McSpedon v. Mayor of New York

20 How. Pr. 395, 7 Bosw. 601
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedMarch 15, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 20 How. Pr. 395 (McSpedon v. Mayor of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McSpedon v. Mayor of New York, 20 How. Pr. 395, 7 Bosw. 601 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1861).

Opinion

By the Court, White, Justice.

Upon the above facts and the pleadings in the case, two questions are presented; first, whether the defendants are bound by the express contract made by the common council with the plaintiffs for the work in controversy ? and second, if the defendants are not bound by the original and express contract, have they, by accepting and using the books, rendered themselves liable to pay the plaintiffs for them what they are reasonably worth ?

It is a settled principle, that when a legislative power from which a corporation derives its authority to act prescribes a particular mode in which the act shall be performed, the corporation cannot lawfully perform the act in any other manner. If not done in the manner prescribed, the act is a mere nullity and utterly void.

In the present case, the legislature having declared in the twelfth section of the act of 1853, that all work to be performed and all supplies to be furnished to the corporation of the city of New York, involving an expenditure of more than $250, shall be by contract, founded on sealed bids, &c., it follows, that the contract for the work done by [401]*401the plaintiffs, (if it is such work as is contemplated by the twelfth section of the act referred to,) should have been made as prescribed in that section; and that not having been made in that manner, it is null and void, and no action can be maintained upon it. (See Brady agt. The Mayor, &c., of the City of New York, 2 Bosw., 173, affirmed upon appeal to the court of appeals, 20 N. Y. Rep., 312.)

But the plaintiffs claim that the work which is the subject of this action was done, not under the employment or contract authorized by the resolution of the common council, passed on December 16, 1853, but under the old contract, made between the parties in July, 1848, which, the plaintiffs contend, was continued in full force to the time of the present transactions.

There is nothing, however, in the case to sustain this suggestion. This complaint sets up no such claim. The only contract, retainer or employment which the complaint alleges, or in any manner refers to, is the resolution of December 16, 1853, and the contract with, and retainer of, the plaintiffs by the defendants, pursuant to the said resolution.”

Again, the compensation agreed to be given to the plaintiffs for the work is not measured or controlled in any manner by the prices or terms of the old contract. In that contract the payment of forty-six cents per page for two hundred and fifty copies is provided for; while the contract price under the resolution of December, 1853, and set forth in the complaint, and for which judgment is demanded, is two dollars per copy, which is hot only a different, but appears to be a much larger rate of compensation than that stipulated in the old contract. So that even were the contract of 1848, in existence at the time of the employment of the plaintiffs, it manifestly was not considered by either of the parties as in any manner affecting the agreement for printing the “ City Charters,” which they both evidently regarded as a new and independent undertaking. But the [402]*402old contract had expired, by its own limitations, in July, 1849. And although the plaintiffs continued to print the proceedings of the common council, and to receive payment therefor, as usual, yet until August, 1854, there was nothing done that had even the semblance of an attempt to renew or revive it; and all that was done then was the passage of a resolution by the councilmen (one board only of the common council), recommending that the old contract be continued—a resolution which could have no effect whatever upon the rights or relations of the parties.

But we do not think that, after the act of 1853, the common council could, by any mere resolution, however formally passed, either make or give vitality to such a contract as that of July, 1848. Even before the passage of the act of 1853, the ordinances of the corporation required that all contracts for work and supplies, involving a certain amount of expenditure, should be made upon bids or proposals invited by public notice; and this very contract of July, 1848, was made in that manner.

We repeat, therefgre, that we can see nothing in the case to warrant the suggestion that the work in question was done under that old contract.

It was also urged by the plaintiffs, as a ground for maintaining the validity of the contract made with them pursuant to the resolution of December 16, 1853, that it was a legislative and not an executive act; that the books ordered to be printed were as necessary for the guidance and information of the members of the common council in the discharge of their legislative duties as their minutes, documents and journals, and were equally the subject of their legislative discretion, to order and contract respecting them, without any other restraint than their own sense of what was proper and necessary. The common council, it is true, is vested with all the legislative power of the corporation ; but it is a peculiarly restricted legislative authority, and is in every respect subject to the provisions of [403]*403the charter, the fundamental law of the corporation; and when that charter requires that certain legislative or executive duties shall be performed in a particular manner, or when it declares that a certain act, which is appropriate to both the executive and legislative departments, shall be done (whenever it is done) in a particular manner, without making any exception in favor of any officer or department, ministerial, legislative or executive, then these several departments of the city government must comply, in the performance of that act, with those special requirements of the fundamental law. There are, it is true, several matters pertaining to the city government which have not been assigned by law, or by ordinance of the corporation, to any of the heads of executive departments, and the administration of which, therefore, remains with the common council. (See Peterson agt. The Mayor, &c., 17 N. Y. Rep., 454.) The erection of new public buildings, when authorized by law, and the public printing, are instances of this kind. But in the administration of these branches or portions of the corporate business, everything must be done (so far as the nature or character of the particular subject will permit or render it possible,) as strictly in compliance with the provisions of the charter, both as it respects the thing to be done and the mode of doing it, as if the matter was in the control or management of the head of an executive department. ■

We conclude, therefore, that when the work of the public printing involves .the expenditure of more than $250, it should be done by contract founded on sealed bids, &c.,- in pursuance of the 12th section of the act of 1853; and that this is the law, whether the printing is required for the legislative or executive departments; and that no contract Or employment for the performance of the work referred to, made in any other manner than that prescribed by said 12th section, is lawful, or valid, or of any binding force or obligation when it involves an expenditure of more than $250.

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Bluebook (online)
20 How. Pr. 395, 7 Bosw. 601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcspedon-v-mayor-of-new-york-nysuperctnyc-1861.