Halsted v. State

41 N.J.L. 552
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 41 N.J.L. 552 (Halsted v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Halsted v. State, 41 N.J.L. 552 (N.J. 1879).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Beasley, Chief Justice.

It appears by the record in this case that at.a meeting of the board of freeholders of the county of Hudson, on the 27th of June, 1876, a resolution was adopted fixing the tax to be raised for county purposes for the fiscal year commencing on the 1st of December, 1876, at $600,000; and that afterwards, at a meeting on the 14th of December, 1876, a resolution was passed, directing the purchase of a certain site for a court-house, at a price amounting in the aggregate to $225,000; and that, in payment of said lauds, a bond or bonds of the county of Hudson should be issued, payable out of the amount to be appropriated and limited for the expense of the next fiscal year, being the fiscal year commencing on the 1st day of December, 1877, such bonds to run one year and to bear interest at the rate of seven per cent, per annum. The indictment further shows that a conveyance for the land above mentioned was duly made, [586]*586and the bonds of the county conformably issued in payment therefor.

It is insisted by the counsel of the defendant, that admitting that such defendant was a member of the board of freeholders, it does not appear from these facts that he committed an indictable offence. ' This contention puts in question the meaning of the supplement to the crimes act, approved February 7th, 1876.

I have found it somewhat difficult to realize that-.any disinterested .person, upon a careful reading of that statute, can have any doubt with respect to the legislative purpose as expressed in its language. By the general law the board of freeholders ascertain, before a certain date, the amount of tax necessary for county purposes for such year, and the manifest purpose of this supplement was to require the freeholders to make all payments during the year out of that fund, or out of moneys in hand, and to contract no obligations that were not to be so paid. Unless the act means this it has no sensible meaning. The provision, as a practical refutation, becomes absurd, if we give to it a signification that will support this defence, because although it is intended as a circumscription of official authority, it has no force whatever in that direction, for these boards, upon such a theory, can contract what debts they please, provided they make such debts payable out of a future assessment. No uncertainty in this respect has been perceived by me. The offence is committed whenever one of these boards, or any member of any one of them, “shall disburse, order, or vote for the disbursement of public moneys in excess of the appropriation respectively, to any such board or committee, or shall incur obligations in excess of the appropriation and limit of expenditure provided by law for the purposes respectively of any such board or committee,” &c. Here, then, is a clear prohibition against incurring any obligations in excess of “ the appropriation and limit of expenditure.” In this case the board’s appropriation was $600,000, and the freeholders incurred this debt of $225,000 in addition to such appropriation, because they provided, in express terms, that it should [587]*587not come out of such fund. By the terms of the bonds issued by the board this additional sum was not to fall due during the current fiscal year; and by the express terms of the resolution the debt so evidenced was to be paid, not out of the $600,000 in their hands, but out of the levy of taxes to be made the next fiscal year. By such an arrangement the whole $600,000 were left in their hands, untouched and unaffected by this obligation; aud such fund, if left unused by them, and although it should have been passed by them to their successors in office, was not to be devoted to the payment of the debt in question. This regulation is so plain that it is difficult to comprehend how any person, not under a misleading bias, can fail to understand that all attempts, no matter by what device, to carry over by a new engagement debts falling due in the current year, or debts created during such year, to a subsequent year for payment, is in direct conflict both with its terms and spirit. The system clearly defined here is, that a certain fund is provided for all the expenses and disbursements and obligations to be incurred during the current year, and that every obligation or debt incurred during such year is to be paid out of the fund so provided, and that all debts incurred which are to be paid out of a fund to be raised in the future is in excess, or what is the same thing, is in transgression of the limit of expenditure established by law. I entirely concur in the view taken on this subject in the Supreme Court, aud am of opinion that this assignment of errors cannot avail the defendant.

Next it is urged that the defendant was not, in a legal sense, a member of the board of freeholders, and therefore he is not within the compass of this statutory provision. The argument is that the director of the board is not a member of the board, the reasons being that he has no vote, except when there is a tie, that his salary is greater, and that there are sundry expressions in the act that seem to indicate that his is a separate and independent office. I shall not attempt to criticise these details, for it would involve a discussion of minutiae which I cannot consider of much importance, and which I [588]*588think are entitled to no weight at all in the presence of the provision of this law, which, in set terms, describes the constitution of this board, and which clearly makes the director a part of it. The section referred to provides that this board of chosen freeholders “shall consist of two chosen freeholders from each assembly district, and also in addition thereto a director of said board to be elected and chosen at large for two years, from the county of Hudson. * * * The director at large * * * shall be the presiding officer of said board,” shall appoint all committees, “ but shall have no vote in said board except in case of a tie. * * * Every resolution of the board * * * shall, before it takes effect, be approved in ■writing by said director.” In a legal sense I regard all persons, no matter what their denominations may be, who are necessary constituents of the board, members of it, and the statute in express terms declares that the board shall consist of a director and of the other chosen freeholders.

And in this connection I will dispose of the kindred objection that this defendant did not either “ order or vote for” the contracting of this obligation, with the remark that by signing the resolution £o incur it, and the bonds by which it was carried into execution, I think, within the meaning of the act, he did officially participate in the incurring of this obligation.

On these points I have found no difficulty. ■ ■

The next objection relates to the overruling at the trial of certain exculpatory facts.

When the state had closed, the defence offered to show that the defendant, in aiding in the passage and effectuation of the resolution which I have pronounced to be illegal, did so under the advice of counsel, and in good faith, and from pure and honest motives, and that he therein exercised due care and caution. The arguments upon this interesting topic, contained in the briefs of the respective counsel, marked, as such briefs are, by acute reasoning and copious learning, have been of much assistance in the examination of the subject.

On the part of the defence, it is strongly ui’ged that the -defendant was not a volunteer in this affair; that'he was [589]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 N.J.L. 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/halsted-v-state-nj-1879.