Hayes v. Symonds

9 Barb. 260
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 Barb. 260 (Hayes v. Symonds) 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
Hayes v. Symonds, 9 Barb. 260 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1850).

Opinion

By the Court, Gridley, J.

This ease comes before the court on an appeal from a judgment entered on a report of referees. The claim of the plaintiff is founded on an indebtedness which accrued for supplies furnished for the Jefferson county poorhouse while the predecessors of the present defendants held the office of superintendents of the poor.. The defense relied on is, that the superintendents, as a corporation, or in the character of superintendents, never contracted the debt.

I. A question is made, whether an action can be maintained against the superintendents, as a corporation, for supplies furnished for the poor-house. Prior to the revised statutes it was decided in the eases of Gourlay v. Allen, (5 Cowen, 644,) and Flower v. Allen, (Id. 654,) that overseers of the poor were not liable upon an implied assumpsit, for articles furnished or services rendered for the paupers of their respective towns; that they could not make their towns the debtors for a demand not authorized by the order of a justice of the peace. In King v. Butler, (15 John. 281,) it was held that an overseer was personally liable on an express undertaldng to pay for the keeping of a pauper, without an order. [265]*265In Todd v. Birdsall, (1 Cowen, 260,) it was held that an overseer was liable on a contract made by his predecessor, which was within the scope of his authority and which ho had, therefore, a right to make. Thus the law stood when the revised statutes were enacted, and the 4th article of title 4, (2 R. S. 473,) entitled, “ Of proceedings by and against public bodies having certain corporate powers, and by and against the officers representing them,” became a law. By the first section of this article, (the 92d of the title,) it was provided that actions might be brought by a large number of officers, among which were county superin. tendents of the poor, upon any contract made with them or then predecessors, and to enforce any duty or liability enjoined by law, <fcc. By the 96th section, actions were given against the same officers named in the 92d section, and by the 97th section it was enacted that in actions against superintendents of the poor, or overseers of the poor, to enforce any liability of the county or town, the defendants should not be held to bail. By the 102d and 103d sections, no execution was to issue on such judgment, but a transcript of the judgment was to be laid before the supervisors of the county at their next meeting, and the amount thereof assessed like other taxes, and paid by the county treasurer.

These provisions, it will be readily seen, were intended to constitute a system for the enforcement of claims in certain cases, in relation to which the decisions had been fluctuating and inconsistent. It was the intention of the legislature, as appears by the notes of the revisers, (3 R. 757,) to enact the law as laid down in the case of Todd v. Birdsall, and to provide the way in which a judgment should be collected, short of taking it from the pocket of an innocent officer.

A note of the revisers to the 97th section, refers us to the 1st and 2d titles of the 20th chapter of the first part of the revised statutes,- for the cases in which actions are given against superintendents. This act “ for the relief and support of indigent persons,” prescribes the powers and duties of the superintendents of the poor. (1 R. S. 613.) By the 16th section they are declared to be a corporate body, whose duty it shall be to provide [266]*266suitable places for keeping the poor, where houses have not been erected for that purpose by the county; to establish prudential rules for the government of the paupers; to employ suitable keepers, officers and servants ; to purchase furniture, implements, and materials that shall be necessary for the maintenance of the poor; and to sell and dispose of the proceeds of their labor. These provisions, with several others contained in subsequent sections, clearly contemplate a power to make contracts and to provide for the performance of them. To meet these expenditures it is provided by the 50th section of the act, that the superintendents shall annually make an estimate of the sum necessary for the support of the poor, and present the same to the board of supervisors, whose duty it shall be to raise this sum by assessment, and pay it to the county treasurer, to be by him kept as a separate fund, distinct from the other funds of the county.

In the 3d section of title 4, chapter 13, (1 R. S. 386,) are enumerated what shall be deemed county charges; and in the 12th subdivision is found the following: “ The sums necessarily expended in each county in support of county poor-houses and indigent persons whose' support is chargeable to the county.” And by the 4th section of the same act it is provided, that “ accounts for county charges of any description, shall be presented to the board of supervisors of the county, to be audited by them.” Now who shall account for the sums expended in support of the county poor, but the superintendents who are charged with the duty of purchasing supplies and of hiring the laborers and servants for the poor-house 1 It is very clear to my mind that by comparing the two classes of enactments together, there is no statutory objection to the capacity of the superintendents to contract a liability for supplies for the county poor-house, which may be enforced by suit.

The law stood thus till 1832, when the revised statutes were amended by adopting the following provision: “ The superintendents of the poor shall audit and settle all accounts of overseers of the poor, justices of the peace, and all other persons, for services relating to the support, relief and transportation of [267]*267county paupers; and shall from time to time, draw on the county treasurer for the amount of the accounts which they shall audit and settle.” (Laws of 1832, p. 43, § 1. 1 R. S. 628, § 62.) These accounts must be made out in items, and verified by affidavit. ( Laws of 1847, p. 729, § 2.) Now this cause was argued as though the comprehensive terms employed by the legislature would embrace claims for labor and services in the poor-house, or appertaining to the county poor. I can not think such was the intention of the makers of the law. It may all refer to the services of the overseer and justice in a case where the pauper was too ill to be immediately removed. And the terms “all other persons,” would be satisfied by construing it to mean, persons who performed any services—as transporting, for instance— in relation to the same class of paupers. If this provision is to receive a broader interpretation—one that would embrace the claims of the laborers and servants at the poor-house—then there is no reason why the same enactment did not embrace the supplies for the county poor-house. It would leave the latter to be the subject of contract under the 16th section of the act before cited, (1 R. S. 613,) and the other to be audited and paid by the superintendents, by order on the treasurer. It is true that Judge Cowen intimated in 2 Hill, 45, that such a provision would not be inconsistent with the right to sue the superintendents for the same claim which they were bound to sit in judgment upon, and to satisfy, by an order on the treasurer. But that case was more than doubted by Bronson, J. in 6 Hill, 245, and is utterly inconsistent with the decision in Vedder v. The Superintendents of the Poor of Schenectady, (5 Deuio,

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Bluebook (online)
9 Barb. 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-v-symonds-nysupct-1850.