County of Ontario v. Shepard

100 A.D. 200, 91 N.Y.S. 611

This text of 100 A.D. 200 (County of Ontario v. Shepard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
County of Ontario v. Shepard, 100 A.D. 200, 91 N.Y.S. 611 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Stover, J.:

This is a case submitted on an agreed statement of facts. The plaintiff is a domestic municipal corporation, and the defendants are copartners doing a banking and brokerage business in New York city.

The board of supervisors of Ontario county duly passed resolutions for the improvement of roads within the. county. Plans, maps and specifications as required by chapter 115 of the Laws of 1898 were prepared and duly filed by the State Engineer, and the said board of supervisors duly adopted resolutions for the construction of highways under the provisions of chapter 115 of. the Laws ■of 1898. Thereafter proceedings were had under that act; the board of supervisors resolved to issue bonds to the amount of $120,000, and duly advertised for bids for the same, and the defendants thereupon bid for $120,000 of the bonds, agreeing to pay therefor the sum of $122,880 and accrued interest to the date of delivery, the bonds to be delivered at the county treasurer’s office in Canandaigua on the 22d of August, 1904. In accordance with such bid the bonds were awarded to the defendants.

The defendants have failed to accept or pay for said bonds, alleging that the county of Ontario had no power to issue said bonds for highway improvement; that the county had no right or power to include in the issue the amount to be ultimately paid by the towns, and that the form of the bond was insufficient in that the maturity thereof is not specified in the condition of the bond; and further objecting that the county treasurer had failed to file his bond prior to the advertisement and the acceptance of defendants’ bid for said bonds.

It is contended on the part of the defendants that the county is without poiyer to issue bonds to pay for the. highway improvement authorized by chapter 115 of the Laws of 1898, the precise contention being that the power to borrow money and issue bonds is not to be implied in favor of a municipal corporation, and that [203]*203■such power must be given by statute expressly or by necessary implication.

No question is made as to the regularity of the proceedings for the improvement of the highways so 'far as the preliminary resolutions and certificates are concerned.

The statute provides:

“ § 9. One-half of the expense of the construction thereof shall he paid by the State Treasurer upon the warrant of the Comptroller, issued upon the requisition of such engineer, out of any specific •appropriations made to carry out the provisions of this act. And one-half of the expense thereof shall be a county charge in the first instance, and the same shall be paid by the county treasurer of the county in which such highway or section thereof is, upon the requisition of such engineer, but the amount so paid shall be apportioned by the board of supervisors, so that if the same has been built upon a resolution of said board without petition, thirty-five per centum ■of the cost of construction shall be a general county charge, and fifteen per centum shall be a charge upon the town in which the improved highway or section thereof is located, and if the same has been built upon a resolution of said board after petition as provided in section two, thirty-five per centum shall be a general county charge and fifteen per centum shall be assessed upon and paid by the owners of the lands benefited in the proportion of the benefits accruing to said owners as determined by the town assessors in the next section hereof.”

It will be seen that this section makes one-half of the cost of building the highway a county charge in the first instance and of course payable in the first instance by the county; but.under the other provisions of the statute fifteen per cent is to be charged against the town and collected in. the usual manner, but the statute nowhere directs the special manner in which this obligation shall be met by the county.

It is said in Village of Carthage v. Frederick (122 N. Y. 268) as follows: “ A municipal corporation possesses not only the powers specifically conferred upon it by its charter, but also such as are necessarily incident to, or may fairly be implied from, those powers, including all that are essential to the declared object of its existence.”

[204]*204While this is said in a ease not involving the identical question here, yet it is no more true in the situation appearing in the case . cited than in the one under consideration.

There can be no question that it was the duty of the supervisors to provide means for the payment of the extraordinary expenditure for the improvement of roads. The Legislature gave the power to incur the liability, and unless it provided some means for its payment it is left' to the board of supervisors to employ spell means- and measures as are generally incident to the discharge of such liabilities. Were there no further authority than chapter 115 of the-Laws of 1898 it would be the duty of the board of supervisors to-provide means for the purpose of paying the obligation as it matured. Nor do we think that it contemplated that the entire sum was to be-raised by immediate taxation. This construction would involve the ignoring of experience and the rejection of ordinary business methods in financial transactions. Unless we are necessarily brought to such a determination, we ought not to place such a construction upon the statute as would involve a hardship to the community and needless accumulation of funds, or,' in short, prevent the board of supervisors from acting as an ordinarily prudent man would act in the handling of financial transactions of this nature. • The' ordinary method would be the.negotiation of a loan to be paid at such time or times as might be convenient, and at the same, time not compel the carrying of a large amount of idle money, or place it át the risk of depositories.

■We think a fair construction of the statute is. that the liability was to be handled by the board of supervisors within their sound business judgment; and they necessarily would be compelled to proceed in accordance with ordinary business management' and adopt the -usual methods for raising money and discharging a liability,; and if they failed to proceed in this way any aggrieved taxpayer might interfere.

It is provided.in subdivision 6 of section 12 of the .County Law (Laws of 1892, chap, 686), under the general powers given to boards., of supervisors, that, they "shall: “ Borrow money when they deem it necessary, for the erection of county buildings, and for the purchase of sites therefor, on the credit--of the county, and for the funding of any debt of the county not represented- by bonds, and [205]*205issue county obligations therefor, and for other lawful county uses and purposes; and authorize a town in their county to borrow money for town uses and purposes on its credit, and issue its obligations therefor, when, and in the manner, authorized by law.”

So reading the two statutes together, we have a highway law known as the Good Roads Law ” which authorizes the creation of a debt of the county; and under the County Law it was the duty of the supervisors to borrow money for the funding of any debt of the county, not represented by bonds, and to issue obligations therefor. And if this is not sufficient they are authorized to borrow money for other lawful county uses and purposes. Surely the payment of a debt which the Legislature has authorized is -a lawful purpose for the issuing of bonds.

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Related

Village of Carthage v. . Frederick
25 N.E. 480 (New York Court of Appeals, 1890)

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Bluebook (online)
100 A.D. 200, 91 N.Y.S. 611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-ontario-v-shepard-nyappdiv-1905.