King v. Village of Randolph
This text of 50 N.Y.S. 902 (King v. Village of Randolph) 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.
Opinion
It is provided by section 3245 of the Code of Civil Procedure that “costs cannot be awarded to the plaintiff in an action against a municipal corporation, in which the complaint demands judgment for a sum of money only, unless the claim upon which the action is founded was, before the commencement of the action, presented for payment to the chief fiscal officer of the corporation.” In the disposal of this appeal, therefore, the sole question to be decided is whether the plaintiff fulfilled this requirement of the statute by presenting an unverified account to the treasurer of the board of water commissioners of the defendant. If this requirement has not been -fulfilled on behalf of the plaintiff, he is not entitled to costs, for “costs are a creation by statute, and can be awarded only in cases that are clearly within the statutory provisions.” Patterson v. Burnett, 17 Civ. Proc. R. 115-118, 4 N. Y. Supp. 921. The referee before whom the case was tried, awarded no costs to the plaintiff. Plaintiff is not entitled to costs under the general provisions of the statute relative to awarding costs to a successful party, as those general provisions are modified by the subsequent provision of the statute above quoted.
The claim of the plaintiff, however, is that the actual defendant in this action is not the corporation of the village of Randolph, but the board of water commissioners of the village of Randolph; and that, therefore, section 3245 of the Code of Civil Procedure has no application to this case, as the defendant is not a municipal corporation. I quote from respondent’s brief:
“The board of water commissioners is a quasi corporation (Grant v. Fancher, 5 Cow. 309), a corporation sub modo (Rouse v. Moore, 18 Johns. 407), and permitting it to use, for the purpose of this action, the name of the village, did not make the action one against the village corporation; it was still an action against the board of water commissioners of the village of Randolph.”
The cases cited by the learned counsel were decided previously to the original act authorizing the formation of the board of water commissioners. Chapter 181, Laws 1875. There is no provision in [904]*904that act which permitted action against the board, or against the members of the board in their name of office. But section 18 of the act provided that “all judgments against said commissioners in their name of office, and all judgments against them, where the transaction upon which the action was brought shall have been in the performance of their duties as commissioners, shall not be enforced against the individual property of either of said commissioners.” This act received consideration and construction in Flemming v. Village of Suspension Bridge, 92 N. Y. 372, where the court used this language:
“It will thus be seen from this analysis of the act- that the board of water commissioners is not a corporation. There is no provision in the act authorizing the commissioners to sue or to be sued as a board. The board is at all times composed of the trustees of the village, and the water commissioners are manifestly the agents of the village. The waterworks are a local improvement, exclusively for the benefit of citizens of the village. They are to be constructed upon the credit of the village, are to belong to it when constructed, and the title to all the land taken is vested in it. The rents received for the use of the water belong to it, and the entire expense of constructing the waterworks is a charge upon it. It was, therefore, immaterial whether, in making this contract, the water commissioners made the same in the name of the village, as they did, or in their own official names as water commissioners, or as a board of water commissioners. -The village became bound by their act, and for this conclusion the cases of Appleton v. Commissioners, 2 Hill, 432; Bailey v. Mayor, etc., of City of New York, 3 Hill, 531; Id., 2 Denio, 433; and Sage v. City of Brooklyn, 89 N. Y. 189,—are ample authority. Any other construction of the act might practically leave a contractor performing the work without remedy. It is expressly provided that he shall have no remedy to be enforced against the individual property of either of the commissioners; and, if he has no remedy against the village, it would be quite difficult to see how payment for work done under the act could be enforced. It is clearly to be inferred from the fact that the commissioners are exempted from individual liability that it was the intention of the legislature to impose the liability upon their principal, the village.”
After the decision in this case, section 18 of the act of 1875 was amended by providing that:
.“The board of water commissioners of any village may sue, complain or defend, in any court, in the name of the said village, in any action to enforce any contract with said board, or to enforce any claim for damages, water rents, labor, or supplies, connected with the building, or carrying on, of the waterworks by said board. The complaint or answer of said village, in such actions, shall be verified by the oath of some member of the board. The complaint in an action against such village, in such actions, shall be served upon the water commissioners, whose duty it shall be to defend in the name of the village.” Laws 1890, c. 527.
This amendment was declaratory of the law as established by the decision in 92 N. Y. 372, supra, so that, under the original act and under the amendment, the liability, in such an action as the one at bar, rested upon the municipal corporation, and not upon the board of water commissioners, nor the individual members thereof. Duties are imposed by the statute upon the water commissioners in respect to such action. The action itself is against the village, and any judgment obtained therein can be enforced against it. The board of water commissioners is intrusted with certain duties, and given permission to make certain payments. But when it is claimed that moneys due under contract with the [905]*905water commissioners are unpaid, and owing to a contractor, and it becomes necessary for such contractor to enforce, by legal proceedings, the payment of such claim, the action must be brought against the municipal corporation. Before commencing such an action against such a defendant, he must conform to the provisions of the statute, and fulfill the conditions precedent established thereby, if he seeks to recover his costs in the action. This the plaintiff has not done. His claim was against the village, and it is provided that “the trustees shall have the auditing of all accounts and claims against the village.” Chapter 291, Laws 1870, as amended by chapter 440, Laws 1889. “Ho account or claim shall be allowed by the trustees, unless it shall be made out in items and accompanied by the affidavit of the person claiming to have rendered services """ that the items of such account or claim are correct, and that no part of such claim has been paid.” Chapter 291, Laws 1870, amended by chapter 357, Laws 1872. The trustees of the village, charged with the duty of auditing accounts after the same had been properly presented, were not, preceding the commencement of this action, given any notice whatever that the plaintiff had a- claim against the defendant. Heither was any notice thereof served upon or given to the treasurer of the defendant. The plaintiff is chargeable with knowledge of all these provisions of law governing the defendant and its board of water commissioners, with whom he contracted. Donovan v. Mayor, etc., of City of Hew York, 33 N. Y. 293.
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50 N.Y.S. 902, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-village-of-randolph-nyappdiv-1898.