Judson v. City of Niagara Falls

140 A.D. 62, 124 N.Y.S. 282, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2862
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 12, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 140 A.D. 62 (Judson v. City of Niagara Falls) 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
Judson v. City of Niagara Falls, 140 A.D. 62, 124 N.Y.S. 282, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2862 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinions

Robson, J.:

Plaintiff is an attorney, and his recovery in this action is for services as counsel of a committee of defendant’s common council in an investigation made by such committee.

On the trial defendant conceded that its common council duly adopted a resolution which, after reciting the occasion of and necessity for the investigation, directed the president of the common council to appoint a committee, with power to employ counsel, if necessary, to make such investigation and report thereon. It was also conceded that five members of the common council were thereafter duly appointed as such committee and that the committee pursuant to the resolution employed plaintiff to conduct the investigation, and that he acted as counsel for the committee therein. If the committee had authority to employ plaintiff, defendant does not question his right to the judgment he has obtained.

It- would seem that defendant by conceding that the resolution directing the appointment of a committee with power to employ counsel was duly adopted by its common council; that this committee was duly appointed, and that it employed plaintiff as its counsel, has precluded itself from questioning the authority of the committee to employ an attorney, which it seems to have conceded was duly conferred. But whether that is the legal effect to be given to these concessions or not, we think the committee had such authority. Every point now urged by appellant’s counsel in opposition to the claim that the committee had such authority, except [64]*64the single one, based upon the claim that the statute, by which defendant’s corporate existence is created, prohibits the employment of counsel other than the city’s corporation counsel, was presented and passed upon adversely to defendant in an action arising out of a claim for stenographer’s services rendered to this same committee in the same investigation. (O'Brien v. City of Niagara Falls, 65 Misc Rep. 92.) Except for the fact above adverted to affirmance of this judgment would be recommended on the opinion of the trial-court in that case.

The statute under which defendant is organized (Laws of 1904, chap. 300), which for convenience of reference may be called its charter, gives the common council power to make such investigation as that in question. The charter also, by implication at least, authorizes such investigation to be made by a committee of that body appointed for that purpose. (§§ 136, 141.) If the common •council had either the express or implied power to employ counsel to assist it in making such an investigation, it is not questioned that a committee duly appointed to make the investigation for the council could, if authorized by the council, employ an attorney to assist in the investigation. Unless prohibited by the charter the common council has, as an incident to its general power, the authority to employ counsel, if necessary, to assist it in the due performance of the duties or trusts with which in its corporate capacity it is charged by law. Defendant.does not question that proposition; nor does it question that the committee needed the aid of counsel in making the. investigation, but it does urge that the corporation-counsel was by section 483 of the charter made the solé legal adviser for the city’s officers, its departments, its common council, and committees, and was, therefore, the only counsel whose-services could be employed.

Section 483 reads as follows : “ The corporation counsel shall be . and act as the legal adviser of the common council and of the several officers, boards and departments of the city, and he shall appear for and protect the rights and interests of the city in all actions, suits and proceedings brought by or against it or any city officer, board or department, and such officers, boards or departments shall not employ other .counsel.”

It is further provided by section 65 : “No member or committee [65]*65of the common council, or other officer of the city' shall have power to employ any person, incur any expense or purchase any material for or on behalf of the city, or any one of its officers, boards or committees, except as provided in this act.” It will be observed that section 483 does not in terms prohibit the common council from employing other counsel than the corporation counsel; but it does provide that the corporation counsel shall act as its legal adviser. We may, therefore, in view of the provisions' of section 65, above quoted, consider the question here presented as though this section of the charter had directed that the common council shall not employ other counsel. Of course, the charter, just as every other written expression of ideas, should be 'interpreted with due regard to the purpose to be served and the object to be accomplished. It recognizes that the city and its officers and departments would be met with the frequent necessity of requiring the aid of legal advice in the management of the city’s concerns. This need it was clearly the. purpose of the charter to supply through the services of the corporation counsel. But an occasion might arise when, by reason of the fact that the corporation counsel was manifestly legally disqualified, or for some equally apparent reason it would be improper for him to appear for and act as the city’s legal adviser in a proceeding, or action, in which the city’s interests were at stake. The charter makes no specific provision for the appointment of a counsel in the place of the corporation counsel, or as his temporary substitute. Section 486 does provide that assistant counsel may, with the written consent of the mayor, be employed to assist the corporation counsel in important cases, or proceedings, in which the city is interested, or is a party; but such counsel, if employed, would not take the place of the corporation counsel, but only, as the statute provides, assist him, he, of course, remaining as the city’s legal adviser in fact. In a contingency, such as is above indicated, if the city authorities, charged with the duty of protecting the city’s interest then in vol ved, are absolutely precluded from employing counsel other than the corporation counsel, then it necessarily follows that the city must in such an event either remain wholly unrepresented by counsel, or rely upon the services of counsel, who, presumably, is in no position to properly represent and protect the city’s interests': [66]*66and the corporation counsel himself is confronted with the dilemma of either on the one hand refusing to discharge his statutory duty, or of assuming to act as the city’s legal adviser under circumstances which should in no event be required of any honest and self-respecting attorney. It seems to me clear that such a contingency was not within the contemplation of the Legislature when the. charter was enacted, and was neither foreseen nor provided for. If this be true, then the city’s right to employ a counsel in such a case rests not upon direct power so to do conferred by the charter; but upon the incidental power implied in those expressly granted, the proper exercise-of which makes necessary the exercise of the incidental and implied power; -and the city’s right to employ counsel in such case is to be determined as though the statute had not provided for employment of counsel in any case. Where no provision expressly conferring this authority appears, it is well established by an unbroken line of decisions that it will be implied whenever its exercise is essential to protect the city’s rights and interests,, or necessary in the exércise of the powers granted in express words.

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Bluebook (online)
140 A.D. 62, 124 N.Y.S. 282, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2862, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/judson-v-city-of-niagara-falls-nyappdiv-1910.