From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Weston v. City of Syracuse

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Feb 28, 1899
158 N.Y. 274 (N.Y. 1899)

Opinion

Argued January 13, 1899

Decided February 28, 1899

Charles E. Ide for appellant. George H. Sears for respondent.



On this review it must be taken as established by the verdict of the jury that the plaintiffs substantially performed their contract with the defendant, except as to the construction of the first 1,453 feet of the sewer, the work upon which was done prior to the investigation by the common council. That investigation resulted in a resolution waiving performance so far as the work done was not in conformity with the plans and specifications, and modifying the contract to the extent that it should be in conformity with the work already done. The trial court decided that the resolution of July 29, 1890, effected that result. The appellant concedes that such was the purpose of the common council, but nevertheless insists that it was beyond the power of that body to waive performance of any of the requirements of the contract or specifications, and that in holding otherwise error was committed.

The result of our examination of the charter of the city of Syracuse leads us to the conclusion that it does not place any limitations upon the powers of the common council in respect to such acts as the common council undertook to perform by means of the resolution in question. Aside from certain limitations that we need not specify, all details are left to the common council, and not made the basis of the consent of the property owners. The modification attempted, therefore, was within the power of the common council under the ruling of this court in Meech v. City of Buffalo ( 29 N.Y. 198); Moore v. City of Albany ( 98 N.Y. 396) ; and Voght v. City of Buffalo ( 133 N.Y. 463).

The appellant next contends that the failure to obtain the certificate of the engineer entitled the defendant to a dismissal of the complaint. We think the certificate obtained was in compliance with the contract as modified by the resolution of July 29, 1890. The engineer could not certify that the work was performed in accordance with the original contract and specifications, because such was not the fact, but he did certify in effect that the work done after the 29th day of July, 1890, was in accordance with the contract and specifications, while the work done prior to that date was in conformity with the resolution adopted by the common council, by which an attempt was made to modify the contract. It was, in effect, therefore, a certificate that the work had been performed in accordance with the original contract as modified by the resolution of July 29, 1890, and was sufficient.

The appellant also insists that the action was prematurely brought, because no part of the contract price has been assessed or collected. The contract provides: "No payment shall be made to the party of the first part under this contract, until the cost of such work shall have been ascertained and assessed upon and collected from the taxpayers liable to local taxation for the same * * * and as soon thereafter as the costs of said work shall have been collected from said taxpayers, the party of the first part shall be entitled to receive the amount due on said final account. * * *" This clause in the contract is not an unusual one, nor is it, or at least an equivalent provision, a stranger to the courts. As long ago as the action of Hunt v. City of Utica ( 18 N.Y. 442) the court had under consideration a contract of this character. After its completion, and on the 16th day of November, the claim for compensation was allowed by the common council, "payable when collected by assessment." On the 7th of December following the common council made the necessary assessment and directed that measures be taken for the collection thereof. On January 26th the assignee of the contractor commenced an action to recover the contract price. At that time no part of the assessment had been paid, but five days later the treasurer issued a warrant for its collection, which was in the hands of the collector at the time of the commencement of the action. It was held that the plaintiff could not recover. The decision of the court in that case has not been questioned in any subsequent case, and the decision of many succeeding cases has been governed by the principle enunciated in that case, viz., that where a way of payment is prescribed by statute or by contract that way must be strictly pursued. ( People ex rel. Ready v. Mayor, etc., of Syracuse, 144 N.Y. 63; Swift v. Mayor etc., 83 N.Y. 528, 533; Howell v. City of Buffalo, 15 N.Y. 512, 519; Baldwin v. City of Oswego, 1 Abb. Ct. App. Dec. 62, 68; Beard v. City of Brooklyn, 31 Barb. 142, 149; Dannat v. Mayor, etc., 66 N.Y. 585.)

Such a provision as to work of this character is usual and reasonable, for, as the municipal authorities have no right to make such improvements at the expense of the taxpayers generally, it follows, first, that no money is raised by general taxation that is available for the payment of such expenses; and, second, that it is necessary to make the avails of the special assessment meet the obligations of the city under the contract. All this is known to the contractor when he makes his bid and enters into the contract, and presumably he has provided suitable compensation to himself for the loss of the use of the sums due under his contract until a reasonable time shall have elapsed in which to levy the assessment and make collection. If he finds, as in the case of Ready v. Mayor, etc. ( supra), that the city has not proceeded with reasonable diligence to collect the assessment and turn over the proceeds to him, he may and should proceed by mandamus to compel such action on its part. But where a municipality disables itself from performing the contract by such action on its part as makes void and, therefore, uncollectible an assessment, for the purpose of providing compensation, or refuses to perform the contract on its part, as in Reilly v. City of Albany ( 112 N.Y. 30), then an action against the city for the damages sustained by reason of its failure to perform the contract on its part may be maintained.

