Summary
In Matter of City of Rochester (208 N.Y. 188, 192) the court stated that the rule that a Judge should never have the power to decide where he is himself a party is based upon the belief that: "Self-interest and selfishness are persuasive or compelling forces in all ordinary affairs and rare, indeed, is the person in whom mental rectitude and a clear and impartial judgment are not impaired by them in determining an issue between himself and another.
Summary of this case from County Cease, Inc v. PersicoOpinion
Argued February 26, 1913
Decided April 22, 1913
Edward C. Randall for appellant.
William W. Webb, Corporation Counsel ( Albert L. Shepard of counsel), for respondent.
The appellant, Otis Elevator Company, asserts that the common council of the city of Rochester should have rejected the report of the commissioners in this proceeding for the reason, among others, that two of the three commissioners were interested because each owned lands within the district upon which their award was to be assessed.
The proceeding was instituted, under provisions of the charter of the city of Rochester, to acquire lands for the widening of Frank street of that city. The appellant owned a large part of those lands. Regularly in the course of the proceeding the common council directed that the expense of the public improvement be assessed upon all the lots and parcels of land located in nine designated wards of the city. There were in the city twenty-two wards. Thereafter, the city applied, after due notice to the interested parties, to the County Court of Monroe county for the appointment of commissioners to ascertain and report to the common council the compensation to be awarded to the owners of the property to be taken. The appellant appeared upon the application and consented that commissioners be appointed and the court thereupon appointed three persons such commissioners. The total compensation awarded was $56,750.00 of which $50,000.00 was to the appellant. Pursuant to the provisions of the charter of the city, the common council assigned a time and place for hearing the objections of any person interested in the confirmation of the award, and at the hearing appellant duly raised the objection, among others, that two of the commissioners were disqualified to act because each of them owned land in the district to be assessed and was personally interested in the award by reason of his liability to pay a part of it, and introduced proof that the appellant and its counsel were ignorant of such fact until after the award was made. The confirmation of the report and award was made and was affirmed by the Appellate Division upon the appeal, permitted by a provision of the charter of the city, of the Otis Elevator Company.
A provision of the charter authorized the court, the prescribed antecedent acts having been done, to "appoint three commissioners of appraisal who are residents and freeholders of the city * * * not interested in any of the real estate, rights or easements sought to be taken nor of kin to any owner thereof or to any person having any estate, right or interest therein or lien, charge or incumbrance thereon." (L. 1907, ch. 755, section 438.) The fact that a commissioner of appraisal owned land to be assessed was not, therefore, a disqualification under the language of this provision, and the counsel for the respondent asserts that the provision specifically and affirmatively qualified the commissioners objected to. We have reached a contrary conclusion.
The common council of the city, pursuant to a provision of the charter, directed that the whole of the expense of the improvement be assessed "per front foot" upon the property within the designated wards. Manifestly, therefore, and it is an unquestioned fact, the part of the expense to be paid by each landowner of those wards depended upon the aggregate expense of the improvement and consequently upon the awards of compensation by the commissioners of appraisal. An award to the appellant greater than that actually made would have increased the sum to be paid by each of such owners including the two commissioners. The property rights and interests of the two commissioners were, therefore, affected by their action and award.
The plain dictates of justice and fair dealing, compliance with which, through general principles and precedents, investing it with certitude and continuity, is the vitality of the law, require that a man shall not be a judge in his own cause. "The learned wisdom of enlightened nations, and the unlettered ideas of ruder societies, are in full accord upon this point; and wherever tribunals of justice have existed, all men have agreed that a judge shall never have the power to decide where he is himself a party." ( Washington Ins. Co. of N.Y. v. Price, Hopk. Ch. 1.) The rule is rooted in sound reason. Self-interest and selfishness are persuasive or compelling forces in all ordinary affairs and rare, indeed, is the person in whom mental rectitude and a clear and impartial judgment are not impaired by them in determining an issue between himself and another. It is, moreover, essential to the purpose and the perpetuity of the law as the supreme power enforcing justice and order among men that it and the tribunals which declare and administer it secure to themselves without intermission or substantial diminution the respect and confidence of those subject to their jurisdiction. In People ex rel. Roe v. Suffolk Common Pleas (18 Wend. 550, 552) Judge BRONSON well said: "Next in importance to the duty of rendering a righteous judgment, is that of doing it in such a manner as will beget no suspicion of the fairness and integrity of the judge." So vital is deemed the observance of this principle that it has been held that a judge disqualified under a statute cannot act even with the consent of the parties interested, because the law was not designed merely for the protection of the parties to the suit, but for the general interests of justice. ( Oakley v. Aspinwall, 3 N.Y. 547; St. John v. Andrews Institute, 192 N.Y. 382, 387.)
