter adjustment found the dues of the plaintiffs to be much less than the moneys which the city *628had received from them. Most of such primary assessments-had been set aside and re-assessments made, by force of the act approved March 7th, 1877. Rev., p. 1357, pl. 6. In the payments made in the manner above mentioned, had been included certain penalties, in the form of increased interest, which had been incurred by the illegal procrastination of the settlement of the first assessments. The cause was tried before the Circuit Court of the county of Hudson, a jury being waived, and a judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiffs. To review this result, this writ of error has been brought.

The first objection urged against the legality of the judicial action taken at the Circuit is, that several of the sums embraced in the judgment were barred by the statute of limitations. This position is based on the fact that more than six years had run between the payments of the original assessments by the plaintiffs and the commencement of their suit. In some eases, there had been such a period intervening between such payments and the vacations of the assessments.' But this contention, as it appears to me, is manifestly untenable. The statute of limitations is so clear upon this pbint, that I do not see how any reasonable doubt can arise, for its language is, that the designated actions “ shall be commenced and sued within six years next after the causes of such actions-shall have accrued, and not after.” In the application, therefore, of this provision, all we have to do is to inquire, in the-particular case, when the right to sue arose, for until that event, the statutory limitation is inoperative. And in the-present instance, but one reply can be given to such an-inquiry, for by the decisions of this court, it has been settled that no right of action existed in these plaintiffs with respect to the moneys in controversy, until after the vacation of the assessments by force of which such moneys had been paid.. It was the setting aside of the assessments that gave the plaintiffs their cause of action, and consequently such right could not be barred until the running of six years after that act. This exception cannot prevail.

*629The next objection taken is, that the act of the 7th of March, 1877, (Rev., p. 1357, pl. 6,) does not authorize the board of finance and taxation of Jersey City to set aside the assessments in question.

The argument upon this head is, mainly, that by the proper construction of the first section of this statute, this official body is not authorized to vacate any assessments except such as are possessed of two characteristics—first, that they are void in law, and second, that they “have been assessed wholly upon the line of such improvement, or wholly upon the owners of the lands along such line.” The argument then assumes that there is no evidence before this court that, in the present instance, these particular proceedings were possessed ■of either of such characteristics.

But this assumption, which forms the basis of this contention, as this case now stands before this court, is entirely gratuitous. The original proceedings, by virtue of which these assessments were vacated, have not been brought up with this writ of error, and it is, consequently, impossible for this court to know under what, circumstances such power was, in point of fact, exercised. If it should be admitted that this power of vacation can be put in force only when the two conditions above mentioned are present—and upon that question no opinion is intended to be intimated—this present judgment cannot be reversed on that ground, because we cannot say that such was not the state of things to which this vacation related. Instead of the official return of this board of officers, all that is before this court on' this subject, is a state of the case agreed upon, and signed by the counsel of the respective parties; and in the statement so authenticated, it is declared and admitted that the assessments in question, at a certain date, were respectively “set aside and vacated by the board of finance and taxation of Jersey City, and a new assessment made,” &o. Such admissions are not qualified by reservations, or by allegations of informalities or defects, and in such a state of tilings, the legal presumption must be in .favor of the correctness and legality—if such legality be *630possible—of the official action. If it were deemed desirable to put this court in possession of the circumstances under which the power in question was exercised, such circumstances should have been exhibited in the state of the case agreed upon, for it would be contrary to all legal rules, and to right reason, to permit the plaintiff in error, here on the argument, to supply such omissions—if any such there be—by unsupported suggestions and averments. The maxim, that everything is presumed to be rightly and duly performed until the contrary is shown,” can have no more legitimate use than when applied to the formal admission of parties that certain official action has taken place. On this point, therefore, it must be now assumed that if, under any circumstances, these assessments could have been vacated, and re-assessments made, such circumstances existed. The consequence is, that only such exceptions to these proceedings can be now considered that tend to show that, under no possible state of affairs, can this official action be justified.

An objection of this fundamental character is the position that, by the proper interpretation of this statute, it is only unpaid assessments that can be set aside. In support of this view, the case of Edwards v. Jersey City, 11 Vroom 176, relied on. But the act there in question has no similitude to the one now under consideration, for the board therein authorized to be appointed was expressly declared to be a body constituted to revise and adjust unpaid assessments,” whereas, in the present law, there is an absence of all such restrictive expressions. To import into the present act the limitation claimed, would be to legislate—so plain to the contrary are the. terms of this law—and not to interpret. Its direction, in this respect, is this—that this official body, when the proper conditions exist, “ may vacate and set aside, by resolution, all the proceedings in relation to such void assessment.” Here, the vacation of the entirety of the proceedings is specified in plain words, and no exception is even faintly indicated, touching such assessments as have been paid. *Nor is anything perceived in the context which i& *631inconsistent with this plain demonstration of purpose; neither is there any reason to lead to the conclusion that such an adjustment could not have been embraced in the legislative design, for there is assuredly nothing irrational in the idea that, in case a void assessment should be annulled, that justice should be done as well to the citizen who had paid more than his quota, as to him who had paid nothing.

This exception is not well taken.

The several exceptions to the constitutionality of this law have been carefully considered, and it is deemed sufficient to say that none of them are entitled to prevail.

The questions relating to the recovery of the penalties paid, and to the proper measure of interest, are not before this court, and cannot be considered. The only bill of exceptions taken at the trial is on the refusal of the judge to non-suit, and it is obvious that these matters could not arise on such an occasion.

Let the judgment be affirmed.

For affirmance—The Chief Justice, Depue, Dixon, Magie, Parker, Reed, Scudder, Van Syckel, Clement, Cole, Dodd—11.

For reversal—None.