In re Syracuse

20 Abb. N. Cas. 131
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1887
StatusPublished

This text of 20 Abb. N. Cas. 131 (In re Syracuse) 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
In re Syracuse, 20 Abb. N. Cas. 131 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1887).

Opinion

Vann, J.

This matter arises under a statute passed in 1879 (c. 307), entitled, “ An act to provide for the summary investigation of unlawful and corrupt expenditures by officers of towns, or incorporated villages, and for restraining the same” (1 R. S. [7 ed.] 863). This statute provides in' substance that if twenty-five freeholders of a town or incorporated village shall present to a justice of the supreme court an affidavit setting forth, among other things, that they have cause to believe that the moneys of such town or village “are being unlawfully. or corruptly expended,” it shall be the duty of such justice to make a summary investigation into the financial affairs of such town or village. Provision is made for-notice tc the officers who have control of the expenditures in question, and requiring them to obey all orders of the justice directed to them for facilitating the investigation.

Said justice, if satisfied that any of the moneys of such town or incorporated village are being unlawfully or corruptly expended, or appropriated to purposes to which they are not properly applicable, or are improvidently squandered or wasted, is required to grant an order-restraining such unlawful, corrupt or improvident expenditure. The costs incurred in such investigation, when taxed by said justice, are required to be paid by the; [133]*133supervisor or supervisors, or trustees, as the case maybe,” whose expenditures are the subject of the investigation, when the facts charged in said affidavit shall be substantially proved, and by the freeholders making the affidavit when the facts charged therein shall not be proved.

The affidavit by which this proceeding was initiated contains no specific charge against the officers of the village, but simply the general allegation oñ the part of the petitioners that they have cause to believe that the moneys of the village have been unlawfully and corruptly expended. .What the cause of this belief on the part of the petitioners was, or what moneys were thus expended, or when or for what purpose, is nowhere alleged. The general and indefinite nature of the charge has been an embarrassment throughout the investigation, and has prevented an orderly, logical and systematic examination.

Xo evidence has been given tending to show any corruption upon the part of any officer whose conduct has been inquired into. Xo proof has been furnished that any money belonging to the village has been corruptly expended, or that any officer who is a party to these proceedings sought to make money out of his official position or in any way acted dishonestly or from evil motives in transacting the business of the village. The evidence compels the conclusion that the president, treasurer and trustees, who are the only officers that can be made parties to such an investigation, used their best judgment and acted in good faith in the discharge of their official duties. Some of their methods of doing business may deserve criticism as loose, informal and unbusinesslike. They may have seriously erred in judgment and have made a foolish expenditure of public moneys. They may have misused the large discretionary powers with which they are clothed by law. But these evils are foreign to an investigation of this character, and must be corrected, unless under extraordinary circumstances, such as are not [134]*134■shown to exist in this case, otherwise than by an appeal to judicial tribunals. Unless the evils complained of result in the unlawful or corrupt expenditure of money belonging to the village, the statute gives the justice conducting the proceeding no power either to investigate or-to correct them.

As it is not now claimed that any corruption existed, the remaining inquiry must be confined to any unlawful expenditure of money on the part of the officers of the village.

The point upon which the petitioners apparently place their main reliance relates to a gutter on the south side of Manlius street, which it is claimed that the trustees caused to be dug and the earth removed therefrom, and then caused the gutter to be substantially filled up again with gravel. The petitioners further claim that $150 was thus expended with no good result, and that said sum was. largely in excess of what the work should have cost.

It appears from the evidence that Manlius street extends through the village on an east and west line, and that on the south side thereof is situated a store belonging to Mr. Wills, one of the petitioners. On the north side of Manlius street, and directly opposite said store, is Silver street, extending northerly from Manlius street and at right angles thereto. The first floor of this store is lower than the street, and is on a level with the sidewalk in front. During the Spring rains or any heavy rain storm the water has been in the habit of running down Silver street and across Manlius street into Mr. Wills’s store, to his serious inconvenience. The highest grade on Manlius street is near said store, so that the natural flow of the water is both to the east and west from this point. The trustees sought to carry off the water from Silver street, and at the same time to properly drain Manlius street, by digging a gutter 872 feet long on the south' side of Manlius street from Charles street, which is one block west of Mr. Wills’s store, to Division street, which is about [135]*135one block east of said store. The grade of the gutter as thus projected was fixed by a skillful engineer, who gave it as his opinion that the improvement as thus planned was a proper one, and this is confirmed by a preponderance of evidence. In doing the work, however, there was a failure to conform to the grade, as the gutter was dug too deep in places, which would cause the water to collect and make a mud-hole. To remedy this evil, cobble-stones were placed in the deepest parts, and covered over with gravel, but the work did not prove satisfactory to some of the citizens for whose benefit it was mainly intended, and owing to their complaints the original plan as laid out by the engineer was substantially abandoned and the water permitted to Sow both to the east and west, as it did in the first place. While the money thus expended has not been wholly lost to the village, it has resulted in comparatively little benefit.

The digging of this gutter cost more than it was worth to do the work in a proper manner, and more than it was worth to do it in the way that it was done. This, however, was owing to a lack of skill and judgment rather than to any wrong intention. The men who did the work were entitled to their pay, and they received no more than they were entitled to. There was no unlawful expenditure of money, but, in my judgment, there was an injudicious and foolish expenditure. The matter appears to have been mismanaged, and it cost something to correct the mistake: but there is nothing in this, or in any circumstance surrounding the transaction, not here detailed, that authorizes interference by the courts. Some one must have the power of deciding what public improvements are to be made, how they are to be made, when they are to be changed, and even when they are to be changed back again. That power in this case was vested in the trustees of the village, elected by the people. I cannot substitute my judgment for that of the trustees, whom the law has clothed with a large discretionary power in projecting, [136]*136executing and altering public works.

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Bluebook (online)
20 Abb. N. Cas. 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-syracuse-nysupct-1887.