COOMAN v. BOARD OF EDUCATION

44 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 96
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1885
StatusPublished

This text of 44 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 96 (COOMAN v. BOARD OF EDUCATION) 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
COOMAN v. BOARD OF EDUCATION, 44 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 96 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1885).

Opinion

Smith, P. J.:

Tbe action was brought to recover for a quantity of charcoal sold and dehvered by tbe plaintiff to tbe defendant, to be used in and about tbe public school buildings in said city, under tbe charge off tbe defendant, and which was so used. The answer admitted tbe creation of tbe debt, and alleged payment of tbe same to Otis N. 'Wilcox, a judgment creditor of tbe plaintiff, in pursuance of an order made by tbe special county judge of Monroe county, in proceedings supplementary to execution upon tbe judgment in favor of Wilcox. Tbe questions raised by tbe appeal relate to tbe validity of those proceedings. Tbe proceedings were bad under section 294 of the Code of Procedure. That section provided that tbe affidavit to be presented to tbe judge, on tbe application for tbe initiatory order, shall show, among other things, that a person or corporation has property of tbe judgment debtor, or is indebted to him in an amount exceeding ten dollars. Tbe only averment on that subject, in tbe affidavit presented to the judge by Wilcox, was the following : “ That tbe city of Rochester, as deponent is informed and believes, is indebted to said defendant in an amount exceeding ten dollars, and that Alonzo L. Mabbett, tbe superintendent of tbe board of education, is acquainted with tbe facts of said indebtedness and has possession of tbe claim, order or cheek upon tbe treasurer of said city, as such officer of said city, of said indebtedness to said defendant. That tbe treasurer of said city has charge of tbe moneys so to be paid to said defendant.”

Tbe appellant’s counsel contends that tbe affidavit, being on information and belief, was insufficient to give jurisdiction. We regard Miller v. Adams (52 N. Y., 409) as an authority adverse to that contention in this collateral action. Whether, upon a direct application to set aside tbe proceeding, the affidavit would be held sufficient to support an order based upon it, was left an open question by tbe decision cited, and it does not arise in this case.

A more serious question is presented by tbe claim of tbe appellant’s counsel that tbe proceeding was not instituted to reach tbe debt owing to Oooman by tbe defendant herein, tbe only debt described [98]*98in tbe affidavit being one alleged to be owing by another corporation, to wit, tbe city of Rochester, and for that reason tbe proceeding is not available to tbe defendant as a defense herein. A reference to tbe charter of the city of Rochester shows that the defendant is a separate department of the government of that city, composed of the commissioners of common schools of the city, and by express terms is made a corporate body in relation to all the powers and duties conferred upon it by virtue of the charter, and is charged with “the superintendence, supervision and management” of the common schools in said city, in all respects. (Laws 1861, chap. 143, title 6, §§ 137, 142, sub. 9, as amended.) The charter also provides for raising money by tax for the support of the common schools of the city, which is made subject to the disposal of the board (sec. 148), and to that end all such moneys, and all moneys received by the city for schools, are to be deposited with the city treasurer, to the credit of the board, and it is provided that they shall be drawn out in pursuance of a resolution of the board, by draft drawn by the president and countersigned by the clerk of said board, payable to the order of the person entitled to receive the money. The treasurer is to keep such funds separate and distinct from any other moneys in his hands. (Sec. 149.) Among other specified purposes for which money may be thus raised by tax, and for which purposes the board of education has the power and is charged with the duty of expending the money under their control, so far as may be necessary, are “ to procure fuel and defray the contingent expenses of the common schools. (Secs. 140, sub. 4; 142, sub. 11; 144, 148.) The board is also charged with the expenditure of the public moneys received by the city from the State and paid to the treasurer for the support of common schools. (Sec. 142, sub. 12, part 3; sec. 149.) All provisions of law in respect to school district libraries apply to it (sec. 145), and it is required to report annually, among other things, such information respecting the common schools of the city as may from time to time be required by the State superintendent of common schools. (Sec. 14-2, sub. 12, part 5.) In short, the board of education, although its individual members are officers of the city, is a corporation distinct from that of the city, subject to the direct control of the State, in some particulars, and capable of making contracts binding upon itself alone, and of [99]*99■contracting debts payable out of a specified fund which it has the «ole power to control and disburse. It would seem that in a proceeding instituted for the sole purpose of reaching a debt owing to the judgment debtor by one corporation, an order requiring another .and different corporation, against which no proceeding was had, to make payment of a debt owing by it, must necessarily be a nullity. And if the latter corporation pays to any one other than its creditor, it does so voluntarily; it is not protected by the order, •and the rights of its creditor are not affected thereby.

But in the proceeding under consideration, neither corporation was required to make payment. The initiatory order referred to the debt mentioned in the affidavit, as one in favor of Cooman against the city of Rochester, but it did not require either the city ■of Rochester or the board of education to appear and be examined. Its requirement in that behalf was laid upon Alonzo L. Mabbett, but not as an officer of either of said corporations, the only fact stated in the order in connection with the said Mabbett being that he “is acquainted with the facts of said indebtedness and has ■charge of said claim.” The only purpose in naming him seems to have been to procure his testimony as a witness and to obtain an injunction restraining him from parting with a certain draft hereinafter mentioned, which injunction was granted by the judge. The only persons served with the order were Mabbett and Cooman. Cooman did not appear. Neither corporation appeared or answered. Mabbett appeared and was sworn as a witness, but his attendance for that purpose could have been compelled as effectually, and more .appropriately, by the service of a subpoena. (Code, § 295.) There is no pretense that he owed the debt. As the initiatory order was not directed to the city or the board, and neither of them appeared, ■the judge did not acquire jurisdiction over either of them, and no subsequent action by either of them in respect to the debt owing to Cooman was justified by any order made in the proceeding.

Much was said on the argument as to the official character of Mabbett, but that question we regard as immaterial. As has been said, the initiatory order did not specify him as an officer of either corporation nor direct service to be made on him as such. The affidavit described him as “the superintendent of the board of education,” and he testified in the proceeding that he was superin[100]*100tendent of schools, and as such, clerk of the board of education. Whether he was or was not an officer of the city or of the board is-of no consequence, since neither corporation was directed to appear, and there is nothing in the case to show that he appeared for either corporation to protect its interests, or that he appeared in any other capacity than that of a witness.

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Related

Miller v. . Adams
52 N.Y. 409 (New York Court of Appeals, 1873)

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Bluebook (online)
44 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooman-v-board-of-education-nysupct-1885.