Opinion
April 9, 1920.
Louis Marshall, for the appellants.
Percy V.D. Gott [ George A. Blauvelt and Joseph W. Gott with him on the brief], for the respondent.
The land to be taken for this highway is made a charge on the county of Orange. (Highway Law §§ 148, 149, 151, 153.) This law provides for the appointment of three disinterested persons as commissioners (§ 151). The judgment of condemnation described the three persons named as "three competent and disinterested freeholders of the Judicial District embracing the County where said real property is situated," following the wording of section 3369 of the Code of Civil Procedure. These statutes devolve the choice of commissioners wholly on the court, without means to examine the appointees as to their qualifications, such as are provided in condemnations in New York city. (Greater N.Y. Charter [Laws of 1901, chap. 466], § 973, as amd. by Laws of 1906, chap. 658, and Laws of 1910, chap. 336; Greater N.Y. Charter, § 1004, as added by Laws of 1915, chap. 606.) The appointment was in effect an adjudication that the persons named were eligible under the provisions of the statute and the common law. The primary question is whether Mr. Collins, as an Orange county taxpayer, was a disinterested commissioner. On this reargument we are in substantial accord that he is not competent and disinterested, and thus was not eligible. ( Parishes of Great Charte Kennington, 2 Strange, 1173; King v. Inhabitants of Yarpole, 4 Durn. East, 71; The Queen v. Justices of Hertfordshire, 6 Ad. Ell. N.S. [51 Eng. Com. Law] 753; Corporation v. Manhattan Co., 1 Caines, 507; Lewis Em. Dom. [3d ed.] § 619; 2 Nichols Law. of Em. Dom. [2d ed.] § 341.) A resident and taxpayer in a municipal corporation is not a competent juror in an action against the municipality, or in a proceeding in which it is directly interested. ( Diveny v. City of Elmira, 51 N.Y. 506. See 24 Cyc. 271.) Likewise in a qui tam action, where half the recovery goes to the poor of the town where the offense was committed, the inhabitants of such town cannot act as jurors. ( Wood v. Stoddard, 2 Johns. 194. See Matter of City of Rochester v. Holden, 224 N.Y. 386, 393.)
Even where a commissioner held a mortgage on lands liable to be assessed in drainage proceedings, he was held to be disqualified. The court said: "No higher public policy is served by any recognized rule of the law than by that rule which demands that indifferent tribunals shall determine private rights." ( Lickly v. Bishopp, 150 Mich. 256, 261.) While the Legislature may enact that local taxpayers shall be competent in matters affecting them ( Hildreth v. City of Troy, 101 N.Y. 234; Code Civ. Proc. § 1179), it has not removed such disqualification of interest so that a county freeholder could condemn a county right of way, the cost of which should fall on the taxpayers of such county. The extent of the increased tax burden from the award is immaterial. It is the fact of interest, not its amount, that disqualifies. This commissioner, who was chairman of the commission, deposed: "In making the award, I was not conscious of the ownership of said property, and in determining the damages, I was governed by the law and evidence." We do not doubt the sincerity of this statement. Nevertheless, so deep and subtle is the influence of interest, that the defending landowners are not to be subjected to its effects, even if unconscious, or the plaintiff to what sometimes happens, an opposite leaning in the solicitude to do more than make adequate compensation.
The report herein has been confirmed on the ground of waiver. Matters like the omission of the oath or like formal requirements may be waived. Yet even this is dangerous in such strictly statutory proceedings. As Mr. Justice POUND has warningly declared: "Too much reliance should not be placed on implied waivers of irregularities in these proceedings." ( Matter of Grade Crossing Commissioners, 69 Misc. Rep. 23, 26. See, also, Douglass v. Byrnes, 63 Fed. Rep. 16.) Here it is urged that before hearings began appellants were informed that Mr. Collins was a taxpayer of Orange county. No such entry appears on the minutes of the commission that such interest was disclosed to the parties. If defending landowners, in such proceedings, have waived or can waive their rights to a disinterested tribunal, certainly such waiver should be clearly established. The majority of this court are unwilling to sanction the finding of such a waiver merely on the uncertain affidavits of parties who attempt to speak of conversations that took place before the commission had organized, or when one not an attorney had attended to ascertain the date for adjournment. The court named these commissioners. The commissioner appointed must be presumed to have known the law and the fact of his interest, and we cannot sustain the theory of waiver upon statements of what was talked about in the presence of a subordinate representative, which conversations are strongly controverted and which never reached the parties or their attorneys of record.
Without deciding that in such proceedings it would be competent to waive the requirement of a disinterested tribunal, the majority of the court are unable to find that any such waiver did occur, or that the defendants' representatives, with knowledge of this disqualification, acquiesced and consented to go on before this commissioner.
However regrettable it may be to reverse and send back the proceedings for a new commission, we regard it as indispensable that the defendants be given the disinterested, impartial and indifferent commission to which the statute entitles them.
The order is, therefore, reversed, with a single bill of costs to the appellants, and the matter should be remitted to a new commission for reappraisal.
RICH and KELLY, JJ., concur; JAYCOX, J., dissents on the ground that the justice at Special Term was justified in holding that there was a waiver of the disqualification of the commissioner, with whom BLACKMAR, J., concurs.
Order confirming report of commissioners in condemnation proceedings reversed on reargument, with a single bill of costs to the appellants, and matter remitted to a new commission for reappraisal, to be appointed by the Special Term.