People ex rel. Brown v. Green

5 Daly 194
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedApril 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 5 Daly 194 (People ex rel. Brown v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Brown v. Green, 5 Daly 194 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1874).

Opinion

The court at special term delivered the following opinion:

Robinson, J.

I concur in the opinion of Judge Joseph F. Daly, in the People ex rel. Haskell v. Green, Comptroller, that the action of the board of supervisors in auditing and allowing •claims against the county for county charges, duly presen ted .and acted upon by that body, is final, and not subject to review by the .auditor of accounts, and that his and the comptroller’s action is confined to a mere examination and allowance of the proper vouchers, as affording satisfactory evidence of the nature of the claim, its presentation and due verification (as required by L. 1845, chaps. 180, 524, as amended by L. 1847, c. 490, .§ 2), and the action of this board thereon (6 Lans. 30).

This consideration answers all the objections to the payment •of the claim of the relator, except to $2,532 59 for printing, as to which it is asserted but $350 12 remains unexpended of the appropriation out of which it can be paid. As to this, an alternative mandamus ought to issue, but as to the other claims, a peremptory writ should be allowed.

E. Delafield Smith, for appellant.

I. The audit, and the allowance of the relator’s bill by reso[197]*197lution of the board of supervisors, is not sufficient to authorize payment by the comptroller, {a) Ohap. 190, § 6, of the Laws of 1870 provides that “the finance department of the mayor, aldermen, and commonalty of the city of New York shall have the like powers and perform the like duties in regard to the fiscal concerns of the board of supervisors, as the said department possesses in regard to the concerns of the said mayor,, aldermen, and commonalty of the city of New York,” and that “ all moneys drawn from the treasury by authority of the board of supervisors, shall be upon vouchers for the expenditure thereof, examined and allowed by the auditor and approved by the comptroller.”

The powers and duties of the finance department in relation to the fiscal concerns of the mayor, &e., of the city of New .York, which, by the statute, were extended over and made applicable to the fiscal affairs of the county, are defined in article fifth of the charter (L. 1870, c. 137, §§ 33-39).

The provisions of the statute as to adjustment, audit, and payment of bills and accounts are briefly as follows, viz.: 1.. The finance department is directed to settle and adjust all claims in favor of or against the corporation, and all accounts in which the corporation is concerned as debtor and creditor. 2. The auditing bureau of the finance department shall audit, revise, and settle all accounts in which the city is concerned as debtor and creditor. 3. Vouchers for money drawn from the treasury shall be examined and allowed by the auditor and approved by the comptroller.

The charter of 1873 (c. 335, §§ 31 & 33) contains substantially the same provisions.

(5) It is conceded that, were it not for the provisions of L. 1857, c. 590, and L. 1870, c. 190, the audit and allowance by the board of supervisors of a bill or claim which was a proper and legal county charge, would be final and conclusive, and the county treasurer would be obliged to pay in accordance thereAvith (People v. Lawrence, 6 Hill, 244; People v. Supervisors of Dutchess, 9 Wend. 508). But these statutes introduced an entire change as to the powers of the board of supervisors in relation to the audit and allowance of bills and the payment of [198]*198claims against the county. A new check was created, and a new safeguard thrown around the county treasury by the provision that every claim against the county should be adjusted, revised, and settled by the auditor of accounts in the finance department, and should be paid only upon vouchers for the expenditure, examined and allowed by the auditor, and approved by the comptroller. The power to direct payment by the county treasurer of a specific sum, for a liability of the county, was thus taken from the board of supervisors. They might ¡authorize the purchase of supplies needed for county purposes, but the audit and adjustment of the bill therefor, and the examination of the voucher for the expenditure, was committed to the auditor’s bureau in the finance department. The resolution of the board of supervisors is necessary to authorize the purchase, but an adjustment and audit by the finance departs ment is necessary to fix the amount of the claim (People v. Flagg, 15 How. 553; People v. Flagg, 17 N. Y. 589).

A. Oakey Hall, for respondent, relied on People ex rel. Kelly v. Haws (12 Abb. Pr. 200-202) and People ex rel. Haskell v. Green (MSS. opinion by Judge J. F. Daly, of this court, at special term).

Daly, Chief Justice.

As respects the' question presented upon this appeal, the1 provisions of section 6 in the act of 1857 (2 L. 1857, p. 286), and of section 6 in the act of 1870 (1 L. 1870, p. 482), are substantially the same. A construction was given to the provision of section 6, in the act of 1857, by Judge Sutherland, in The People ex rel. Kelly v. Haws (12 Abb. Pr. 201, 202), which is equally applicable to the provisions in section 6 of the act of 1870. That construction is that it was not the intention of this provision to give the officers of the finance department an absolute supervisory power over the acts of the board of supervisors, in examining, settling, and allowing accounts against the county, which would be equivalent to an absolute veto check over the discretionary power of the board of supervisors. That the provision that all moneys drawn from the treasury upon the aulhori1/y of the [199]*199board of supervisors shall be upon vouchers to be examined ■and allowed by the auditor and approved by the comptroller, means that it is the board of supervisors who are to determine whether the service was performed or the expense incurred.

I agree only in part in this construction, for, in my judgment, to examine, allow and approve a voucher means something more. What is a voucher ? The word has several meanings ; but, in its ordinary signification, it means a document which serves to vouch the truth of accounts, or to confirm and establish facts of any kind. A merchant’s books are the vouchers of the correctness of his accounts, or a receipt is a voucher of a payment, but neither are conclusive. “To vouch” is to aver that a thing is true. “ It is,” says Orabbe, “ to rest the truth of another’s statement upon our own responsibility ” (Crabbe’s Synonymes, p. 441, Am. ed. of 1833). The voucher of the board of supervisors is that the claim or account submitted to them is correct, and should be paid as a valid charge against the county. But it cannot be paid unless the voucher is examined and allowed by the auditor and approved by the comptroller. How what does this mean ? The voucher is neces■sarily the account or claim, with the attestation, in some form or other, of the board of supervisors, that it is a valid charge against the county. It is presented to the auditor for examination. What is he to examine ? Is he simply to ascertain whether the attestation, or other evidence of the action of the board of supervisors, is in the proper form and duly certified by the proper officer ? The statute says he is to examine the voucher, and the account or claim is part of the voucher.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Daly 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-brown-v-green-nyctcompl-1874.