Cleveland v. City of Watertown

99 Misc. 66
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 99 Misc. 66 (Cleveland v. City of Watertown) 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
Cleveland v. City of Watertown, 99 Misc. 66 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1917).

Opinion

Emerson, J.

The city of Watertown now exists by virtue of an amended charter passed in 1897, being chapter 760 of the laws of that year. In the year 1914 the legislature enacted chapter 444, Laws of 1914, [68]*68known as The Optional City Government Law,” by the terms of which the electors of cities of the second and third class were permitted to vote on the adoption of any one of several forms of city government, known respectively as plans A, B, C, D, E, F and G.

The statute further provided that, upon filing with the common council a petition therefor, the city clerk was required to transmit a certified copy of said petition to the commissioners of elections, who should cause the question proposed by such petition to be submitted to a vote of the electors, and, if a majority of the votes cast upon the proposition was in favor of its adoption, the officers provided for in the plan so adopted should be elected at the next general city election and their terms of office should commence on the first day of the second calendar month thereafter, and thereupon the terms of all other city officers should expire, except the members of the board of education and city clerk, and all provisions of the city charter and of all general and special laws inconsistent with said Optional City Government Law should be superseded.

In the fall of 1915, upon a petition therefor, the electors of said city voted upon the proposition to adopt plan C as specified and described in said act, and a majority of the votes cast were in favor of the adoption of that plan.

It is conceded that the time to organize under the Optional City Government Law, as provided in said plan, was extended one year by the legislature, and the executive officials of said city now threaten to carry said plan into execution by the election of the officers therein provided for at the next general election.

The plaintiffs, who are taxpayers of the city, and also officials of the city who will be legislated out of [69]*69office by the operation of said optional city plan, now bring this action and ask that the city officials who are charged with that duty be restrained from holding such election and from organizing the city under said Optional City Government Law on the ground that said act is unconstitutional and, therefore, void. A suit now lies at the instance of any taxpayer to restrain illegal official action or waste of the public funds. Code Civ. Pro. § 1925; Gen. Mun. Law, § 51; Brill v. Miller, 140 App. Div. 602; Matter of Reynolds, 202 N. Y. 440, 441.

An unconstitutional law is absolutely void and, therefore, no law at all. It is the same as if the law had never been passed. Newell v. People, 7 N. Y. 95.

If, therefore, the Optional City Government Law is invalid, any action taken by the city officials to carry out the same would not only be unlawful but would involve a waste of the public funds. Taxpayers ’ suits to restrain such action have been frequently upheld under similar conditions. McCutcheon v. Terminal Station Commission, 168 App. Div. 301, 306; Andrews v. Pierson, 174 id. 478, 481; Gibbs v. Luther, 81 Misc. Rep. 612; Stanton v. Board of Supervisors, 191 N. Y. 430.

The question thus presented involves an inquiry as to the provisions of the present city charter and the method of city government therein provided, and also the provisions of the Optional City Government Law, and the changes sought to be accomplished by that act. The question will then arise whether, under the Constitution, the legislature had authority to pass the latter act and to authorize the changes in the city government which it is proposed to make.

From an examination of the present revised city charter we find that it provides at great length and [70]*70with much detail for the government of the municipality and places many restraints upon the governing body in the interest of the residents and taxpayers of the city.' It provides that the elective officers shall consist of a mayor, president of the common council, an alderman and supervisor from each ward, a city judge and three assessors. The aldermen thus chosen are to constitute the common council, over which the president is to preside. The common council is vested with all legislative powers pertaining to the city and also with all powers conferred by the general statutes of the state. The method of city government is set forth at length and it is provided that when the manner of executing the same is not expressly stated in the charter the same shall be provided for by ordinances or resolution of the common council. The common council is also authorized to enact ordinances for any local purposes pertaining to the government of the city, the management of its business and the preservation of the order, peace, health, safety and welfare of its inhabitants, and, to that end, the charter sets forth at great length the subjects on which it is authorized to enact ordinances. The common council is also given the management and control of the finances of the city, including the making up of the annual tax levies, and is invested with all the powers of the board of supervisors in relation to the correction of the city assessment rolls. It is, however, provided that there shall be no raising or expenditure of money except as expressly authorized by the charter, and that the tax to be levied for municipal purposes shall in no event exceed one dollar and seventy cents upon every one hundred dollars of the assessed valuation of the taxable property in the city. The common council has no power to direct any extraordinary expenditure except [71]*71upon a two-thirds vote of its members, nor until such an expenditure has been authorized by the taxpayers at a special election held for that purpose, nor can it borrow any money except as specially authorized by the charter, save in anticipation of taxes then remaining unpaid.

The mayor is made the executive head of the city with a qualified veto over the proceedings of the common council, while the assessors are invested with all the powers and duties of town assessors under the statutes and general laws of the state.

The' appointive officers are declared to be a city attorney, treasurer, clerk, engineer, sealer of weights and measures, constables, pound master, commissioners of deeds, city hall janitor, and five commissioners for each of the following boards, viz., public works, health, safety, charity, education and water works, all of whom are to be appointed by the mayor with the consent of the common council. The Public Health Law, as amended in 1913, changed the constitution of the board of health to the mayor and six commissioners to be appointed by the common council upon the nomination of the mayor, but, as so changed, the complexion of the boards remains as above stated. The duties of these city officials are largely of a local character and, therefore, need not be considered here, with the exception of the treasurer and various administrative boards above mentioned.

The city treasurer is declared to be the fiscal officer of the city. He is invested with all the powers and duties of town collectors and is required to collect all taxes levied in the city. He is required to pay over weekly to the county treasurer all taxes collected for state and county purposes and in the meantime all taxes collected by him in excess of $100 must be [72]

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Bluebook (online)
99 Misc. 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-v-city-of-watertown-nysupct-1917.