Board of Supervisors of Richmond County v. Ellis

14 N.Y. 620
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 2, 1875
StatusPublished

This text of 14 N.Y. 620 (Board of Supervisors of Richmond County v. Ellis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Supervisors of Richmond County v. Ellis, 14 N.Y. 620 (N.Y. 1875).

Opinion

Folger, J.

The evidence is slight, if any, that there was ever any legal and proper audit and allowance of these bills. But as we do not put our decision upon the lack of a formal audit, it may be assumed that there was one. The inquiry, then, is, whether the charges in them, now objected to, were legal charges against the county and such as it could be compelled or ought to pay.

The charges for fer diem and mileage, while serving upon a committee appointed by the board of supervisors, could not be enforced against the county. The law is plain, that a supervisor may not claim from the county, for services other than attendance at the sessions of the board and mileage thereon. (Laws of 1869, chap. 855, p. 2060, § 8.) He is confined in amount to the rate of three dollars per day; and limited as to the number of days, to full days’ service during the sessions of the board; and is awarded in addition thereto his mileage allowed by law. And, to make this the more emphatic, it is enacted that he shall not receive any other compensation whatever, except as the same is specially provided for by law. Ho special provision of law is cited, nor have we any in mind, which gives any other or different compensation to the defendant for service to his county as a supervisor. As the act above cited especially denies compensation other tlian as above stated, the ease cannot fall within the rule cited by the defendant from The People v. Supervisors of Albany Co. (12 Wend., 257). Hor does the act of 1870 (chap. 242, p. 559, § 2) make special provision for this case. That professes to amend subdivision 1 of sec[623]*623tion 53, of title 4, part 1 of the Revised Statutes. The reference is indefinite, and to be complete it should have contained, as a part of it, chapter 11 article 6. The draftsman of the act deceived himself by referring to what is known as the fifth edition of the Revised Statutes; there is no such fifty-third section in the Revised Statutes proper. What was really amended w-as subdivision 1, of section 3, of chapter 615 of Laws of 1857, which was afterward inserted in that fifth edition asu section 53. The amendment in 1870 is by giving two dollars per day, instead of one dollar and fifty cents allowed by the act of 1857, as a compensation to a supervisor and certain other officers. But that is, in the language of the act of 1857 “for each day * * * devoted by them to the service of the town * * So it is not applicable to a charge for a service to the county.

Eor was the expense of the litigation gone into by the defendant, to establish his right to the office of police commissioner, a legal and proper charge against the county. Eot even, if it be, that the board formally authorized the litigation and agreed to pay the costs and charges. We are not required to decide whether the county might not under some circumstances have had such an interest in maintaining the validity of the law creating it a separate police district (Laws of 1870, chap. 497, p. 1132), as that its board of supervisors might not in its behalf lawfully undertake a litigation to that end and incur costs and charges therefor. It does not appear that in the action or proceeding now in question the validity of that law was in question, or that more was involved than the individual right of the defendant to the office. In that, the county as a corporate body, had no such interest as that the board of supervisors could lawfully engage it to a participation in the litigation, and to a payment of the costs and charges. It appears, then, that the charges above named were not such as that the defendant could lawfully claim and enforce them against the county.

It is claimed, however, that the board of supervisors in one year having audited and allowed them, the board of [624]*624supervisors in a later year being the same body in law {Suprs. of Ohenmigo v. Birdsall, 4 Wend., 453), cannot disregard that action. Doubtless, if a board of supervisors at one.time acts finally upon a matter of which they have jurisdiction, and as to which they have lawful right to act, a succeeding board may not undo what they have done to the immediate detriment of third parties. (Id.) I do not think that any decision will be found which goes farther than this. But it has appeared that these were not legal charges against the county of Richmond. A board of supervisors has no power to audit and allow accounts not legally chargeable to their county; and if it attempts so to do, it is an act in excess of jurisdiction, done without the power to make it valid, and is null and void. (The People v. Lawrence, 6 Hill, 244; Chemung Canal Bk. v. Suprs. of Chemung, 5 Denio, 511.) It may be disregarded by other officers of the county (6 Hill, supra), and is not binding and conclusive upon another board.

There is no doubt of the payment to the defendant of these bills, nor that payment was made by the county treasurer upon vouchers from the chairman and clerk of the board of supervisors, (with, perhaps one exception), in due form. It is claimed that this payment was voluntary, made with full knowledge of all the circumstances, and that it cannot now be overhauled. We are not called upon to overlook or stretch any of the rules which forbid a voluntary payment to be repented of and reviewed. The question is, whether the municipal corporation, the county of Richmond, is so far bound hy the action of its board of supervisors as that it may not, in this case, be found outside of those rules. The board of supervisors is not the county. It is an aggregate of certain town ófficers which, for certain specified purposes, is the representative of the county. It is an important and prominent representative, but not the only one. The county had other agents through whom it acted, and it at times acted through the board as its agent. Boards of supervisors- are classed as subordinate public agents. (Hull v. Suprs. of [625]*625Oneida Co., 19 J. R., 259.) They are agents with limited powers which they may not exceed and give any validity to the excess. It is a rule, that in cases of public agents the principal is not bound by their action, unless they act within the scope of their authority. (Lee v. Munroe, 7 Cranch, 366.) In the case cited it was held, that if the facts would have created an estoppel against the agents, had they been acting for themselves, and would have postponed their prior right in bonds to a subsequent interest acquired by the plaintiff acting’ in reliance upon the declarations; yet, as they had limited powers beyond the scope of which they had passed in making these declarations, the public, their principal, could not be injured by their unauthorized acts. It is said, that it is better that an individual should now and then suffer by such mistakes, than to introduce a rule against the abuse of which, by improper collusions, it would be very difficult for the public to protect itself. This court has held in The People v. Fields (not yet reported)

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Related

Lee v. Munroe
11 U.S. 366 (Supreme Court, 1813)
People of the State of N.Y. v. . Fields
58 N.Y. 491 (New York Court of Appeals, 1874)
Supervisors of Onondaga v. Briggs
2 Denio 26 (New York Supreme Court, 1846)
Supervisors of Chenango v. Birdsall
4 Wend. 453 (New York Supreme Court, 1830)
People ex rel. Hilton v. Supervisors of Albany
12 Wend. 257 (New York Supreme Court, 1834)

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Bluebook (online)
14 N.Y. 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-supervisors-of-richmond-county-v-ellis-ny-1875.