In Re the Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank

75 N.Y. 388, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 876
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 10, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 75 N.Y. 388 (In Re the Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank, 75 N.Y. 388, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 876 (N.Y. 1878).

Opinion

Rapallo, J.

The petition in this matter specifies two grounds upon which the petitioner claims that the assessment should be vacated. First, that no contract for the work, for the expense of which the assessment was laid, was advertised for or made in conformity with the provisions of section 91 of the charter of 1873 (Laws of 1873, page 508) and Secondly, that there is included in the assessment the cost of work not authorized by the ordinance upon which the assessment is founded. The first ground is the only one which we deem it necessary to consider.

The work and supplies necessary to complete the improvement in question in this case involved the expenditure of far more than $1,000, viz., of upwards of $107,000, and it is conceded that there was no contract and no advertisement for bids or proposals either for the work or supplies, but that the work was done by day’s work and the supplies furnished on orders of the commissioner of public works. The provisions of section 91 in our judgment imperatively require, that where an aggregate expenditure of more than $1,000 is involved in the completion in all its parts of any particular job, to be undertaken for the corporation, or in obtaining supplies to be furnished to it for any particular purpose, the same shall be by contract to be awarded to the lowest bidder after advertisement for sealed proposals, unless otherwise ordered by a vote of three-fourths of the members elected to the common council. The only cases excepted from this provision are such works, in progress at the time of the adoption of the charter, as were authorized' by law or ordinance to be done otherwise than by contract. The present case does not fall within the exception, the ordi *391 nance under which it was undertaken not having been passed until December, 1873.

It Avas held at General Term that the provisions of section 91 did not require that the work in question be done by contract, for the reason that the commissioner of public works, as succeeding to the powers of the commissioners of Central Park, had power to cause the work to be done either by day’s work or contract by virtue of the provisions of chapter 565 of the Laws of 1865, and chapter 367 of the Laws of 1866.

After a careful examination of these acts we are unable to find in them any such poiver. The Avork for Avhieh the present assessment Avas laid was paving, curbing, guttering and flagging One Hundred and Forty-fifth street from Seventh avenue to the Boulevard. The power claimed, is said by counsel to be conferred by the eighth section of the act of 1865 and the seventh section of the act of 1866. The eighth section of the act of 1865 enacts as to the streets, roads, public squares and places laid out by the commissoners of Central Park as provided in the act, that such commissioners may cause such streets, etc., to be regulated, graded and improved as streets or country roads, but there is no power contained in the act to improve any streets except those Avhieh the commissioners are by the act empowered to lay out. These are as appears from section 1 of the act streets in that part of the city to the northward of One Hundred and Fifty-fifth street, and also the road or public drive hoav called the Boulevard. There is no poAver given in the act to lay out any other street. The only poAver conferred on the commissioners in respect to any street south of One Hundred and Fifty-fifth street is to determine the grades of such streets and avenues as intersect the boulevard. No power is given to do any Avork upon such intersecting streets and avenues. The maps which by section 2 the commissioners arc directed to file are maps of the streets, etc., to be laid out by them pursuant to the act. These would iiecessarily, after the completion of the work, exhibit the streets *392 intersected by the Boulevard, at least at the point' of intersection, and might show their grade, but there is nothing in the act from which authority can be inferred to do work upon any streets or avenues except those authorized to be laid out, viz. : the Boulevard, One Hundred and Fifty-fifth street and the streets and places northerly thereof. The work in ■ question being upon One Hundred and Forty-fifth street is clearly not embraced within the act of 1865.

The act of 1866 authorizes the commissioners of Central Park to lay out St. Nicholas avenue from One Hundred and Tenth to One Hundred and Fifty-fifth street and to extend and widen Manhattan street, and also to establish or change the grade of any street or avenue which intersects any street, road or avenue which they are by law required to lay out or improve. The seventh section vests the commissioners "with all the powers of the corporation in respect to the streets and avenues required by law to be laid out or improved by them or under their direction, and the laying out, grading» regulating, sewering, paving and improving the same, and authorizes the commissioners to do the work either by day’s work or by contract, and makes provision for the expense of such work by assessment and by general taxation. But these, powers are strictly confined to the streets which the commissioners are by law authorized to lay out or improve, and we find nothing in the act of 1866, or in any other to which we have been referred, authorizing them to lay out or improve One Hundred and Forty-fifth street.

The work now in question does not appear to have been undertaken under either of the acts referred to, but on the contrary by order of the common council, by ordinance adopted in December, 1873. We are of opinion that it falls within the provisions of section 91 of the charter of 1873 and is not affected by the acts of 1865 and 1866. It is therefore not necessary to consider the points raised by the appellant’s counsel in respect to the constitutionality of those acts nor the question whether they are controlled by the later provisions in section 91 of the charter of 1873. 0

*393 The counsel for the city contend that, conceding section 91 to lie applicable to the work in question, it has been complied with, inasmuch as the ordinance ivas adopted by a vote of three-fourths of the members elected to the common council, and directs that the work 1 ‘ be done in such manner as the said commissioner may deem expedient and for the. best interests of the city and property owners.” This clause it is claimed authorized the commissioner of public works to do the work without contract.

Assuming that the power intended to be given to the commissioner, by this clause related to the manner of employing the persons to do the work, and to the purchase of the supplies necessary therefor, and not merely to the mode in which the work should be performed, we think that it was ineffectual to dispense with the provisions of the charter requiring advertisement for sealed proposals, and a contract with the lowest bidder. The law confers upon the common council the power and duty of deciding in each particular case whether those provisions shall be dispensed with, and requires a vote of three-fourths of all the members elected, to accomplish that purpose. This is eminently a discretionary power which cannot be delegated. It is their judgment which the law requires and not that of any officer they may designate.

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Bluebook (online)
75 N.Y. 388, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 876, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-emigrant-industrial-savings-bank-ny-1878.