Cumines v. Board of Supervisors

63 Barb. 287, 1872 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 105
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 30, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 63 Barb. 287 (Cumines v. Board of Supervisors) 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
Cumines v. Board of Supervisors, 63 Barb. 287, 1872 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 105 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1872).

Opinion

Hardin, J.

On the 29th of March, 1869, the legislature passed an act known as “An act to authorize the towns of Wilna, Champion, Rutland, Le Roy, Pamelia, Watertown, Brownville and Hounsfield, in Jefferson county, to take stock and issue bonds therefor, in aid of the Carthage, Watertown and Sackett’s Harbor Railroad Company.” (Laws of 1869, ch. 75.)

Section 1 of this act authorizes and requires the county judge of Jefferson county, upon the application of twelve or more “ freeholders, to appoint three commissioners, [290]*290who shall hold their office for three years and until their successors are appointed; and authorizes a majority of them to subscribe, in the - corporate name of such town, to the capital stock of the said Carthage, Watertown and Sackett’s Harbor Bailroad Company, and issue bonds for the payment of such stock to. an amount not exceeding fifteen per cent of the assessed valuation of the real and personal property of said town appearing upon the assessment roll of the year 1868.” And discretion is given by the act to the commissioners as to times and places of payment of said bonds; and then follows a proviso in respect to the powers and acts of the commissioners, in these words, viz: “provided, however, that no subscription to stock shall be made, or bonds issued as aforesaid, until the consent in writing specifying the amount of such subscription and bonds to be issued, be first obtained of a majority of the tax-payers appearing on the assessment roll of such town for the year 1868, representing a majority of the taxable property therein.”

This act contains other provisions as to the manner of carrying out the purpose" of the act, to which it is not necessary to allude, at this time; except the one contained in section seven of said act, which is as follows :

“ § 7. All bonds issued by the commissioners of the towns aforesaid shall he valid and binding upon the towns represented by such commissioners, in the hands of bona fide holders or owners thereof; and in ease of any error, fraud or willful violation of duty on the part of any. commissioner, in the issue of such bonds, the town which he or they represent shall have redress upon his official bond, to the extent provided therein.”

The proofs in this case establish that quite a large portion, if not all, of the bonds of the town of Watertown,' issued by the commissioners of that town, are in the hands of hona fide _holders, and they are entitled .to protection under the provisions of the seventh section, so far as it [291]*291affords protection against some of the grounds of error alleged by the plaintiffs against the validity of the bonds, if the act in question is valid. Besides, it may be observed there is no proof given, in this case, to show that the bonds, to the whole amount of the principal sum for which the defendants were asked to raise funds to pay maturing interest, were not, at the time of the request by the commissioners upon the defendants, in the hands of bona fide holders, and therefore within the class, as well as situation, which the section expressly declares shall be valid and binding upon the town issuing the same.

By section 3 of the act, the commissioners are required “ to report to the board of supervisors of said county within three days of their regular session in each year, the amount of money required to pay principal and interest on.the bonds thus issued, * * * and the said board of supervisors shall thereupon cause to be assessed, raised and collected, upon and out of the real and personal property of such town, at the same time, and in the same manner as other taxes for town and county purposes are levied and collected, such sum as shall he thus reported to said board as necessary to pay said principal .and interest; and such amount, when collected, shall be paid and applied by the commissioners to the payment of said principal and interest of the bonds aforesaid.”

It will be observed by the provisions of the act quoted, that to some extent it differs from the provisions of the general act passed for “ bonding for railroad purposes.”

The same legislature, on the 8th day of May, 1869, passed “an act to incorporate the city of Watertown.” (Laws of 1869, ch. 714.) The country embraced within the city limits, by the provisions of said act of incorporation, consists of portions of the town of Watertown as it had theretofore existed, and portions o.f the town of Pamelia, as it had theretofore existed.

It was expressly provided in the act chartering the city [292]*292of Watertown, in section 18, that “nothing in the act shall be taken or construed to affect the right of the town of Watertown as it existed prior to the passage of this act, to bond itself\ according to the terms of the act,” already quoted. And it was further provided, in the incorporating act, “that nothing in the act” should be construed to affect an act entitled as the act of March 29, 1869, which title in words is repeated.

The act of May 8,1869, does not by express words contain any provision expressing any purpose on the part of the legislature to repeal, modify or render impossible of execution, the act of March 29, 1869; nor does it contain words justifying the inference that the prior act was repealed or impaired. The legislative intent is clear that the former act, with all its provisions, should remain in full force and vigor.

Proceedings were taken by tax-payers to avail themselves of the provisions of the act of March 29,1869, and were in a state of progress, looking to the bonding of the town, for $300,000, in aid of the railroad in question, and to authorize the commissioners who had been appointed by the county judge under the act, in behalf of the town of Water-town, and certain objections had been made in respect to the proceedings, and many questions had arisen in respect to the validity of the proceedings so instituted.

An application, was made to the legislature of 1870, and that body passed an act known as chapter 52, entitled “An act to relieve the towns of Watertown and Pamelia from embarrassment in the execution of chapter seventy-five of the laws of 1869, arising from chapter 714 of the laws of 1869, and to facilitate the construction of the Carthage, Watertown and Sackett’s Harbor Railroad Company.” (See Sess. Laws of 1870, p. 127.) ,

If there was any doubt as to the intent or meaning of this last act, or as to the extent or limitation of its provisions, it would be in accordance with the- well established [293]*293rules of construction of statutes, to look at the title thereof. The English rule was otherwise, and indeed the title to the acts of parliament have been said to be no part of the act. (Mills v. Wilkins, 6 Modern, 62.) But in this country, subject to the qualification already alluded to, the rule is otherwise. (Hadden v. The Collector, 5 Wall. 110.) But an examination of the act of 1870 leaves little or no doubt qs to the purposes thereof. Its provisions are quite elaborate and definite.

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Related

Hahn v. Salmon
20 F. 801 (U.S. Circuit Court, 1884)
Lee v. Board of Supervisors
62 How. Pr. 201 (New York Supreme Court, 1881)
In the Matter, Etc., Village of Middletown
82 N.Y. 196 (New York Court of Appeals, 1880)

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Bluebook (online)
63 Barb. 287, 1872 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cumines-v-board-of-supervisors-nysupct-1872.