Bartlett v. Crozier

17 Johns. 439
CourtCourt for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors
DecidedJanuary 10, 1820
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 17 Johns. 439 (Bartlett v. Crozier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bartlett v. Crozier, 17 Johns. 439 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1820).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The objections, on the part of the plaintiff in error, to the judgment, may be included in the two following, viz.:

1. That no action will lie against an overseer of the highways, at the suit of any private individual, for not repairing a public bridge.

2. If such action can be sustained, in any case, yet that, in this' case, no cause of action is stated in the declaration, and it is bad after verdict.

Though the sum in controversy is small, yet the principle [351]*351involved in the case is important, and may deeply affect every part of the community.

1. I have examined the act to regulate highways, (sess. 36. eh. 33. 1 Rev. Stat. 501. 505.) to discover the power and duty of the overseer, and the responsibility to which he maybe subjected.

The 1st section makes it the duty of the commissioners of highways to give directions relative to the repairing of the roads and bridges within their respective towns, and to cause to be kept in repair the highways and bridges, and to require the overseers, as often as they shall deem necessary, to warn the assessed to work on highways, to come and work thereon, with such implements, carriages, cattle, and sleds, as the commissioners shall direct.

The 3d section makes it the duty of the overseers of highways to repair and keep in order the highways, within their road districts, to warn all persons assessed, to come and work when required by the commissioners, to collect all fines %nd commutation money, and to execute all such orders of the commissioners of the town as shall be given by them in conformity to law.

From these two sections, it would seem, that the overseer is a mere, subordinate agent to execute the orders of the commissioners of highways, and that his duty, so far, consists principally in warning persons to work, and in collecting fines and commutation money. It is, indeed, said to be the duty of the overseers to repair and keep in order the highways, but the first section had already made it the duty of the commissioners to give directions relative to the repairing of roads and bridges, and to cause the highways and bridges to be kept in repair. It cannot have been intended to be the equal and concurrent duty of the commissioners and the overseers to do the same thing; for their orders and acts might interfere and come in collision with each other. All the powers of the overseers must, therefore, be taken to be subordinate to, and under the superior control of, the orders of the commissioners, whom they are bound to obey. It is further to be observed, that the duty of the overseers in these two sections is confined to the highways, and it is the commissioners alone who are directed to keep in repair bridges as well as highways. The overseers have no concern with bridges erected over streams, except so far as they are directed generally to execute the orders of the commissioners.

The 5th section directs the overseers to deliver to the commissioners lists of the persons in their road districts, liable to work on the highways, and the commissioners are to assess the number of days each man is to work, and return the lists to the overseers. And if the assessment should not be sufficient, the overseers are then authorized, in the 6th section, to make another assessment.

[352]*352The 8th section directs commutation money to be paid to the overseer; and the 9th section provides, that the overseer shall make complaint to a justice of all persons who shall not, without due excuse, work according to notice ; and the fines to be collected for such defaults are to be paid to the overseer, and this commutation money, and these fines, *the overseer is to expend in improving the roads and bridges in his district.

This is the only part of the act which gives the overseer any power or direction as to bridges. He is to expend the commutation money and fines which came into his hands, on the roads and bridges; and even this expenditure must, no doubt, be under the direction of the commissioners, who are specially charged with that duty; and they may, by the 11th section, direct this money to another object, by directing the overseers to buy an iron scraper for the use of the road district. Again; by the 13th section, the overseers are annually to account to the commissioners, of the persons who have worked, and the number of days, and of those who have commuted or been fined, and of the manner in which the fines and commutation money have been expended, and they are directed to pay the unexpended moneys over to the commissioners, who are to apply it in making and improving the roads and bridges. The overseers are liable to a penalty of five dollars for neglecting to account, and by the 14th section, they are liable to a penalty of ten dollars, for every neglect of duty under the act. The commissioners recover these penalties, and are to apply them in making and improving the roads and bridges in the town.

Here, again, the commissioners, are to apply the moneys on the roads and bridges; and it is a fact well worthy of notice, that whenever the repairing of bridges is mentioned in the act, it is always in reference to the duty of the commissioners, except in the single case of moneys arising from fines and commutation. From the general provisions, and the whole policy of the act, there seems to be no doubt, that even those moneys are to be expended on the roads and bridges tinder the orders of the commissioners. The superintendence and control of the overseers, as well as the general charge and duty of repairing bridges, rest with the commissioners. Thus, also, by the 31sf section, the commissioners are to account annually to the supervisors for all the moneys received from fines and commutations, or otherwise, and to report the improvements which have been made, or which are necessary to be made, on the roads and bridges; and the moneys which the board of supor-visors shall #direct to be raised in any town for those purposes, are to be paid to the overseers of highways on the order of the commissioners. And again ; in the 33d section, if the erection or repair of a bridge becomes an unreasonable burthen on any town, the supervisors are to raise a requisite sum from the county, to be paid over to the commissioners of the town.

[353]*353In short, it appears, from a careful examination of the several provisions of the act, that the commissioners, and not the overseers, of highways, are the responsible persons in respect to the erection or repair of bridges. The overseers have nothing to do with bridges, but in the single instance in which they receive fines and commutation money, or other money, under the order of the commissioners. In every other part of the act, the duty of repairing bridges and expending money for that purpose, is expressly vested in the commissioners. The overseers were intended to be chiefly confined to highways. They are to warn the people to work with their implements and teams on the highways. The construction or repair of bridges is a distinct business. It is an act in which the people summoned to work with their implements and teams, are not supposed to be skilled. Bridges cannot be made or repaired without money to purchase materials, as timber, plank, and iron ; and when the act speaks of the application of money, it is uniformly to roads and bridges.

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Bluebook (online)
17 Johns. 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bartlett-v-crozier-nycterr-1820.