It has been suggested that the two cases last referred to are in conflict, but they are not. The Ready case points out that prior to the breach of the contract by the municipality the contractor's remedy is to apply for a mandamus to hasten municipal action in the absence of due diligence; while the Reilly case, with equal clearness, marks out the path to be pursued by the contractor, where the other party, to wit, the municipality, either designedly or accidentally puts itself in a position where it will not or cannot perform the contract on its part. In such a case the remedy is against the city for breach of the contract.

As we must regard the facts as found by the verdict of the jury, this case comes under the rule in Reilly's case, for the plaintiffs have fully performed the contract as modified by the resolution of July 29, 1890, and are entitled to compensation therefor. But the defendant, instead of recognizing the plaintiffs' rights in the premises and proceeding with reasonable diligence to levy the assessment, collect and turn it over to the plaintiffs, has declared by resolution that the contractors have not only not performed, but have abandoned the contract, has let to other contractors the rebuilding of a portion of the sewer constructed by these plaintiffs, and has refused to take any steps looking to the making of an assessment upon the property benefited for the purpose of raising the money with which to pay the plaintiffs, as provided by the contract. The plaintiffs' right, therefore, to pursue the defendant for a breach of the contract is established.

We are thus brought to the last, but not the least, of the interesting questions presented by the appellant, which is that the court ought to have permitted the defendant to prove that the passage of the resolution of July 29, 1890, was corruptly procured. The importance of this question in this particular case is readily apparent. It is not pretended that the contract was substantially performed as to the construction of the first 1,453 feet of the sewer. The certificate of the engineer, which the contract says must be given in order to entitle the plaintiffs to the compensation provided for by the contract, does not assert that as to the portion of the sewer above referred to the contract was performed. On the contrary, the certificate is to the effect that performance in that respect is in accordance with the contract as modified by the resolution of July 29, 1890. If that resolution be void and of no effect, then the plaintiffs have not established their right to recover in this action; for they have not only failed to prove the making of the necessary certificate by the engineer, but they have failed to prove substantial performance on their part.

The question is also an important one in its public aspects, for, so far as we have observed, it has seldom been brought to the attention of the courts. The counsel for the respondent insists that the question was not before the court in such a manner as required it to pass upon the point involved. Let us inquire of the record whether he is right or not. The answer alleges, among other things, "that the said resolution, purporting to modify said contract, passed by the common council on the 29th day of July, 1890, as set forth in said complaint, was passed collusively, corruptly and fraudulently, and is the result of a corrupt bargain, in and by which it was agreed that a large sum of money should be paid by said contractors for a vote in favor of said resolution, which said money was paid, and that said resolution by reason thereof is null and void and of no effect as a modification of said contract."

During the progress of the trial the counsel for the corporation asked several questions which brought to the attention of the court and the counsel for the plaintiffs the defense relied upon by the city and which we have in part quoted. The court was inclined to the view that the resolution was a legislative act and could not be thus attacked, whereupon the defendant's counsel, for the purpose of raising the question in the briefest form, said: "I desire to show that Mr. Weston (plaintiff) procured a vote of one member of the common council by corrupt means; that a sum of money was paid by the plaintiff and accepted by a member of the common council in consideration of his vote for the adoption of that resolution and that the vote of such member was obtained and cast by him in consideration of the payment of such sum of money." This offer was denied and the evidence excluded by the court, the defendant excepting. It is not, of course, claimed that if the resolution was in fact procured to be passed by bribery, it would nevertheless constitute a valid and effective modification of the contract. That it would be void as against public policy is too clear to admit of discussion; but the contention rather is that the courts are without power to inquire into the matter. The reason assigned is that the act of the common council in passing this resolution was legislative in character and hence the motives that induced the members to vote for its passage, whether honest or corrupt, are not the subject of judicial investigation. It is true that the legislative department of the state government is sovereign, and hence the motives that induce its action cannot be the subject of judicial investigation. The Constitution also empowers the legislature by general laws to confer upon boards of supervisors of the counties of the state such powers of local legislation and administration as the legislature may from time to time deem expedient. (Const. art. III, § 27.) It has been held that the action of a board of supervisors in undertaking to establish a fire district in a town under section 37 of the County Law, is legislative in character and, therefore, not subject to review by certiorari, because the affidavits verifying the petition did not state that the petition complied with the requirements of the statute. ( People ex rel. O'Connor v. Supervisors, 153 N.Y. 370.)

