Clarke v. . Tunnicliff
This text of 38 N.Y. 58 (Clarke v. . Tunnicliff) 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.
Opinion
The recovery of the Plaintiff in this action was had by reason of the illegal proceedings of the Defendants as trustees of a school district, in assessing a tax upon the Plaintiff, and in collecting said tax by a sale of his property. Ordinarily, a recovery in such an action would entitle a Plaintiff to costs; and if the Defendants are now exonerated from the payment of costs, it is because they are exempted by section 146 of chap. 480 of the Laws of 1847, which provides that when officers of school districts are prosecuted for any act performed by virtue of, or under color of their offices, which might have been the subject of an appeal to the Superintendent, no costs shall be allowed to the Plaintiff, where the Court shall certify that it appeared upon the trial of the cause that the Defendants acted in good faith.
I think the Judge who tried this cause at the Circuit was warranted in granting a certificate, within the provision of the section of the act referred to, and that the Defendants were thereby relieved from the payment of costs. By section 82 of the act in question the trustees are required to call meetings, to make out a tax-list of every district-tax voted, and to annex a warrant to any such tax-list, directed to the collector, for the collection of the sum assessed. Another section (85) requires the trustees, in making out the tax-list, to apportion the tax among the taxable inhabitants of the district, and upon the real estate of non-residents liable to taxation. A subsequent section (132) authorizes an appeal by any person conceiving himself aggrieved in consequence of any decision made in certain cases, which are particu *270 larly specified, “ or concerning any other matter ” arising under the act in question, to the Superintendent, who is authorized and required to examine and decide the same, and whose decision is final and conclusive.
The provision of the section last cited is broad and comprehensive in its terms, and evidently includes any and all acts which may possibly arise in regard to the official proceedings of these officers. It certainly embraces the acts of the Defendants in this case,'in the assessment and collection of the tax against the .Plaintiff,
The Legislature, no doubt, intended to prevent needless prosecutions, and unnecessary suits against officers of this character, who had acted in good faith in the discharge of their official duties, and, I think, provided an ample remedy for redress in the case before us, without resort to a Court of Law. The acts of the Defendants, for which they were held liable, were for assessing the tax, and instituting and carrying out the proceedings required by law for its enforcement and collection. This clearly was a decision concerning a matter within the letter, spirit, and meaning of the act in question, which it was especially intended to provide •for, and the legality of which was litigated upon the trial. The injury to the Plaintiff arose in consequence of the decision of the trustees, that the Plaintiff was liable to be assessed, and the • warrant of assessment issued by them. The levy made upon, and the sale of the Plaintiff’s property was the result of the unlawful assessment made by the Defendants. Here was the original grievance for which a complete and perfect remedy was provided by an appeal, and which rendered the commencement of a suit a useless proceeding, nor does it alter the case because the Plaintiff was not a resident of the district. The statute does not exclude non-residents whose real estate is liable to tax, but expressly comprehends every person aggrieved.
It was enough that the Plaintiff was aggrieved by the decision of the Defendants to levy the tax, to bring him within the provision of the act, and that the whole question involved in the suit brought could have been appealed, heard and decided by the *271 Superintendent, instead of being contested and adjudicated in an action in a Court of Justice. So long as the Defendants were acting as trustees of the school district, and were called upon to respond for acts done by virtue of, or under color of their office, and acted in good faith, they presented a case which entitled them to the certificate of the Judge who tried the case, and which exonerated them from the payment of costs (Ex parte Bennett, 3 Denio, 175).
It is insisted by the Plaintiff’s counsel that § 304 of the Code allows costs of course to the Plaintiff, in a case like the one under consideration; that § 468 of the Code repeals all statutory provisions inconsistent with the Code, and that by means thereof § 146 of the act of 1847 is abrogated and repealed.
I think this view of the subject is not maintainable, and that the position assumed in the opinion of the General Term, that the scope of §§ 304, 305, and 306 of the Code is to distinguish between the cases in which costs are allowed of course, and those in which they are discretionary, and not to make their allowance peremptory in every case specified in § 304, and that the reason given for upholding it is a satisfactory and full answer to the ground taken by the Plaintiff’s counsel. As was well said by the learned Judge who wrote the opinion: “The intent is manifest, that in the first class of cases costs are not left to the discretion of the Court, while in the latter class they are so left.”
This intent is more apparent from the enactment in § 303, which abolishes the fee bill previously existing, and enacts that “ there may be allowed ” to the successful party “ certain sums, by way of indemnity, for his expenses in the action,” and afterwards distinguishes the cases in which the costs are allowed of course, and those in which they are discretionary.
It may be also observed, that although costs are allowed to the Plaintiff, under § 304, in cases of the same nature as the present one, and unless the Judge interposes and grants a certificate, yet the fact of granting the certificate is not in conflict with this enactment. The party recovers costs of course, unless their allow *272 anee is stayed by the certificate, as provided; and this, I think, is only a mere modification of § 146 of the act of 1847, not inconsistent with the Code, and not repealed by § 468 of the Code.
The certificate of the Judge applies, I think, to all the costs in the case, and the Plaintiff is not entitled to his costs on this motion for a new trial. The exceptions taken upon the trial were first heard at General Term, by the order of the Court, and the motion for a new trial was only a continuation of the action, and not the institution of a new proceeding by the Defendants. The Defendants were merely pressing their defence originally interposed on the hearing at General Term, and the certificate of the Judge who tried the case was not-given until after a decision had been made upon the exceptions. The denial of the motion for a new trial, “ with costs,” was the usual form of an order in such cases, and not an adjudication that the Plaintiff was entitled to costs, and which would preclude the Defendants from obtaining the certificate. The Plaintiff in such a case would be entitled to costs, as a matter of course, upon the decision, the same as he would upon a verdict at the Circuit, and therefore the form of the order was not inappropriate, but the granting of the certificate prevented the allowance of the costs, by the Clerk, upon taxation.
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38 N.Y. 58, 4 Abb. Pr. 451, 5 Trans. App. 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clarke-v-tunnicliff-ny-1868.