The Constitution of the state expressly guards the citizen against an unjust or illegal exercise of the right to deprive him of his property through eminent domain. It provides that just compensation shall be made for all property thus taken, injured or destroyed, to be ascertained by a jury or by not less than three commissioners appointed by a court of record, as shall be prescribed by law. (Constitution, art. 1, §§ 6, 7.) The rule that the courts should zealously secure to all the parties in actions or proceedings submitted to them an unbiased hearing and decision should be as rigidly adhered to in a proceeding affecting the right to own and enjoy property as in an action in a duly constituted court. The exercise of the right of eminent domain involves a hearing upon notice to the parties interested, the receiving and weighing of evidence, a determination based upon the evidence, is judicial in character and the commissioners of appraisal should not have an interest, as the law defines the word, in the proceeding.
The courts of this state extend to the rule that a man shall not be a judge in his own cause a broad signification and a liberal application. The accuracy of such statement is attested by the exceptions to the rule. In People ex rel. Howlett v. Mayor, etc., of Syracuse ( 63 N.Y. 291, 295) one of three commissioners to award compensation and assess the expense in eminent domain was a trustee of a church liable to assessment. A ground of attacking the validity of the proceeding was that the commissioner was by reason of such fact incompetent to act by reason of interest. It was held that he was competent. Judge ANDREWS writing for the court said: "It does not appear that he was a pew owner or had any pecuniary interest which would be affected by an assessment of the church property. The title was vested in the corporation. The trustees are charged with the control and management of the temporalities of the church, but are not subject to personal liability for its debts or assessments. * * * The duty imposed upon the commissioners of assessments in this case required the exercise of judgment and discretion. This is true, to a greater or less extent, in most cases of boards appointed for the discharge of duties connected with the administration of the local affairs of municipalities, but it has not been supposed that a remote interest in the subject to which the appointment relates would disqualify a member of the board from acting under his appointment. Great public inconvenience would result from establishing such a rule. There are many town and city officers who are called upon to discharge public duties which may remotely affect their pecuniary interests. Assessors are officers of this kind, but they are not incapacitated from assessing the property of other citizens by the fact that they own property also liable to assessment, the taxation of which may be affected by the rate of assessment of the other property within their jurisdiction. In the proceeding under consideration the parties were the public and the owners of the property liable to assessment. The commissioner who was trustee was not the owner of or interested, in a legal sense, in the property of the religious corporation of which he was an officer, and was not disqualified from acting as commissioner." In Matter of Ryers ( 72 N.Y. 1, 15) the county judge of Richmond county appointed commissioners of drainage under the General Drainage Act, whose official duty it was, first, to determine upon the necessity of the work, and then to carry it forward, determining the lands to be taken, the lands to be benefited and the amounts of the assessments. The county judge was the owner of some of the lands to be affected. The statute existing at the time put upon a county judge the power to appoint commissioners in a proceeding to drain lands in his county, and put it upon him alone. He had no authority to call in another county judge or other officer to act in his place. This court, assuming, but not deciding, that the interest of the county judge was disqualifying, held the appointment of the commissioners legal under the rule of necessity, and formulated the rule: "That where a judicial officer has not so direct an interest in the cause or matter as that the result must necessarily affect him to his personal or pecuniary loss or gain, or where his personal or pecuniary interest is minute, and he has so exclusive jurisdiction of the cause or matter by Constitution or by statute, as that his refusal to act will prevent any proceeding in it, then he may act so far as that there may not be a failure of remedy, or, as it is sometimes expressed, a failure of justice." In Leonard v. Mulry ( 93 N.Y. 392, 396) we said: "So far as there are limitations to this rule (of disqualification for judicial power because of interest) they are noted in Matter of Ryers ( 72 N.Y. 7). " It may be added that the legislature of the state have by enactments created other exceptions to the rule, particular reference to which need not be made here. The interests affected by those exceptions are so remote and minute that the legislature may well have believed they would not influence the judgment, and, therefore, and from public necessity, they wisely determined that they should be disregarded.
