Hathaway v. County of Delaware

103 A.D. 179, 93 N.Y.S. 436
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 103 A.D. 179 (Hathaway v. County of Delaware) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hathaway v. County of Delaware, 103 A.D. 179, 93 N.Y.S. 436 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinions

Parker, P. J.:

The plaintiffs seek to recover against Delaware county the $10,000 advanced by them to the Albany County Bank, and which was subsequently applied by that bank upon a note held by it against such county, upon the theory that such application amounted to a payment of a debt due from the county, and, therefore, was money paid by them to the use of the county. ■

Upon this claim the trial judge has found that if it be assumed that the note upon which the plaintiffs’ money was so applied was a valid and existing obligation against the county, yet the plaintiffs did not make themselves creditors of the county by voluntarily discharging that debt or any portion thereof.

It is conceded that the note delivered by Woodruff to the plaintiffs was a forgery and that all his statements concerning it and the alleged loan to the county were false, and that the county has never, either expressly or impliedly, promised the plaintiffs to pay them such sum or any part thereof. Neither is there any claim [183]*183on the part of the plaintiffs that Delaware county ever directly requested them to advance this money to the Albany County Bank to be applied upon this alleged note against the county, nor has there been any action whatever on the part of that county from which a request to make such advancement can be implied for the clear reason that Delaware county lias never taken any action whatever in the matter. It was utterly ignorant of the transaction until after the plaintiffs had advanced the money and asked from the county that it be returned. It is tojoe noticed that this is not an action to recover money had and received by the defendant, but one to recover money paid to another for its use. A request to make such alleged payment, either express or implied, is, therefore, indispensable before a right of action is established. It is a familiar principle that a voluntary payment of the liabilities of another without his request will not give an action in favor of him who makes the payment. (Taylor v. Baldwin, 10 Barb. 626; Ingraham v. Gilbert, 20 id. 151; Gould v. Village of Phœnix, 3 T. & C. 797; Thomson v. Thomson, 76 App. Div. 178; Flynn v. Hurd, 118 N. Y. 19; National Bank of Bullston Spa v. Board of Supervisors, 106 id. 494; City of Albany v. McNamara, 117 id. 169.)

The plaintiffs, however, claim that a request will be implied whenever the equities in the case warrant it, and that in this case the equities are so strong in favor of the plaintiffs, and it is so clear that they should not be deemed as having volunteered to pay the debt in question, that a request should be implied upon the part of the county.

From an examination of the evidence in this case it so clearly appears to me that none of the plaintiffs’ $10,000 has in fact been applied to pay a liability due from the county of Delaware that I prefer to sustain this decision of the trial court upon that ground, rather than to examine the claim and argument of the plaintiffs above stated.

At the time when the plaintiffs’ draft for $10,000 was sent to the Albany County Bank, or just prior thereto, that bank held four several notes purporting to be the obligations of Delaware county, executed to it for money borrowed thereon. One was for $15,896.83, given to renew two notes which were about $7,000 each and issued in April and May, 1898; the three other notes, aggregating $18,691.65, were discounted in February, April and May, 1899. All of such notes were issued for the avowed purpose of procuring [184]*184funds with which to pay the State taxes, and the proceeds thereof were paid directly by the bank, at the time each was issued, to the Comptroller of the State for such purpose. Each of such three notes was subsequently on its maturity, viz., October 2, 1899, renewed to the bank, and it was upon these notes that the plaintiffs’ $10,000 in question was subsequently applied. Each of such three notes, when it was originally discounted by the bank, purported to be the obligation of Delaware county, was signed by its treasurer, Woodruff, and on its face recited that it was issued pursuant to the provisions of section 91 .of chapter 908 of the Laws of the State of New York of the year 1896, as amended by chapter 361 of the Laws of 1898, and for the purpose of procuring sufficient money to pay the Comptroller of the State the State tax due from said county of Delaware, and that it was also issued by virtue and in pursuance of a certain resolution adopted by the board of supervisors of said county at a regular meeting of said board, held on the 19tli day of November, 1898. As a matter of fact, however, all the towns in Delaware county had, at the time such notes were discounted, levied and collected and paid over to the said Woodruff, as treasurer, the full amount of the taxes assessed against said county and necessary to be paid to the State for the year 1899, and if it were necessary for said treasurer to borrow money to meet the call of the State Comptroller for such taxes by the first of June for that year, it was because he had either converted the amount so paid him to his own use, or else had diverted the same to some other .unauthorized purpose. Very clearly the said county of Delaware had at that time performed all the duty that it then owed to the State regarding such taxes, viz.: It had levied and collected the same and paid them over to its treasurer, and any default in the payment of the same, as required by the statute, would have been the default of. such treasurer in the performance of his official duties. Under such circumstances, it is clear that the county treasurer was utterly unauthorized to borrow any money upon the credit of the county for the purpose of paying such taxes, and the notes which he assumed to then issue for that purpose were each of them void on its face. An inspection of such section 91 would have informed the said bank that the treasurer could issue a note to borrow funds for such purpose only to the extent of the deficiency appearing in the county [185]*185treasury against the several towns of the county, and an inspection of the records of such treasury would, have informed it that no such deficiency whatever existed. Also an examination of the resolution which is referred to in said notes, with the record annexed, shows that no authority was given, or intended, by the board of supervisors to the treasurer, to borrow money for the purpose of paying such State taxes. '

Nor, indeed, could any officer of the county, or resolution of such board, confer any authority to borrow on the credit of the county for such purpose. As stated above, the county had performed its full duty when sufficient money had been paid over to its treasurer by its several towns to pay the tax in question. From that time the claim of the State was against the treasurer and his sureties, and no obligation from the county to the State arose or existed, save for the deficiency that might arise after judgment and execution in favor of the State had been exhausted against them. This is clear from the provisions of sections 91,92 and 93 of the Tax Law, above cited.

Thus it is apparent that the money borrowed by Woodruff from the Albany County Bank, upon the notes above mentioned, was not used for the benefit of the county at all. The State then had no claim against the county for it, nor any part of it.

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Related

Hathaway v. . County of Delaware
78 N.E. 153 (New York Court of Appeals, 1906)

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Bluebook (online)
103 A.D. 179, 93 N.Y.S. 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hathaway-v-county-of-delaware-nyappdiv-1905.