Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Mayor of New York

17 Bosw. 80
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedJanuary 29, 1859
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Bosw. 80 (Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Mayor of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Mayor of New York, 17 Bosw. 80 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1859).

Opinion

By the Court—Hoffman, J.

The first and an important question is, whether the twelfth section of the charter of 185B applies to the case. The question is one of great practical moment beyond the decision of the present action. The counsel of the defendants insists that it controls. The counsel of the plaintiffs has made several points to show that it is inapplicable.

That section provides “ that all work to be done, and all supplies to be furnished for the corporation, involving an expenditure of more than $250 must be by contract founded on sealed bids, or on proposals made in compliance with public notice for the full period of ten days; and all such contracts, when given, shall be given to the lowest bidder, with security.”

In the case of Brady v. The Mayor, &c., of New York, in this court, (2 Bosw., 173, and 7 Abb., 238,) it was held, that where a contract under which work had been done was void, because entered into in violation of this provision of the charter, the contractor could not recover for the work in any form; neither under the contract, nor as upon a quantum meruit. A subsequent ratification was of no more validity than the original contract. If this were allowed, this restriction in the charter would become practically null, and the officers and agents through whom alone the corporation can act, might disregard the statute, and in practice repeal it. The difficulty lies, not merely in the want of original [89]*89power in the agents to make the contract, but in the want of power in the corporation itself to make the contract, otherwise than in the mode prescribed by the charter.

If then the present case is within the provision, nothing short of an express contract entered into after full.compliance with its directions, could be binding upon the corporation.

It may be, as the learned counsel of the plaintiffs contends, that in the ordinary acceptation of the terms, the hiring of a pier for public purposes was neither “ work done,” nor “ supplies furnished.” Yet an enlarged etymological sense of the word “supply” comprises anything yielded or afforded, to meet a want.

It is clear however, that there must be a class of cases, in which the very object of the exercise of a municipal power, would indicate the inapplicability of the provision. The establishment of a market within a particular district of the city calls for the exercise of a discretion in choosing the locality, so as to meet the convenience of the greater number and facilitate the means of cleansing, which might be wholly defeated or impaired if the corporation was compelled to advertise and take the plot of ground offered by the lowest bidder. The selection of piers for the purpose of casting away the offal of the city, falls within the same principle. It would be a misuse of power, to take for this purpose a pier daily thronged with carts and laborers, for loading or unloading the cargoes of vessels. The particular force and direction of the tide may render one spot far more eligible than another. The distance from dwelling houses would be another element of consideration.

In the case of The People v. Flagg (17 N. Y. R., 584), it was strongly urged by Judge Comstock that the construction of the phrase “ work to be done ” used in this provision, did not extend it to the making of a survey and maps by a surveyor requiring skill and professional knowledge for its performance. “This would be an unreasonable and mischievous construction of the statute.” Justice Roosevelt was of a different opinion on the facts of that case; and the Court abstained from expressing an opinion upon the point.

It appears to me that the principle contained in the opinion of Judge Comstooic applies with even greater force to the cases I have suggested, than to the one before him.

[90]*90It may perhaps be found upon a more extended investigation of the extent and meaning of the provision, that it does nob apply to cases of the acquisition of real property by purchase or hiring for the purposes of municipal government, within acknowledged powers of the corporation. It may be that the phrase is used in-the sense in which it is employed in the commercial law, and in various statutes, as relating merely to personal property, going into or forming part of something else or contributed for the use of something else, or towards its efficiency. The maritime doctrine as to supplies for ships, the State Statutes in aid of material-men are instances of this nature. (4 Wheat., 438; Kent’s Com., vol. 3, p. 169; 1 Blatch. & Howl., 177; 2 R. S., of 1830, 493; The Calisto, Daveis R., 31.)

It is in this sense that the phrase is used in various enactments connected with the government of Hew York. Thus, in section 13 of the charter as amended in 1849, there is constituted an Executive Department called The Department of “ Repairs and Supplies,” having cognizance of all repairs and supplies of and for roads and avenues, pavements, fire engines, &c.

So in section 14, the department of streets and lamps shall have cognizance of procuring the necessary supplies for, and of lighting the public streets, &o

And section 23 of the same chapter provides, that “ all contracts to be made or let by authority of the Common Council for work to he done or supplies to be furnished," and all sales of personal property shall be made by the appropriate heads of departments, under such regulations as shall be established by ordinances.

All the previous sections establishing departments contemplate expenditures distinct from any acquisition of real estate. Ho such power is any where granted to or is to be inferred as possessed by either of them.

But without pursuing this subject further, or attempting to define either what is comprehended in or what is excluded from the purview of the provision in question, it is sufficient to say, that in our opinion the hiring of a pier by the corporation for the purpose of removing offal from the city, is not within it.

We must, therefore, proceed to the other questions in the cause.

2. The right to hire a pier for the purpose of fulfilling the duty of the corporation in the removal of nuisances, is a power [91]*91inherent in the Common Council, because necessary or important for the exercise of an admitted and vested • power. The charters gave the corporation power to hold land in fee simple to them and their successors forever; but a restriction was imposed in the Montgomery Charter, that the annual income should not exceed £3,000 sterling. (See upon the subject of this restriction, Kent’s Notes, note 48; 2 Coke’s Inst., 722, and Flagg v. Lowber, 7 Abb. R., 176.)

Whatever may be the legal operation of this restriction at the present day, it was a restriction upon the right to hold lands in perpetuity, which right, upon common law principles belongs to a corporation. (2 Kent’s Com., 281.) It does not affect the present question, which relates to a power to hire lands for a particular period, in order to fulfill a duty, and in the exercise of a power necessary, for municipal purposes. That authority which is material in order to execute the purposes for which a corporation is created, is possessed by implication. (1 R. S., 1830, 600, § 3; 4 Hill, p. 39, 13 Mass. R., 199.)

The late case of The People and Flagg v. Lowber (7 Abb. R., 176), illustrates this view.

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Fister v. La Rue
15 Barb. 323 (New York Supreme Court, 1853)
People ex rel. Reynolds v. Flagg
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6 Johns. 46 (New York Supreme Court, 1810)
Featherstonhaugh v. Bradshaw
1 Wend. 134 (New York Supreme Court, 1828)
Page v. Weeks
13 Mass. 199 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1816)
Brady v. Mayor of New York
2 Bosw. 173 (The Superior Court of New York City, 1867)

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Bluebook (online)
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