Borek v. Golder

190 Misc. 366, 74 N.Y.S.2d 675, 1947 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3299
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 19, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 190 Misc. 366 (Borek v. Golder) 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
Borek v. Golder, 190 Misc. 366, 74 N.Y.S.2d 675, 1947 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3299 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1947).

Opinion

Nathan D. Lapham,

Official Referee. This action is brought by a taxpayer of the City of Utica, New York, under the provisions of section 51 of the General Municipal Law against the Mayor, the City Clerk, the-members of the Common Council, the members of the Board of Estimate and Apportionment, the members of the Municipal Housing Authority of the City of Utica, Herman T. Stichman, State Housing Commissioner, Frank C. Moore, State Comptroller and Nathaniel L. Gold-stein, State Attorney-General.

By order of Mr. Justice Frank P. Mabpass dated May 12, 1947, the action was referred to me as Official Referee to try, hear and determine. Hearings were held at the courthouse in thé city of Utica on June 11th, 12th, 13th, 17th and 18th and the case finally submitted to me on July 24,1947.

Mr. Moore and Mr. Goldstein were not served with process and, upon motion of Hon. A. W. Feinberg, Assistant Attorney-General, appearing specially therefor, the attorneys for the respective parties consenting thereto, an order was made in open court dropping their names from the summons. The term of office of Fritz A. Hedberg having expired prior to December 20,1946, upon motion and by mutual consent, he was eliminated as a defendant and the name of his successor, Frank A. Emma, was added to the title as a party defendant. It was likewise [371]*371mutually stipulated that the answers interposed to the first amended complaint be deemed sufficient as answers to the second amended complaint which is the same as the first with the exception of paragraph 2a relating to the defendant Mr. Emma.

The plaintiff’s cause of action rests upon the claim that,, by reason of the illegal official acts of the defendants, the property of the City of Utica as well as that of the taxpayers thereof is being injured and wasted; and she prays that the defendants, the members of the Municipal Housing Authority of the City of Utica, be perpetually enjoined and restrained from issuing and selling to anyone temporary notes or certificates of indebtedness to be paid for through the subsequent issuance and sale of Authority or State housing bonds, and that said temporary notes or certificates of indebtedness be adjudged to be illegal, null and void, and a waste of the funds, property and estate of an instrumentality of government of the City of Utica; that the said defendants be perpetually enjoined and restrained from paying and distributing to any person or corporation any and all moneys and funds held in a general or special account for expenditure and distribution for the purposes defined in the revised plan and project and enumerated in the certificate of purposes issued or to be issued by said Authority, and that such expenditure and distribution be adjudged to be illegal, null and void, and a waste of the funds, property and estate of said Authority for which the City of Utica stands as obligor and guarantor; that the defendants, the officials of the City of Utica be perpetually enjoined and restrained from issuing or selling to anyone the bonds, temporary obligations or certificates of indebtedness of the City of Utica in payment for any of the purposes, public improvements, work, labor and services, for which the City of Utica has contracted to perform or engage in under the terms of the amended Loan and Subsidy Contract made between the Authority, the State of Hew York and the City of Utica, and that any such expenditure, commitment or appropriation be adjudged to be illegal, null and void, and a waste of the funds, property and estate of the City of Utica and of its taxpayers; that all acts and proceedings of the defendants, the members of the said Authority, and the officials of the City of Utica and the Common Council of the City in the passage and approval of the amended Loan and Subsidy Contract and in carrying out the terms and conditions of said Contract, and in complying with the amended plan and project, be adjudged to be null and void as being illegal and a waste of the public funds, money, property and credit of the City of Utica and of its taxpayers; [372]*372that the defendants, the members of the Municipal Housing Authority of the City of Utica, be held to account for any expenditure made, being made^ or which they may have contracted to make, through or on account of the acquisition of such property or properties not deemed to be or legally held for a public purpose or use, for the purchase of other properties at a price in excess of the true and actual value of same as shown through appraisals heretofore made by competent and qualified appraisers of real property and for any expenditure alleged by the second- amended complaint to be illegal and unconstitutional. In this connection it should be noted that, despite the prayer for injunctive relief, up to the present time no application has been made for a temporary injunction.

For purposes of brevity and convenience, I shall refer to the Municipal Housing Authority of the City of Utica as the “ Authority ”, to the Public Housing Law as the Act ”, to the City of Utica as the “ City ”, to the State of New York as the “ State ”, and to the amended Loan and Subsidy Contract as the “ Contract ”.

It seems that in the year 1943 the Authority entered into - a contract pursuant to the provisions of the Public Housing Law with the State and the City for the financing and construction of a low-rent housing project as a part of a plan for the clearance and replanning of an insanitary and substandard area in the Second Ward of downtown Utica. There is no doubt but that it was a substandard and insanitary. ” area within the meaning of the applicable statutory and constitutional provisions. The plan under the contract called for the construction of 500 dwelling units within this area, the clearance, replanning and construction to be financed by a loan from the State to the Authority under the" provisions of article TV of the Act in an amount not to exceed $3,440,000. The City was to become contingently liable for the repayment of the loan with interest in the event of default by the Authority in accordance with provisions of article XVIII of the New York State Constitution and subdivision 2 of section 51 of the Act. Out of proceeds of rentals to be derived from this venture and the subsidies to be paid by the State and City to the Authority according to the Act, the loan with interest was to be repaid over a period of fifty years. Pursuant to the provisions of section 73 of the Act, the contract of 1943 provided for the payment of a periodic annual cash subsidy by the State to the Authority equal to the largest annual installment of interest on the loan plus 1% of the cost of the project. Likewise, the City agreed to match this cash subsidy [373]*373by payments in the form of tax exemptions of the excess of assessed valuation of the property held by the Authority upon completion of the project over the assessed valuation of the property at the date of the contract (Act, § 52, subd. 4; § 73). The Second Ward project was divided into two parts, the “ defense housing ” to meet the urgent needs of the hour involving the construction of 150 dwelling units, and the post-war housing ” to meet the general needs of the community involving the construction of 350 units. This contract with the plan and project was approved and adopted by the Authority, City and State. One hundred and forty-seven of these dwelling units, known as Washington Courts but here referred to as Site A, were constructed and are now in use.

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Bluebook (online)
190 Misc. 366, 74 N.Y.S.2d 675, 1947 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borek-v-golder-nysupct-1947.