DeBaum v. City of New York

2 Edm. Sel. Cas. 396
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1853
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Edm. Sel. Cas. 396 (DeBaum v. City of New York) 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
DeBaum v. City of New York, 2 Edm. Sel. Cas. 396 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1853).

Opinion

Edmonds, J.:

In this case, these plaintiffs, as tax-payers in the city of Hew York, for themselves and other tax-payers, have filed a complaint asking that the common council of the city may be restrained from making a contract with the defendants, Russ and Reid, for laying a portion of the streets with the Russ pavement. A preliminary injunction is not asked for, but a permanent one, to restrain the defendants from acting under a resolution then pending in the common council, and not finally acted upon; and it is also prayed that such resolution, thus incomplete, may be adjudged by this court to be corrupt, fraudulent and void.

The grounds on which this relief is sought are briefly these:

1. That the taxes of the city have, within the past few years, greatly increased by reason of the waste, negligence and corruption, of the common council.

2. That there were two applications before the common council, whereby the work proposed could have been done much cheaper, and they were improperly rejected.

3. That the resolution in question was sought to be passed by direct bribery from Russ and Reid to the majority of the common council.

4 That the price proposed to be paid to Russ and Reid was excessive and unreasonable, and was so made for the purpose of enabling them thus to bribe the common council.

5. That the resolution is illegal, as it violates several provisions of the statute, namely, that it is not based on statements previously made by the proper executive officer; that it usurps executive power, and that it takes the power from the officer to whom it properly belongs, and confers it on one to whose department it does not belong.

6. That the resolution was finally hurried through the common council, in order to evade a bill then pending in the legislature, and subsequently passed into a law.

[398]*398Such is the case as presented on the part of the plaintiffs, on which, without hearing the defendants, they were restrained by a preliminary injunction. The defendants have, however, now been heard, and I shall inquire, first, how the case stands under their explanations and answer; and, second, how far it is competent or proper for the court to interfere in the case thus made out by the evidence on both sides.

As to the first allegation, that the taxes have greatly increased within a few years by the waste, negligence, and corruption of the common council, no answer is made. The charge extends back a period of eight years, and none of the parties to this suit seem to feel themselves called upon to defend the former members of the common council from this sweeping charge. And if that part of the complaint had not been stricken out as irrelevant to the matter in hand, I should be obliged now to hold those persons who are not now in court, and cannot be heard on the charge, as confessedly guilty of most foul corruption. It is painful enough for me to meét with charges of corruption so freely made against those who at present constitute our chief municipal authority. But it would be still more painful if I were compelled to regard the charge as distinctly made out against all who have administered our affairs for the last eight years. I am, however, saved that necessity by the amendment that has been made, though I must not overlook the fact that the charge was in the complaint, and could not then be erased, when the application was originally made and granted for the preliminary injunction.

As to the second charge, that other proposals, more advantageous to the city, were rejected, it is answered that Buss has a patent right, and, under the supreme law of the land, a monopoly for making that peculiar form of pavement, and that, under those laws, he has the same right that every other holder of a patent in the country has, to demand compensation for his invention.

As to the third charge, that this resolution was sought to be passed by direct bribery, while it is made only on “ informa[399]*399tion and belief,” a mode of statement which, under the rules and practice of the courts, is never sufficient to sustain an injunction, it is met, on the other side, by the positive and unequivocal denial of Russ and Reid, and all the members of both boards who voted for the measure. The charge, therefore, is to be regarded, according-to the well established practice of the court, as overthrown, and not to be considered in determining the question before me.

As to the fourth charge, that the price proposed to be paid Russ and Reid is excessive and unreasonable, it is met by a statement by them, under oath, and by reports of the committees of the common council, which may or may not be satisfactory to those who are clothed with the power of acting upon the subject.

The fifth charge has three propositions. First, that the resolution was not based on statements previously made by the proper officer. The act to amend the charter, passed in 1849, enacts (section 1) that no money shall be drawn from the city treasury unless previously appropriated, and all appropriations shall be based upon specific and detailed statements in writing of the several heads of departments, through the comptroller. The resolution in question appropriates $50,000, but does not appear to be based on any statement as required by this statute.

Whether this enactment is merely directory, as has been held in respect to the provision of the charter of 1830, requiring the ayes and noes to be taken, or is so essential as to render void any act disregarding it, is a question which it is not necessary here to discuss.

The second proposition is, that the resolution usurps executive power. The first section of the act of 1849 vests the legislative power of the corporation in the common council, and the ninth section vests the executive power .in the mayor and heads of departments, and prohibits the common council, or any of its committees or members, from performing any executive business whatever, except such as may be specially imposed on them by the laws of the State.

[400]*400The statute is very indefinite as to what is executive, and what legislative power. One thing seems certain, that all appropriation of money is clearly legislative, while the opening, regulating, and paving streets,” and providing supplies for them, are executive. The legislative power is nowhere defined, but there are various provisions, establishing executive departments, and defining their respective duties, whence it would seem that what is not thus defined as executive, must continue to be legislative, for the reason that when the act passed , the common council was the general receptacle of municipal power, and the departments took only what was expressly given them. To that effect is section 21, which declares that the several executive departments, and the officers and clerks thereof, shall be subject to the legislative regulation and direction of the common council, so far as the same shall not be inconsistent with that act.

Thus, it is manifest that the general regulation and direction of the several executive departments, is a part of the legislative power of the common council, wherever it is not expressly regulated by statute.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Edm. Sel. Cas. 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/debaum-v-city-of-new-york-nysupct-1853.