Parmenter v. . State

31 N.E. 1035, 135 N.Y. 154, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 129, 90 Sickels 154, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1604
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 4, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 31 N.E. 1035 (Parmenter v. . State) 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
Parmenter v. . State, 31 N.E. 1035, 135 N.Y. 154, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 129, 90 Sickels 154, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1604 (N.Y. 1892).

Opinion

Peokham, J.

The respondent entered into a contract with the secretary of state and comptroller to do certain printing of a public nature for the sum of $47,500 for each of two *159 legislative sessions. During the first session he did certain printing which he claimed did not come within the description of that for which he was to receive an annual compensation in gross, hut that it was provided to he paid for at special rates by another provision of the contract. The claim he made for payment upon such a basis was disputed by the officers of the state. For the purpose of compelling payment of his claim the respondent commenced proceedings by mandamus against the late Comptroller Olcott, and the result thereof was the procurement and entry of a judgment against the comptroller, directing him to draw his warrant for the payment of the Avork as claimed by the respondent. The judgment was subsequently paid and satisfied of record.

The work for which the respondent claims compensation herein is of the same nature as that for which he was aivarded the mandamus, and Avas performed subsequent to- the time Avhen the proceeding to procure the Avrit was inaugurated. It was necessary in the mandamus proceeding, before the writ could be awarded, to give such a construction to the contract in question as would exclude the claim of the respondent from that class of work which he was bound to perform for the gross sum mentioned. That construction was therein given and a judgment in favor of the respondent followed thereon. He now claims that this judgment is res adjudicada, and estops the state from contending for any other construction of the contract than the one already given in the mandamus proceeding. The comptroller was proceeded against in that matter as an officer who was neglecting to perform an official duty, and if it were true that he Avas guilty of that neglect, he was not in any sense representing the1 state therein. The proceeding was in the name of the people upon the relation of the respondent against a public officer, while this proceeding is permitted by legislative authority, and is one by the respondent as an individual and against the state in its corporate capacity.

To hold the state estopped by the conclusive character of a judgment against one of its officers hi a case like this, would *160 be to create an estoppel against the state by a suit or proceeding to which it was not a party, and where it had not granted leave to any one to sue or implead it except by a procedure not taken in the mandamus matter. We are not impressed with the validity of the claim of the respondent upon this question, but in the view we take of the contract that question becomes unimportant, and we do not, therefore, decide it.

We are of the opinion that the contract has been properly-construed by the Board of Claims in this proceeding. It may be that the language used in the first part of the contract is of such wide scope as to include all kinds of printing for which the state has ever been in the habit of paying. This language is capable of such a construction as to place it in the power of the legislature to bankrupt the person who had made the contract, if all the printing which might be called for under it were to be included in the gross sum mentioned.

After the agreement to do the printing of each legislative ' session for a sum in gross, and after the details regarding it were provided for generally in the contract, this further proviso was added: It is further understood and agreed that in the event of an extra session of the legislature the said work shall be done and materials furnished for the prices stated in detail in the alternative bid annexed; and the sarnie prices shall also be paid for any worh and materials ordered, not for the use of the legislature.” It is claimed on the part of the respondent that the words above italicized apply, as is plainly stated, to “ any work and materials ordered, not for the use of the legislature,” while the counsel for the state contends that those words are to be limited as applying to work and materials ordered at the extra session, and not for the use of the legislature.

Extra sessions of the legislature are comparatively of rare occurrence. Still, when they are convened, it is, of course, necessary that printing should be done for them. The parties evidently did not contemplate that the printing at an extra session should be included in the gross sum of $47,500, and hence it was provided that such printing should be done for *161 the prices stated in detail in the alternative bid annexed to the contract. Then follows the provision by which any work and materials ordered, not for the use of the legislatmre, are to be paid for at the prices stated in the alternative bid. The words actually used are broad enough to cover printing ordered, not for the use of the legislature, at a regular as well as at an extra session. It seems to us that the broader construction is not only called for by the language actually employed, but that the circumstances themselves point to such construction as the natural and proper one.

By the use of this language some limitation is put upon the power of the legislature to order printing under the contract and to be paid for by payment of the gross sum mentioned. To restrict the language to printing at' an extra session is to do away with almost all its usefulness, because, as has been stated. and as is well known to all, extra sessions are of quite rare occurrence, and the power to order printing not for the use of the legislature could be exercised at each regular session, to the possible financial destruction of the public printer, unless there were some such safeguard interposed as is to be found in this limitation if it apply to regular as well as extra sessions. It is said that in the original contract there is a comma instead of a semicolon after the word “annexed” in the above quotation from the contract relating to the extra session and the prices to be paid for printing, so that the language and punctuation would be that the “ work shall be done and materials furnished for the prices stated in detail in the alternative bid mvnexed, and the same prices shall also be paid for any work and materials ordered, not for the use of the legislature.” We think the presence or absence of the semicolon or the comma is not of the slightest consequence upon this question of construction. The language used and the surrounding circumstances both, as we have said, concur in making it entirely plain that the gross sum applies to printing for the use of the legislature, and that prices mentioned in the alternative bid apply to all work ordered at regular or extra sessions which was not for the use of the legislature.

*162 It is true that under the terms of the contract as it stands the contractor would be bound to do “ extra printing ” which might be ordered for the use of the legislature by an act, joint rule or concurrent resolution, which extra printing would be included in the gross sum provided to be paid the contractor. This power might be so used as to perhaps financially ruin the Contractor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 N.E. 1035, 135 N.Y. 154, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 129, 90 Sickels 154, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parmenter-v-state-ny-1892.