May v. Bermel

20 A.D. 53, 46 N.Y.S. 622
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 20 A.D. 53 (May v. Bermel) 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
May v. Bermel, 20 A.D. 53, 46 N.Y.S. 622 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Hatch, J. :

The purpose of this action is to restrain the delivery by the defendants of $620,000 in bonds of the town of Newtown, authorized to be issued in pursuance of a vote of the trustees of the town and of a resolution of the board of supervisors of the county of Queens. It is disclosed by the record that at a regular annual town meeting of the town of Newtown, for the election of town officers' and for the transaction of other business of the town, lield on the [54]*546th day of April, 1897, there was submitted to.the electors voting thereat a proposition to bond the town and borrow money thereon, for the purpose of improving the highways in said town. Eo claim is made but that all of the statutory requirements leading up to the taking of the vote and the passage qf the resolution authorizing the issue' of the bonds by the board of supervisors were observed. The defect in the proceedings, if any, lies in the fact that the vote authorizing the issue of the bonds was not a majority of all the votes cast at said town meeting. It appears that the whole number of ballots cast at such election, for a town office was 8,753. The whole number of ballots cast upon any submitted question was 3,500. The. whole number of votes cast and counted upon the bond proposition, the subject of this controversy, ■ was 2,597, of which “ Yes ” received 1,650 and “ Eo ” received 947. The number of ballots cast and counted where there was no vote upon the bond proposition' was 903. The result, therefore, is that, of the whole number of votes cast and counted, the bond proposition failed of obtaining a majority of the electors who voted for the town officers receiving the highest number of votes. It did, however, obtain a majority of all electors who voted upon the bond proposition.

We come, therefore, to a consideration of the vital question in the case : Was it required', in order to authorize the resolution passed by the board of supervisors-, that a majority of all of the votes cast and counted for' the highest town office should have been cast for the bonding proposition, or was it sufficient that a majority only should be had of those votes cast and counted, upon the proposition to bond? The answer to be given depends upon the construction of the statute under which the vote-was taken. The statute upon the subject, prior to its amendment in 1896, is found in section 69 of the County Law (Laws of 1892, eliap. 686), and reads as follows:

“ The board may, upon the application of any town, or towns liable to taxation for constructing, building or repairing any highway or bridge therein, or upon its borders, pursuant to a vote of a majority of the electors thereof at any annual town meeting, or special town meeting called for that purpose, or upon the written request of the commissioners of highways and town board of such-town or towns, authorize such town or towns to construct, bui'ld. and repair such highway or bridge, and to borrow such sums of money for and on [55]*55the credit of the town as may be necessary for that purpose, and to lay out, widen, grade or macadamize such highway, or to purchase for public use any plankroad, turnpike, toll-road or toll-bridge in such town or towns, and may authorize the company owning the same to sell the same or any part thereof or the franchises thereof, or to pay any debt incurred in good faith by or in behalf of such town or towns for such purpose. If such highway or bridge shall be situated in two or more towns in the same county, the board shall apportion the expenses among such towns in such proportion as shall be just.”

This, section provided for two contingencies in which a town might be authorized to borrow money and issue its obligations therefor. First, upon application made to the board pursuant to a vote of the electors of the town. Second, upon the written request of the commissioners of highways and the town board of the town. This remained the law until 1896, when this section was amended. (Laws of 1896, chap. 178). While' the phraseology is changed in some slight particulars by the amendment, it remains,.so far as important" to any question presented by this case, precisely as it formerly stood, except as there is added to such section this clause: “ But in the county of Queens a vote of a majority of the electors of any such town or towns, voting at an annual town meeting, or special town meeting called for that purpose, must first be obtained before the board can authorize such town or towns to borrow any money for, or on the faith and credit of such town or towns for the purposes above mentioned.”

The only substantial change worked by this amendment is the requirement that in the county of Queens no resolution shall be passed by the board of supervisors pledging the credit of the town, except there be a vote of the electors of the town authorizing the same. The only change which could in any view otherwise affect the construction of the amendment arises out of the addition of the word voting ” at an annual town meeting, in substitution of the language “pursuant to a vote of a majority of the electors,” etc. The result would be the same upon a vote in either case. If a majority of the whole number voting is required by the words in one case, it is in the other. If at an annual town meeting a majority of all "who voted for any given office did not vote upon the special proposition, [56]*56but a majority was obtained of those who voted thereon, in a sense it could be said that such votes'didl not constitute a majority of the electors at that town meeting, and, therefore, that there was.no vote by a majority of the electors. The answer is that the statute contemplated a majority who vote upon the proposition submitted. We do not think that by , the addition of the word “ voting,” any change was contemplated, in the number of the electors who should vote,, or that any other method of determining such majority was'intended to obtain. ■ How this vote should be taken, and when, remains precisely the same in the. amended section, is preserved in substantially the same language applicable to counties generally, and no reason is suggested why these words should receive any other or different, construction when applied to the county of Queens than when applied to the other counties of the State. If there had been any intention to work a change in this respect, undoubtedly .the Legislature would have used language indicative of such intent. The change that was worked is clear, definite and precise, leaving' no room for cavil or question, and this consisted in the omission of. authority to act upon the request of the commissioners and the town board. The change in phraseology does .not indicate an intent to change the law in the absence of substantive language or circumstances indicating that a different rule was intended to be established. (Davis v. Davis, 75 N. Y. 221.) We are,' therefore, to consider the construction of this language in connection with section 69 as a whole, together with adjudications which have been had upon similar statutes, as there are none construing this particular section. The language is: “A majority of the electors of any such town or towns, voting at an annual town meeting, or special town meeting called for that purpose.” If there had been a special town meeting called for this purpose, it could not be contended but that a majority of those who voted would control, even though a majority of the electors of the town did not attend or vote, or if a majority of the electors who attended such meeting did not vote upon the question, or that more blank ballots were cast than affirmative votes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 A.D. 53, 46 N.Y.S. 622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/may-v-bermel-nyappdiv-1897.