No exception to the rule applies to the interests of the two commissioners in this case who owned property liable to be assessed under their award. The interest of each was financial and proprietary, direct, definite, capable of demonstration, and was affected by the proceeding. The rule of necessity did not apply to them because the section of the city charter providing for the appointment of commissioners could have been complied with by the appointment of others who had the statutory qualifications and did not own property in the district to be assessed. They were incompetent to act, and the proceeding was a nullity unless the statutory qualifications were exclusive. ( Oakley v. Aspinwall, 3 N.Y. 547; Diveny v. City of Elmira, 51 N.Y. 506; Leonard v. Mulry, 93 N.Y. 392.) This conclusion does not involve to any extent the consideration of whether or not the disqualifying interests affected the award.
The provisions of the charter that the court "may appoint three commissioners of appraisal who are residents and freeholders of the city * * * not interested in any of the real estate or easements sought to be taken, nor of kin to any owner thereof, or any person having any estate, right or easement therein, or lien, charge or incumbrance thereon," did not qualify the two commissioners. At the time the provision was enacted, the common-law rule that the commissioners should be disinterested existed. The statute is not at variance with and did not affect the rule. The principle that a common-law right existing at the date of the enactment of a statute relating to the same subject is not taken away by the statute, unless its language clearly and directly so provides or it is inescapably repugnant, applies.
A serious question is, did the appellant dispense with the qualification of disinterestedness on the part of the two commissioners? It raised no objection to their competency prior to or through the protracted hearing before them. It first raised the question upon the hearing by the common council of the objections to the confirmation of the report. The court acquired jurisdiction of the subject-matter and the persons and the appointment of the interested persons as commissioners was not a jurisdictional error. ( Matter of Baker, 173 N.Y. 249; Matter of New York, W.S. B. Ry. Co., 35 Hun, 575.) It was, however, the duty of the court to appoint as commissioners competent and qualified persons. The statute placed no right of interference or responsibility therein upon the persons interested in the proceeding or the city of Rochester. The appellant was not negligent in failing throughout the proceeding to search into the qualifications of the commissioners, inasmuch as it was not under any duty in that regard. The appointment was in effect an adjudication that the persons appointed were eligible under the provisions of the statute and the common law. The appellant here is upon ground different from that upon which stood the appellants in Matter of New York, W.S. B. Ry. Co. (35 Hun, 575), wherein the latter assumed the duty of informing themselves in regard to the qualifications of the disqualified appointee by proposing him and suggesting his appointment. Waiver is usually a matter of intention as indicated by the language or conduct, and knowledge, actual or constructive, of the existence of the right or condition alleged to have been waived is an essential prerequisite to its relinquishment. ( Jewell v. Jewell, 84 Me. 304; Vyvyan v. Vyvyan, 30 Beav. 65.) The appellant did not know of the interests of the commissioners in the proceeding until after the award was made and we conclude that it did not waive their incompetency.
Upon the hearing before the commissioners, the respondent introduced testimony in proof that the building of the appellant encroached about four feet upon Frank street as actually laid out as relevant to the determination of the compensation to be awarded the appellant. The appellant now asserts that the admission of the testimony was error on the part of the commissioners in that ownership of or title to the four feet could not be tried in the proceeding. We are of the opinion that no exception nor the form of the award presents the question, which, therefore, is not decided or considered.
A careful scrutiny of the record does not disclose any exception which requires discussion in this opinion.
The orders should be reversed and proceedings remitted to the County Court with directions to appoint other commissioners, with costs to appellants in all courts.
CULLEN, Ch. J., WERNER, WILLARD BARTLETT, HISCOCK, CHASE and HOGAN, JJ., concur.
Orders reversed, etc.