Cox v. Mayor, Aldermen & Commonalty

9 N.E. 48, 103 N.Y. 519, 3 N.Y. St. Rep. 672, 58 Sickels 519, 1886 N.Y. LEXIS 1086
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 23, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 9 N.E. 48 (Cox v. Mayor, Aldermen & Commonalty) 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.

Bluebook
Cox v. Mayor, Aldermen & Commonalty, 9 N.E. 48, 103 N.Y. 519, 3 N.Y. St. Rep. 672, 58 Sickels 519, 1886 N.Y. LEXIS 1086 (N.Y. 1886).

Opinion

Earl, J.

The plaintiff was elected one of the police justices of the city of Hew York in the fall of 1869 for the term of six years, commencing on the first day of January following, and he served in his office until Hovember 3, 1873, when his term came to an end pursuant to the provisions of section 2 of chapter 538 of the Laws of 1873. He was paid for his salary at the rate of $10,000 per year to and including July 31, 1871; and thereafter while he was in office he demanded his salary at the same rate, but was paid only at the rate of $5,000. He commenced this action to recover the balance of liis salary, being the difference between the $5,000 paid and the $10,000 claimed. The defendants in their answer alleged that the plaintiff’s salary was lawfully but $5,000, and that he was paid the greater sum in 1870 and 1871 by mistake and without authority of law, and they set up the over-payment *522 of $7,916.66 as a counter-claim for which they demanded judgment.

The action was brought to trial before a judge without a jury, and he found that plaintiff’s salary was lawfully but $5,000, dismissed liis complaint and gave judgment to the defendants for their counter-claim. The plaintiff appealed to the General Term where the court modified the judgment by disallowing the counter-claim and affirming it as so modified. Both parties then appealed to this court.

While this case is not free from some difficulty and doubt, •we find no satisfactory reason for differing from the General Term.

The act, chapter 508 of the Laws of 1860, provided for the reorganization of the police courts in the city of Mew'York, and imposed additional duties upon the police justices ; and in section 26 provided as follows: “ And for the additional duties imposed in this act the common council or board of supervisors in said city and county may increase the compensation of any officer mentioned herein.” At the time that act was passed the salary of police justices was $3,500 ; and in December, 1862, the common council, professing to act under that statute, increased the salary to $5,000, payable monthly, from January 1, 1863. By section 11 of the act, chapter 876 of the Laws of 1869, it was enacted that the common council or any head of department of the city of New York is hereby prohibited from creating any new office or department, or increasing the salaries of those now in office, or their successors, except as provided by acts passed by the legislature.”

On the 31st day of December, 1869, the common council adopted a resolution which provided that from and after January 1, 1870, the salary of police justices should be $10,000, payable in equal monthly installments. The claim of the plaintiff is that by this resolution his salary became. lawfully fixed at the sum of $10,000. Whether or not this claim is well founded depends upon the construction to be given to section 26 of the act of 1860. Did that section empower the common council to increase the salary of police justices from time to *523 time, or only once? We are of opinion that it authorized but one increase, and that by the increase made in 1862 the power of the common council to increase the salary was exhausted.

By the act of 1860 additional duties were imposed upon the police justices, and in view of that circumstance and to adjust the salary to the new state of things, the power to increase was conferred. It was not a power which, to promote the public good or to carry out a definite public policy, was required to be continuously possessed or repeatedly exercised. The language of the statute seems to have been carefully selected, and if it had been intended to lodge a power in the common council liable from continuous importunities of office-holders to be abused, we might expect to find the intent expressed in more appropriate and unmistakable phraseology. It is a delegated power which should not be extended by construction, implication or doubtful inference. There was authority to make the salary commensurate with the public service required, and this was to be exercised, not piece-meal, but once for all. Therefore the resolution for a further increase of the salary on the 31st of December, 1869, was unauthorized and was also m violation of section 11 of the act of 1869 above quoted, and the plaintiff cannot, therefore, base his claim upon that resolution alone.

But the claim is made that the legislature approved and ratified the increase of the salary of police justices to $10,000, and that, therefore, plaintiff’s claim to the increase is well founded.

In chapter 383, Laws of 1870 (p. 888), it was enacted as follows : “ The mayor and comptroller are hereby authorized to fix the salaries of the civil justices of said city (and any or either of them) as they may deem the legal business of the respective districts to justify, not exceeding the salary now paid to the police justices of the city.” The civil justices were then receiving a salary of $5,000, and in pursuance of that act the mayor and comptroller fixed the salary at $10,000, and it was held that thereby that sum became the lawful salary. (Quinn v. Mayor, etc., 63 Barb. 595; affirmed in this court, 53 N. Y. 627.)

*524 It is contended that the legislature must be presumed to have known that the salary of police justices had been increased to $10,000 and to have intended to confer authority to make a like increase to the civil justices, and that thus it ratified the salary then allowed to the police justices. "We cannot assent to this claim. It is a rule of construction that the legislature is presumed to have knowledge of the facts directly involved in its acts. But it would be quite absurd to presume that it had knowledge of all the collateral and remote facts involved, or that it contemplated all the consequences to flow directly or indirectly from its legislation. Its knowledge falls far short of omniscience, and che rule can go but little further than to deny the right to assail legislative acts on the ground that they were passed through ignorance or mistake of fact. There can be no presumption that the legislature knew when they passed the act referred to that there had been an attempted unlawful increase m the salary of police justices, or that it knew what salary was in fact paid or payable to them. It was simply dealing with the salary of civil justices, and it empowered the officers named to fix that at any sum not exceeding that paid to the police justices, and there can be no inference that it intended in any way to act upon or affect the salary of the latter officials, and hence there is no ground for saying that it approved that salary. It was, however, held upon a course of reasoning not altogether satisfactory, that as $10,000 was the salary actually paid to the police justices at that time, the strict letter of the act authorized an increase of the salary of the civil justices to the same amount, and that conclusion was reached without determining whether or not the salary of the police justices had been lawfully increased to $10,000.

By the statute (Chap. 876 of the Law's of 1869, § 12, p. 2133), the legislature required that thereafter all estimates for the anticipated expenditures of all boards and departments of

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9 N.E. 48, 103 N.Y. 519, 3 N.Y. St. Rep. 672, 58 Sickels 519, 1886 N.Y. LEXIS 1086, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-mayor-aldermen-commonalty-ny-1886.