Mayor v. Carson
Mayor v. Carson
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Beasley, Chief Justice.
The exception to the judgment brought here by this writ of error arises out of these facts. The property of the plaintiff below, for which he was assessed, did not abut upon the street improved, but was situated upon a side street. The assessment thus made having been imposed by virtue of a provision of the charter of Jersey City, which was not in harmony with the legal rule, was set aside by the board of finance, and a re-assessment made. The contention before this court was that this abrogation of the first assessment was unauthorized, and therefore void. The question thus raised has reference to the proper construction of the several provisions in the act entitled “ A further act in relation to assessments in cities.” Rev., p. 1357. With reference to this law, in the brief of counsel, it is said, “ the city claims that under said act the board of finance had no power to set aside the original assessments, or make new ones in any case (other than for the laying of sidewalks), except where the costs, damages and expenses of the improvement have been assessed wholly upon the line of such improvement, or wholly upon the owners of the lands along such line.” As the plaintiff’s lands abutted on a side street, and not upon the street improved, it was argued that the city authorities were not empowered to vacate the assessment in question. If the only power conferred on these officials were that embraced in the first section of the act referred to, this position would, perhaps, be tenable, for such section gives this power of vacation only when the damages, &c., “ have been assessed wholly upon the line of such improvement, or wholly upon the owners of the lands along such line.” Whether this statutory expression
No opinion as to the proper construction of these legislative provisions was intended to be expressed in the case of Mayor, &c., of Jersey City v. Green, 13 Vroom 629.
For affirmance—The Chancellor, Chief Justice, Dixon, Mache, Parker, Reed, Scudder, Van Syckel, Clement, Cole, Dodd, Green, Whitaker—13.
i
For reversal—None.
Note.—In referring to this case in 13 Vroom, it is well to say that in that part of the opinion which relates to the statute'of limitations, there is an important omission. Instead of stating the right of action to accrue upon the vacation of the assessment, it should read after such “ vacation and upon re-assessment made.” M. B.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- MAYOR, &c., OF JERSEY CITY, IN ERROR v. THOMAS G. CARSON, IN ERROR
- Status
- Published