In People ex rel. Wakeley v. McIntyre ( 154 N.Y. 628) it was held that within the limits of the power delegated to supervisors by the legislature under the authority conferred upon it by the section referred to, each board of supervisors is clothed with the sovereignty of the state to legislate as to all details, precisely the same as the legislature might have done in the premises. While that is so, there are many duties devolved upon boards of supervisors by the legislature which are not legislative in character, but are administrative, and in some instances quasi judicial in nature and not at all impressed with the character of sovereignty. Among other duties they are required to audit and allow claims against the county. If they arbitrarily refuse to audit a claim the court may, by mandamus, require them to take action thereon. ( People ex rel. Johnson v. Supervisors of Delaware Co., 45 N.Y. 196, 199.) So where the board of supervisors audit and allow to a public officer a sum in excess of that legally due him, the court will, by mandamus, and upon the application of a taxpayer, require the board to reconsider, revoke and annul the audit as to such excess. ( People ex rel. Lawrence v. Supervisors, 73 N.Y. 173.)

While the acts of boards of supervisors, or boards of town auditors, in auditing the accounts within their jurisdiction, are, in the absence of fraud and collusion, final and conclusive and not the subject of attack in a collateral proceeding, they may, nevertheless, be attacked in such a proceeding in an action brought by a taxpayer under chapter 161 of the Laws of 1872. ( Osterhoudt v. Rigney, 98 N.Y. 222.)

Many cases might be cited where boards of supervisors have been compelled to act by mandamus, where they have failed to perform the duties which the law enjoined upon them, as well as cases where their action, involving legal errors as distinguished from discretionary matters, have been reviewed by certiorari, and also where the audit has been attacked in a collateral action brought under the taxpayers' statute, so-called. But it would serve no good purpose, as the cases already cited are sufficient to call attention to the fact that there are many administrative duties of boards of supervisors that are not impressed with the character of sovereignty. So, too, the legislature may confer upon common councils of cities authority to pass municipal ordinances. Such as are passed in pursuance of such authority have the force of law, and are as obligatory as if enacted by the legislature itself. ( City of Buffalo v. N.Y., L.E. W.R.R. Co., 152 N.Y. 276. ) But like boards of supervisors, a common council has many administrative duties that are not legislative in character, performance of which, at times, has to be compelled by the courts. Not infrequently in the case of special assessments for local improvements, such as the case at bar, actions are successfully prosecuted by taxpayers to set aside assessments against property on the ground that the assessments are illegal and void. In Miller v. Amsterdam ( 149 N.Y. 288), in pursuance of legislative authority, the common council undertook to, and did, pave a certain street, and to defray the expense thereof made an assessment against the property specially benefited, but the statute under which the common council attempted to act provided that the street could be paved only upon a petition therefor of the owners of a majority of the lineal feet fronting on the street. The petition presented, and upon which the common council acted, turned out not to have the requisite number of consents. This court held that the action of the common council was without jurisdiction, and affirmed the judgment setting aside the assessment against the property of the plaintiff, upon the ground that it was void.

If the common council in Miller's case, in the institution of proceedings to pave the street, had been acting in a legislative capacity and was sovereign in that which it did, then, necessarily, it would not have been open for inquiry by the courts whether it had acquired jurisdiction to legislate at all by the petition of the requisite number of lot owners. But it was not sovereign. It had no authority to act at all in the absence of a petition signed by the owners of a majority of the lineal feet fronting on the street, and, therefore, its proceedings were not in accordance with the directions of the charter; and in attemping to act as it did, its proceedings were the subject of direct review by certiorari or to attack in a collateral action such as was made. If the action taken by a common council under the statute to pave a street be not sovereign and free from direct review or collateral attack in the courts, no more is the action of a common council, under a similar statute, to build a sewer; and it is yet more absurd to claim that the resolution by which the common council undertook to effect a compromise and settlement with a contractor to whom something was equitably due, though, perhaps, nothing legally, because of his failure to perform the contract in all respects, constituted a legislative act.

