Blanshard v. City of New York

141 Misc. 609, 253 N.Y.S. 419, 1931 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1503
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 14, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 141 Misc. 609 (Blanshard v. City of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blanshard v. City of New York, 141 Misc. 609, 253 N.Y.S. 419, 1931 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1503 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1931).

Opinion

Shientag, J.

This is a taxpayer’s action to restrain the defendants from proceeding and operating under a bus franchise, alleged to have been granted illegally, fraudulently and in waste of the public funds and domain. It also seeks to annul and declare void the resolution of the board of estimate and apportionment of the city of New York granting the franchise to the defendant Brooklyn Bus Corporation, as well as the contract embodying the terms thereof, entered into between the defendants.

Although the complaint is silent on the subject, the parties have assumed, and for the purposes of this motion I shall take judicial notice of the fact, that before the action was instituted the franchise here attacked was completed by the granting of a certificate of convenience and necessity by the Transit- Commission of the State of New York, and that the defendant Brooklyn Bus Corporation actually commenced the operation of buses on a number of routes designated in the franchise contract.

The pending motion is addressed to the sufficiency of the complaint. The defendants contend that the complaint is insufficient in law for two reasons: First, that a taxpayer, under the statute, may not maintain an action based upon illegality, waste or fraud, [611]*611to annul a franchise completed and acted upon, or to restrain operation and proceedings thereunder; that the only one empowered to bring such a suit is the Attorney-General, acting on behalf of the People of the State. Second, that, in any event, the complaint fails to set forth facts sufficient to constitute a taxpayer’s action.

At common law a taxpayer could not maintain a suit against a public officer to restrain an illegal act, or the waste of public funds, unless the violation of the public right subjected the taxpayer to some special or particular damage not suffered by the rest of the community. As a practical matter, therefore, a taxpayer’s action could notffie brought at common law. This unsatisfactory condition, aggravated by the scandals arising from illegal and wrongful acts committed by municipal officers and others, dealing with municipal funds and property, led to the enactment of the first taxpayer’s statute in this State (Laws of 1872, chap. 161).

With various amendments extending its scope, the taxpayer’s remedial statute is now embodied, in substance, in section 51 of the General Municipal Law. The history of the legislation and the reasons which led to its enactment are fully discussed in Talcott v. City of Buffalo (125 N. Y. 280, 285); Rogers v. O’Brien (153 id. 357, 361), and Altschul v. Ludwig (216 id. 459, 464).

The defendants, in their briefs, place much reliance upon the fact that the plaintiff shows “ no special or particular damage to himself.” This argument loses sight of the whole purpose of the statutory provisions for the maintenance of a taxpayer’s suit. We have long abandoned in this State the requirement that one who sues to protect public property against official waste must prove that he seeks, by his suit, to pursue selfish, pecuniary ends.

The requirement of special damage, while a traditional limitation upon the right of private individuals to enjoin or abate a public nuisance, is wholly irrelevant to the statutory right which, since 1872, has been given to taxpayers in this State to restrain illegal, fraudulent or wasteful official action.

Section 51 of the General Municipal Law empowers a taxpayer, under certain specified conditions, to institute a suit against municipal officers, (a) to prevent any illegal official act; (b) to prevent waste or injury to the property, funds or estate of a municipal corporation; (c) to restore and make good any property, funds or estate of a municipality.

It is true that not every illegal official act of a municipal officer falls within the scope of the taxpayer’s statute. It was not the intention of the statute that a taxpayer shall be allowed to intervene and bring to the decision of the courts every act of a municipal [612]*612officer which may be claimed to be illegal, although concededly it is entirely innocuous.” (Western N. Y. Water Co. v. City of Buffalo, 242 N. Y. 202, 207.) To be entitled to relief under the taxpayer’s statute, when waste is not involved, “ it must appear that in addition to being an illegal official act the threatened act is such as to imperil the public interests or calculated to work public injury or produce some public mischief.” (Altschul v. Ludwig, supra, 467.) It must be in a real sense a menace to the public welfare.” (Southern Leasing Co. v. Ludwig, 217 N. Y. 100, 104.) This does not necessarily require that the threatened public harm be measurable in dollars and cents. There may well be public interests which a taxpayer is interested to conserve, which relate to the general public welfare and which ought to be protected.” (Brill v. Miller, 140 App. Div. 602, 607; Bareham v. City of Rochester, 221 id. 36; modfd. and affd., 246 N. Y. 140; Fletcher v. Hylan, 211 N. Y. Supp. 727.) The complaint alleges official illegality of this type. In any event, it also charges official waste of the property and funds of the city, thus bringing the complaint on this point squarely within the statute. Moreover, this complaint charges fraud and bad faith, elements wholly lacking in Gallagher v. Keating (40 App. Div. 81) and Cross v. Gaynor (78 Misc. 216).

Defendants further contend that the acts against which the present suit is directed are wholly past, and beyond the power of this court to rectify.

. The statute provides not only for prevention but for reparation; it contemplates action not only to frustrate, but to undo. Under it, the performance as well as the entry into illegal or wasteful contracts may be enjoined. (McQuillin Mun. Corp. [2d ed.] § 2758.) To hold otherwise would be to give to secrecy and haste total immunity from the sanctions against official misconduct created by the taxpayer’s statute. The right does not depend upon the speed with which the law is broken.” (Cawker v. Milwaukee, 133 Wis. 35, 38.)

Ordinarily, the remedies sought under the statute have been preventive, but from an early date it has been held that as an incident to the preventive and prospective relief, a retrospective remedy may be afforded. (People v. Ingersoll, 58 N. Y. 1, 14.)

As the taxpayer’s action developed in this State, this principle became firmly imbedded in the decisions.

In Wenk v. City of New York (171 N. Y. 607) the court, in sustaining the sufficiency of a complaint in a taxpayer’s suit to annul certain leases of public property, pointed out that “ the illegal act sought to be prevented in this case is the collection by the ' acting ’ official of the municipality, of rents under leases which the court is [613]*613asked to annul because they are alleged to be void ” (p. 615). (See, also, Hendrickson v. City of New York, 160 N. Y. 144; Jackson v. Norris, 72 Ill. 364; Leffingwell v. Scutt, 221 App. Div. 462; Burns v. City of Watertown, 126 Misc. 140; Tompkins v. Pallas, 47 id. 309.)

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Bluebook (online)
141 Misc. 609, 253 N.Y.S. 419, 1931 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blanshard-v-city-of-new-york-nysupct-1931.