State v. Mayor of Hudson
State v. Mayor of Hudson
Opinion of the Court
The certiorari in this case removed into the Supreme Court the proceedings of the mayor and common council of the city of Hudson, in the matter of grading, regulating, curbing, guttering, and planking
A principal ground for setting aside or reversing the ordinance under which the plaintiffs allege the improvements were-made, or the work was done, is that no notice that au application had been made for the passage of such an ordinance, or that such an ordinance was about to be or likely to be passed, was ever given, as the law requires. The charter of the city requires that ihe passage of all ordinances of this kind should be preceded by a notice of twenty days, to the end that the persons to be affected might have an opportunity of making objections thereto, or of being heard thereon.
The ordinance under which the work was actually done was approved July 18th, 1856; but it does not appear by any of the proceedings that the passage of this ordinance was preceded by any notice relating thereto, and it is not alleged that there was any previous notice given. But it appears that an ordinance for the regulating and grading of a part of Palisade avenue was passed November 15th, 1855. It also appears that another ordinance was passed'for the improvement of the avenue, in .another part of it, on the 20th December, 1855. Also, on the 6th of March, 1856, another ordinance was passed
It also appears that the work and improvements contemplated by the last act were different, and perhaps very different, from those contemplated by the first four. It seems that when the first four ordinances were passed, grade maps had been previously adopted by the authorities, aud are supposed to have been understood by the citizens; hut a few weeks before the passage of the last ordinance, the common council, without any notice, by resolution repealed the old grade maps previously in use, and adopted different ones, made by Mr. Hexamor, and after this was done, repealed all the ordinances that had been passed relative to the improvement when the old grade was in force, and passed without notice a new ordinance requiring the work to be done according to the last-mentioned grade.
The brief history of the case then is, that under the first four notices, showing the improvements contemplated by each, and with the grade as it was then established and understood, the persons whose property was to be affected made no objection, and the ordinances were passed. Afterwards, and without any notice what
I think, therefore, that the ordinance directing this work to be done was illegal, and cannot be sustained. Not because it is void in itself. It is not, for it is a kind of ordinance which the city authorities have power to pass, but because they passed it in an unlawful way. It is what is known as a judicial ordinance, requiring certain things to be done seriously affecting the rights of others; and the parties injured or to be injured have a right to remove it directly into the Supreme Court, and through that into this court, if need be, to have it reversed and set aside.
Nor do I think that the lapse of time between the passing of this ordinance and the bringing of the writ of certiorari should be allowed to defeat it, for this lapse of time cannot make an ordinance lawful which is wholly otherwise. And, besides, it in no way appears that these prosecutors had any knowledge of the passage of the erroneous ordinance under which the work was done. They saw the work go on, it is true, but then they knew, or are supposed to have known, for due notice to that effect had been given, that other ordinances had been legally passed for the regulating, &c., of this avenue ; and although they stood by and may have disliked the work,
Nor do I see a great deal of force in the idea suggested, that the reversal of this ordinance will throw the expense of this work upon the city generally, for the city is doubtless responsible for the acts, generally, of the persons they select to legislate for them ; and if they, by their unwise or unlawful acts, impose burthens upon them, they ought, as a body, to bear such burthens. The improvements, if such they were, were unquestionably intended for the benefit, to some extent, of all the citizens, as well as for those whose property was to be immediately affected by them; and if we take for our guide the map furnished us, which shows the natural surface of the ground, as well as the grade actually adopted and used, with all its excavations and embankments, its benefits and its injuries to the adjoining owners, it is difficult to avoid the conclusion that if the expense be equalized throughout the city, the owners of lots will be still much the greater sufferers.
I think, therefore, that the ordinance under which the work was done is unlawful, and should be set aside.
For affirmance — None.
For reversal — The Chancellor, the Chief Justice, and Judges Brown, Clawson, Vredenburgh, Van Dyke, Combs, Kennedy, Swain and Wood.
Cited in State v. Perth Amboy, 5 Dutch. 263; State v. Newark, 1 Vr. 306; Phillips v. City of Hudson, 2 Vr. 149; Eames v. Stiles, 2 Vr. 493.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- The State, William B. Ogden, prosecutors v. The Mayor and Common Council of the City of Hudson
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published