In re Taxpayers & Freeholders

50 N.Y.S. 356
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 2, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 50 N.Y.S. 356 (In re Taxpayers & Freeholders) 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 Taxpayers & Freeholders, 50 N.Y.S. 356 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinions

HERRICK, J.

We are asked to review upon this appeal, not only that portion of the justice’s decision in which he enjoins the officers of the village of Plattsburgh from paying certain specific claims or parts of claims, but also to review his decision in regard to alleged illegal payments made, or liabilities incurred and now outstanding against said village, because, as it is claimed, his findings and decisions in relation thereto will be conclusive upon the defendants in the event of any proceedings being taken against them to cause them to pay into the village treasury the moneys thus found by the justice to have been illegally paid by them, or, in the event of any proceedings being taken against them, to compel payment of the bills found by him to have been illegally contracted, and now outstanding and unpaid. The record is quite voluminous, and the items and claims passed upon by the learned justice are many, but I shall content myself with reviewing only those embraced by the appellants in their statement of facts as above set forth. It will be observed that they may be classified under several heads,: First, moneys paid in excess of the amounts appropriated; second, bills contracted in one year, paid out of funds raised and appropriated for another year; third, claims paid without being audited; "fourth, liabilities and claims contracted, for which no appropriation had been made, or in excess of the amount appropriated therefor; fifth, moneys paid for streets not opened, or land therefor acquired by the village, and for the construction of sewers, without authority of law; sixth,- illegal items contained in bills of the board of health; seventh, bills paid for services, the rendition of which the village officers had no power to authorize.

To enable us to determine the questions thus raised it will be necessary to resort to the statute under which the village of Plattsburgh is incorporated, and see what powers are granted to it and its officers in the raising and expenditure of moneys. Like all charters of municipal corporations, it is provided that the major portion of the expenses of maintaining the village, government shall be raised by taxation, and by section 1, tit. 7, c. 322, Laws 1890, it is provided that the board of trustees may raise by taxes annually the following sums of money:

“(1) A sum sufficient to pay all installments of principal and interest on the bonded debt of the village of Plattsburgh, except as may be otherwise pro[360]*360vided for. (2) A sum sufficient to pay any judgment recovered against the village. (3) A sum sufficient to refund the taxes collected on erroneous assessments. (4) A sum sufficient to pay the current expenses of the fire department not exceeding one thousand dollars. (5) A sum sufficient to pay the current expenses of maintaining streets, sidewalks, and public grounds not exceeding seven thousand five hundred dollars. (6) A sum sufficient to pay for building, laying and maintaining sewers and drains not exceeding one thousand dollars. (7) A sum sufficient to pay the salaries of the officers of said village, contingent expenses and other general purposes not exceeding three thousand five hundred dollars. (8) Such further sums for special purposes as shall have been duly authorized by vote as provided in the next section.”

Standing alone, this would indicate an intention to provide for annual expenditures by annual appropriations and taxation, the appropriations of each year to take care of the expenses of that year. Also that it is a limitation upon the authorities of the village as to the amount they are permitted to expend, because it must be assumed that, when the legislature limited them as to the amount they might raise for a specific purpose, they thereby also limited them as to the amount they were at liberty to expend for that same purpose. This construction is confirmed by the provisions of section 3 of the same title, reading as follows:

“Money cannot be borrowed on the credit of the village; nor can any debt or liability be incurred by the village, except for the ordinary expenses of the village within the income of the current year applicable to that purpose. Any officer or person who shall assume to create a debt or liability, or appropriate any money or property of the village, contrary to the provisions of this act, or shall assent thereto, shall be personally liable for such debt or liability, and to the village for such money or property. Bach trustee present when such violation shall have been ordered, shall be deemed to have assented thereto, unless his dissent shall be expresed' and entered on the journal. Any willful violation of this section shall also be a misdemeanor.”

This constitutes an absolute prohibition against the expenditure for any purpose of any more than has been appropriated for that purpose, and also against incurring any debt or liability in excess of that amount. This confines the expenses of each year to the amount appropriated for that year. The appellants claim, however, that they are not limited in their expenditure to the amounts specified in subdivisions 4, 5, and 6 of section 1, above quoted, for the purposes specified in such subdivisions, respectively, but that they may increase the amounts specified in any one of those funds by transferring from another fund; citing as authority therefor that portion of section 9 of title 7 which reads as follows:

“The trustees shall have power whenever there shall be any excess of money in any one fund raised by taxes, to apply any such excess to supply any deficiency that may exist in any other fund.”

In the answer made by them to the affidavit presented to the justice, they alleged that after expending the sum of $7,500 for the maintaining of the streets and sidewalks for the year 1896 they found that there was a large amount of work necessary to be done in order to put the streets and sidewalks in a passable and safe condition; and they found that there was an excess in the general fund, and that they applied sufficient of that excess in the general fund, transferring'the same to the street fund, for the purpose of making such repairs. And a similar allegation is made as to the transfer from other funds to the

[361]*361sewer fund. Such a construction of the statute is not permissible. To allow it would defeat one of the purposes of the statute. .1 do not think that, where more money is raised for a specific purpose than that purpose requires, the excess can be added to the amount authorized by law to be raised for any other purpose. If the prohibition of section 3 is observed, then there will be no expenditure for any purpose in excess of the amount appropriated for that purpose, and there will be no occasion for a transfer of money from one fund to another. The construction of the word “deficiency” contended for by the appellants provides a way for evading the provisions of section 3, and, if upheld, we will have a statute one section of which positively prohibits the doing of certain things, and another section pointing out how such prohibition can be evaded. Deficiency is defined to be the “lack of a part.” Worcest. Diet. In this case there was no part of the fund lacking. It may have been insufficient, but it was all raised, and all in the treasurer"s hands. It will be observed that the statute provides for a deficiency in the “fund,” not in the appropriation which makes up that fund.

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Bluebook (online)
50 N.Y.S. 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-taxpayers-freeholders-nyappdiv-1898.