In re JENSEN

60 N.Y.S. 933
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 21, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 60 N.Y.S. 933 (In re JENSEN) 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
In re JENSEN, 60 N.Y.S. 933 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

WILLARD BARTLETT, J.

This appeal involves the construction and constitutionality of chapter 700 of the Laws of 1899, which became a law on the 25th day of May in that year, with the approval of the governor, having been passed by the legislature when three-fifths of the members of each house were present. It is entitled “An act to provide for the defrayal of expenses of legal proceedings paid or incurred by certain officers and officials of this state and of the cities and counties thereof.” The statute relates to two classes of claimants: (1) City and county officers; and (2) state officers. The purpose of the enactment was to enable any such officer to obtain, either from the city or county treasury, or from the state treasury, as the case may be, a sum equal to such reasonable counsel fees and expenses as he has paid or incurred in any trial or proceeding to remove him from office, or any prosecution for a crime alleged to have been committed in the performance of his official duties, or in con[934]*934nection therewith, in which trial or proceeding the prosecuted officer has been successful. The act prescribes different methods of procedure in the case of city or county officers, on the one hand, and state officers, on ,the other. The first section permits a city or county officer, coming within the class of successful defendants aforesaid, to apply within three months to a justice of the supreme court “for the appointment of a referee to hear, examine into and report concerning the claim of the officer, or official, against the city or county in which the trial or proceeding against such officer, or official, was commenced, arising out of reasonable counsel fees and expenses paid or incurred by such officer or official.” The same section further provides that the justice of the supreme court shall appoint a referee, who shall hear and examine into the claim, and report his determination to the justice. “If the court shall confirm the report of the referee, the claim shall be audited by the said referee upon receipt of a certified copy of the order of confirmation.” The third section of the statute prescribes the time within which claims must be filed, and the form in which they are to be presented. The fourth section directs the annual imposition of a tax in the several cities or counties of the state to raise an amount sufficient to pay revenue bonds issued by the officer of the city or county empowered to issue the same in anticipation of the collection of taxes for the purpose of paying the respective claims allowed and audited by referees under the act. This provision completes the scheme in regard to the claims of city or county officers. The second section relates solely to like claims in behalf of state officers or officials, and empowers the state comptroller to inquire, examine into, audit, and determine the same. Neither in that section nor anywhere else in the statute is any provision made for the payment of the claims of state officers after the prescribed audit by the comptroller. It will be observed that the act requires no notice to be given of the presentation or prosecution of the claim to any officer of the city or county against which it is made.

A. Lawrence Jensen, the petitioner in this proceeding, was the chief clerk of accounts in the office of the comptroller of the city of Brooklyn when that city became part of the Greater New York, and he continued to hold the same official position in the department of finance of the new city after consolidation. In March, 1898, he was indicted in Kings county for the crime of having accepted a bribe or gratuity for the performance of an official act while acting as chief clerk of accounts in the office of the comptroller of the city of Brooklyn. In July, 1898, the comptroller of the city of New York removed the petitioner from his position or employment in the department of. finance. On May 10, 1899, the petitioner was brought to trial upon the indictment for official misconduct already mentioned, and on May 15,1899, the jury rendered a verdict of acquittal. He has instituted this proceeding, under chapter 700 of the Laws of 1899, to recover from the city of New York the sum of $2,461.70; being the amount of counsel fees and. expenses which he alleges that he has paid or incurred by reason of such unsuccessful criminal prosecution. Although not required to do so by the terms of the statute, he gave [935]*935notice to the corporation counsel of his application to a justice of the supreme court in Kings county for the appointment of a referee. The application was denied, in an order which, though in form an order of the supreme court, has been treated upon this appeal as a justice’s order, under the statute; and from that order the petitioner now appeals.

It is to be borne in mind that we have here to deal with a prosecution that had wholly terminated before chapter 700 of the Laws of 1899 took effect. The petitioner was acquitted on May 15, 1899. The act did not become a law until May 25, 1899, 10 days later. As applied to a case of this kind, in which the claim of the officer sought to be recognized arose wholly before the legislation designed to give it validity, I think the enactment goes beyond the constitutional power of the legislature, in two respects. Independently of any limitation in the constitution on the subject, the taxing power of the legislature is not absolutely unrestricted. The general doctrine prevails in the decisions of the state courts and the supreme court of the United States that the power of taxation can be exercised only for purposes which in some way promote the public interest. “It is the first requisite of lawful taxation,” says Chief Justice Cooley, “that the purpose for which it is laid shall be a public purpose." Cooley, Tax’n (2d Ed.) 55. In Association v. Topeka, 20 Wall. 655, Mr. Justice Miller, speaking for the supreme court of the United States, said:

“We have established, we think, beyond cavil, that there can be no lawful tax which is not laid for a public purpose.”

The supreme judicial court of Massachusetts, in denying the power of the legislature to authorize a town to raise money by taxation for the purpose of refunding sums paid by individuals for substitute soldiers in the Civil War, said:

“A statute conferring such power would be obnoxious to the objection that it authorized the raising of money by taxation for the exclusive benefit of particular individuals; that it relieved one citizen from the performance of a legal duty at the public expense, and appropriated money for a private purpose which could only be raised and used for public objects, it is hardly necessary to say that a statute designed to accomplish such purposes would he against common right, and would transcend the authority conferred on the legislature by .the constitution.” Freeland v. Hastings, 10 Allen, 570, 589.

The principle of constitutional law under consideration has nowhere been more clearly enunciated than by our own court of appeals in the recent case of Bush v. Board, 159 N. Y. 212, 53 N. E. 1121, in which it is 'declared as essential to valid taxation "that the money to be raised must be required for some purpose that in some sense, at least, can be said to be public,” and in which the court condemned as unconstitutional an act passed by the legislature in 1892 which assumed to authorize the levy of a tax to pay $300 apiece to drafted men who served personally or sent substitutes to serve in the Union army in the war with the Confederate States.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 N.Y.S. 933, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jensen-nyappdiv-1899.