Kingsley v. . City of Brooklyn

78 N.Y. 200, 7 Abb. N. Cas. 28, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 895
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 17, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 78 N.Y. 200 (Kingsley v. . City of Brooklyn) 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
Kingsley v. . City of Brooklyn, 78 N.Y. 200, 7 Abb. N. Cas. 28, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 895 (N.Y. 1879).

Opinion

Miller, J.

The work performed by the plaintiffs, and for the payment of which a recovery is sought in this action, was done by virtue of a contract entered into by them on the 9th day of January, 1872, with the defendant by the Permanaut Board of Water and Sewerage Commissioners of the city of Brooklyn, who were duly constituted officers of the defendant for that purpose. The authority for the construction of said work is derived by virtue of chapter 652, Session Laws of 1870, and chapter 47, Session Laws of 1871. The former act made provisions for amending chapter 97 of the Laws of 1869, re-organizing the board of water and sewerage commissioners of the city of Brooklyn. Section 5 made it the duty of the commissioners to prepare and submit to the common council a plan for furnishing an increased supply of water for said city, and for the extension of the present works and the construction of such further reservoirs, etc., as might be necessary for that purpose, together with an estimate of the probable expense thereof. It also authorized them to examine such plans and estimates to determine what would be the most expedient; to adopt a plan and to carry such determination into effect, and directed them to acquire title to such lands as might be necessary. Section 6 of the same act provided for the issuing of bonds of the city for the payment of the expenses authorized by said act. By virtue of the provisions section 6 (supra), a plan was prepared by the commissioners, submitted to the common council and received their sanction and approval. The act of 1871 (supra), *205 was then passed for the evident purpose of carrying into effect the plan which had been previously adopted by the common council. The first section of this act declares : “It shall be the duty of the Permanent Board of Water and Sewerage Commissioners of the city of Brooklyn to proceed to carry into effect the plan for the furnishing an increased supply of water for said city, and for such extension of the present water-works of said city, and the construction of such further reservoirs, conduits and other structures as may be necessary for that purpose, heretofore submitted by the said board to the common council of the city of Brooklyn and approved by a resolution of the board of aldermen of said city, on the eleventh day of July, eighteen hundred and seventy, provided the whole expense thereof shall not exceed the sum of one million four hundred thousand dollars, and which said resolution was finally adopted by the common council of said city, by a two-third vote, on the twelfth day of December, eighteen hundred and seventy. ” The same section further provided for the acquisition of lands, ponds and streams as might be necessary; the approval of the purchases made by the common council and that the board of water and sewerage commissioners should cause the necessary work to carry the plan into effect to be done and should employ proper persons to inspect the same. The effect of this provision was, I think, to limit the liability of the city to the amount named in the act, 11,400,000, and to carrying out the object and purposes of the law, and no construction, in my opinion, authorizes an increase of expenditures beyond that amount. (Matter of Second Avenue M. E. Church, 66 N. Y., 398.) The word “ provided ” employed in the section cited was intended as a limitation, and any different construction would leave the amount to be expended entirely without limit and might lead to the most wasteful and extravagant expenditure. The argument of the plaintiffs’ counsel therefore that “provided" should be read “ providing,” and that, the recital of the two resolutions should be read in parenthesis is not authorized, and would sanction an interpretation *206 adverse to the plain intention of the law. The claim that the act of 1875, chapter 258, by which the city was authorized to issue bonds to the amount of $500,000 to complete the reservoir was a ratification of everything which had in good faith been done and of expenditures made beyond the amount of $1,400,000, is not based upon any sound principle. Work had been done to the amount last named, the reservoir still remained in an incomplete and unfinished condition, and by the act in question the Legislature recognized the existence of the reservoir in its unfinished condition without means for its completion, and provided means for that purpose. By" the act last named nothing could be done without the approval of the common council. That body refused to exercisé the power thereby conferred, demanded a repeal of the act, and for completion of the dam made provision that nothing which it had authorized or which should be done should bo regarded as an approval of that act of 1875. It may also bo added that the act of 1875 provided for new plans, specifications and estimates for the work to be done and for a stipulation, under suitable penalties, that the work should be fully completed for the sum named. It is very manifest, we think, that this act was never intended as a ratification of former expenditures which had been made in violation of law and without any authority. In the reported cases in this State which hold that an act of the Legislature may condone an illegality under a prior act and ratify what has been done, the intention to do so was apparent and beyond any question. No other rule can be safely applied and there can bo no ratification of an illegal act under a contract sanctioned by legislative provision, unless it is plainly apparent that the law was designed for such an object. The obligation of municipal corporations for debts incurred'under authority of law should be enforced, and courts have gone very far in compelling public bodies to fulfill their lawful obligations. But this principle cannot be invoked unless it is manifest that the right of the party to relief and the liability of the corporation is quite clear. It would bo extending this rule beyond proper limits *207 to hold that under the facts here presented there was such a ratification of the amounts expended beyond the limit of the act as to authorize any recovery upon that ground.

Various objections are urged to the validity of the contract under which the work was performed, and it is insisted that the reservoir was to be built according to the ¡fian of the common council which is referred to in the act of 1871, and such plan having been departed from in the contract, such contract was for that reason wholly void. We deem it unnecessary to state at any length the nature and extent of the specifications which accompanied the contract and which characterized the leading features of the plan therein contained. They embrace numerous provisions and a great variety of work to be done. One of the principal features which is -noticeable throughout the contract, is the evident intention which is manifested to vary the design if found to be beneficial or requisite, and a number of the specifications which are particularly referred to in the opinion of the referees show most clearly that the work was to be under the especial direction of the engineer, and he was to superintend the same, from time to time give directions, and it was to be performed in accordance with his instructions.

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Bluebook (online)
78 N.Y. 200, 7 Abb. N. Cas. 28, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 895, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kingsley-v-city-of-brooklyn-ny-1879.