City of Syracuse v. Roscoe

66 Misc. 317, 123 N.Y.S. 403
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 66 Misc. 317 (City of Syracuse v. Roscoe) 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
City of Syracuse v. Roscoe, 66 Misc. 317, 123 N.Y.S. 403 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

On March 4, 1889, Ben W. Boscoe was duly appointed city treasurer of the city of Syracuse for the period of three years. Section 68 of the city charter, as then in force, provided that, before entering upon the duties of his office, the city treasurer “ shall enter into a bond to the city of Syracuse in such penal sum as may be fixed by the common council, with two or more sureties to be approved by the common council, and conditioned for the faithful discharge of his duties; which bond, when so approved and indorsed by the city clerk, shall be filed in the [319]*319clerk’s office of the county of Onondaga, where it shall be recorded as required in the case of collectors of towns. Said bond shall be a lien on all the real estate of said treasurer and his sureties in the county of Onondaga until the conditions thereof, with all the costs and charges which may accrue upon the prosecution thereof, shall be fully satisfied.”

On April 1, 1889, the finance committee of the common council reported that the bond of Mr. Eoscoe should be in the sum of $300,000 to continue during his term of office and until discharge by order of the common council.” On the same day the report was adopted and a resolution was passed that the official bond to be given by the city treasurer be and the same is hereby fixed at the sum of $300,000.”

On April fifth a bond in that amount was given by Ben W. Eoscoe, as principal, and Eoger S. Sperry, Bruce S. Aldridge, Christian Cook, John Dunfee and John McCarthy, as sureties, conditioned that the treasurer should faithfully execute, discharge and perform the duties of his said office and shall faithfully and honestly collect and disburse according to law, all local and general taxes levied and which may hereafter be levied in said city, which it shall be his duty to collect, and shall properly account for and pay over all moneys and property which may be received by him pursuant to the provisions of any law now in force or which may be hereafter enacted.” This bond was duly approved and was filed in the clerk’s office of Onondaga county.

At the end of the first year of Mr. Eoscoe’s term of office, he presented to the common council an annual report and requested an examination of the books, accounts and vouchers of his office. The report was accepted and placed on file; and, on February 24, 1890, one Lawrence W. Myers was appointed by the common council to make this examination and to report his results to the council. On May 26, 1890, Mr. Myers so reported and the report was placed on file. At the next meeting of the council, on June 6, 1890, the minutes of the previous meeting were approved. Simi[320]*320lar proceedings were had a year later. Finally, on February 22, 1892, Mr. Eoscoe made a report for the third year of his term of office. This report was' again accepted and placed on file; and on February twenty-fourth Mr. Myers was appointed to examine such books and accounts. He reported on June 13, 1892, and his report was placed on file. On June twentieth the following resolution was adopted by the council: “Resolved, that the official bond of Ben W. Eoscoe, as city treasurer and tax receiver, dated April 3rd, 1889, and filed in the County Clerk’s office April 5th, 1889, in the sum of three hundred thousand dollars, with Eoger S. Sperry, Bruce S. Aldridge, John Dunfee, Christian Cook and John McCarthy as sureties, he and the same is hereby cancelled and the city clerk is hereby authorized and directed to indorse such cancellation on said bond.” This resolution was duly certified to by the city clerk and was attached to the bond with the following indorsement: “The within bond is hereby cancelled and may be taken off the record in accordance with the resolution of the Common Council of the City of Syracuse adopted on June 20th, 1892, a copy of which is hereto attached.”

Sometime during the year 1908, it was discovered that a considerable sum of money which had come into the hands of Mr. Eoscoe as city treasurer had been misappropriated or lost in his office by the default of some subordinate. The receipt of this sum nowhere appears in the.report of the treasurer to the council. It is not claimed, however, that he was aware of the fact, or that the accounts presented by' him to the council were not presented in good faith" and in the belief that they were correct; nor is any had faith claimed on the part of the council with regard to their action in the matter.

Under this state of facts this action was begun to recover from Mr. Eoscoe and his sureties the amount so misappropriated, it being claimed that the bond above referred to is still in force and that the defendants are liable by reason of its provisions.

The question to be determined by me is whether, at the close of the evidence and in view of the facts just stated. [321]*321a nonsuit should be granted. The result depends upon the answer to be given to various claims made on behalf of the defendants.

First. Had the common council any general authority to cancel and discharge the bond in question ?

Hpon this question I have but little difficulty in reaching a conclusion. It is true that the legislative powers of the city of Syracuse are vested in the common council. Revised charter, city of Syracuse, § 18. It is given the power to make ordinances for certain specific purposes enumerated, one of which is to manage and regulate the finances, and to regulate, preserve and dispose of the real and personal property of the city. § 22. It may also make such other ordinances as it shall deem necessary and proper and which are not in violation of the laws of this State or of the Hnited States. § 24. It appointed the city treasurer (§ 67) and fixed the amount of his bond. § 68. But, notwithstanding the broad language used, the common council has no power of general legislation. It and the municipal corporation which it represents have such powers only as are expressly conferred upon them, or which are fairly implied from the powers so conferred, or which are essential to enable the corporation to accomplish the purposes for which it is created. But, where the statute expressly says that a bond shall remain a lien on the property of those who have executed it until its conditions are fully satisfied, the council has no power, express or implied, to satisfy it without consideration and to deprive the corporation of the security which the statute intended to give it.

Second. Did the common council have the power to audit the accounts of the treasurer; did the action taken by it constitute an audit; and, if so, is it conclusive in favor of the defendants, so long as it remains unimpeached ás to the sums properly chargeable against him? The answer depends upon the language of the statutes in effect at the time.

The charter of the city of Syracuse provided that the mayor and common council of the city of Syracuse should exercise the powers of a board of city auditors and'that that board should possess the powers and perform the duties [322]*322of town boards in the several towns of the county of Onondaga as now regulated by the general statutes of this State. Charter, §§ 131, 132. The council had also, as has been seen, power to make ordinances necessary to permit it conveniently to manage and regulate the finances of the city; and it had adopted such an ordinance, requiring the city treasurer to make an annual report of all the transactions, financial or otherwise, of his department. Ordinances, chap. 38.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 Misc. 317, 123 N.Y.S. 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-syracuse-v-roscoe-nysupct-1910.