Having established by authority, to which very many citations in point in this state might be added, that the resolution in question constituted a part of the administrative duties of the common council, we come next to the question whether such a resolution, if passed by means of fraud and corruption, can be declared of no effect by the courts. This question is answered in the affirmative by Talcott v. City of Buffalo ( 125 N.Y. 280). That was an action by a taxpayer to prevent waste of or injury to the property of the municipality, the claim being that the common council of the city of Buffalo had passed the resolution over the mayor's veto, providing for the substitution of electric lights for gas, and that in pursuance of it the proper officers had entered into a contract with the electric light company, by which it had been agreed to pay an exorbitant price, and it was charged that the acts of the common council and its officers in the matter were illegal. The court held that, inasmuch as the action taken by the common council was clearly within its power and discretion, such an action could not be maintained without any charge or allegation of fraud, collusion, corruption or bad faith. While upon this proposition there was a dissent, all were agreed that, under the Taxpayers' Act, so called, the complaint would not have been demurrable had it alleged that the acts complained of were without power, or that they were the result of corruption, fraud or bad faith amounting to fraud. That action, it is true, was brought under and by virtue of the provision of the statute giving to taxpayers the right by action in a proper case to interfere with the conduct of municipal officers. The title of the act first passed (Chap. 161, Laws 1872) was "An act for the protection of taxpayers against the frauds, embezzlements and wrongful acts of public officers and agents." It has since been amended and supplemented by various enactments, which need not now be referred to. This statute did not take away any right of action that the municipality had; and to avoid any possible opportunity for such a suggestion, the last sentence of the statute provided that it should not be so construed as to take away any right of action from any county, town or municipal corporation. The history attending the passage of this act, and of chapter 49 of the Laws of 1875, is a matter of common knowledge, and was well stated by Judge ANDREWS in People v. N.Y. Manhattan Beach R'y Co. ( 84 N.Y. 565, 569), as follows: It "was passed in view of the fact that the city of New York had been grossly defrauded by the acts of municipal officers and others acting in collusion with them, and that large sums had been taken from the municipal treasury in the perpetration of the frauds committed. These sums the city or county, one or both of them, might sue for and recover, but resort to this remedy was embarrassed by the fact that the city and county governments were to a considerable extent under the control of the guilty participants in the fraud."

The effect of the legislation is to enable a taxpayer of the municipality, threatened with injury from its officers, and in certain cases the state, to accomplish by action not more than the proper municipal authorities can at all times accomplish, but such results as the municipal authorities can and should, but, because of carelessness or willful purpose, will not.

If it be the fact that the passage of this resolution was brought about by bribery of the members of the common council, a taxpayer, under the authority of Talcott's Case ( supra), could have maintained a suit against the city to enjoin it from paying to the contractors the amount claimed by them to be due under their contracts, for the reason that the statute confers upon him the authority to thus interfere for the protection of the municipal corporation, and that which he can accomplish by such a suit, the officers of the municipal corporation, whose duty it is to protect the corporate property from waste and injury, may bring about by a defense to an action brought by the contractor. It is urged by the respondent that the defendant is estopped by the conduct of its officers subsequent to the discovery by the common council of the alleged acts of bribery. But the difficulty with this contention is that it does not appear that the officers of the defendant knew of the alleged bribery at the time of the several acts which the plaintiffs rely upon to create an estoppel. It does appear that before the commission of some of the acts the common council caused an investigation of the charge of corruption to be made, but it is not shown that one of the outcomes of the investigation was the disclosure of the alleged acts of bribery that the defendant upon the trial offered to prove, and, therefore, it cannot be said that the action taken by the common council was with full knowledge of the situation.

The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.

All concur, except BARTLETT, J., dissenting, and MARTIN and VANN, JJ., not sitting.

Judgment reversed, etc.


Summaries of

Weston v. City of Syracuse

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Feb 28, 1899
158 N.Y. 274 (N.Y. 1899)
Case details for

Weston v. City of Syracuse

Case Details

Full title:JOHN WESTON, as Surviving Partner, Respondent, v . THE CITY OF SYRACUSE…

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: Feb 28, 1899

Citations

158 N.Y. 274 (N.Y. 1899)
53 N.E. 12

Citing Cases

Davidson v. Village of White Plains

The common council having failed to levy a proper assessment it was held that an action against the city…

Matter of Finigan v. Zuber

"What a taxpayer may do, the officers of a municipality may do in an action brought against the corporation.…