People ex rel. Green v. Wood

13 Abb. Pr. 374
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 13 Abb. Pr. 374 (People ex rel. Green v. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Green v. Wood, 13 Abb. Pr. 374 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1862).

Opinion

By the Court.— Mullin, J.

—It seems to me quite clear that the contracts between the relator and the board of health, for the removal of offal, &c., from the streets of the city, under which the relator claims relief in this proceeding, are valid and binding on the city.

Being valid, if the relator has performed the labor agreed to be performed by him under and pursuant to the contracts alluded to, there can be no doubt but that he may maintain an action against the city, to recover the compensation to which he is entitled.

When a party has a remedy by action, he cannot have a mandamus.

The relator’s counsel concedes the correctness of the position, but insists that, inasmuch as he has performed the labor and procured his account therefor to be settled, audited, and allowed by the officers of the city government, designated by the charter to settle all accounts against the city, and having procured from the comptroller a warrant on the treasury for the payment 'of the amount due, which it was the duty of the mayor to sign, without assuming to pass upon the question whether the work called for by the contract had or had not been performed, there was no necessity for an action against the city, and that it was the duty of the mayor to affix his name to the warrant, and, having refused, it is the duty of the court to compel him to do.it.

The counsel for the defence insists that the mayor has a discretion as to whether or not he will countersign warrants drawn on the treasurer, and that it is his duty to refuse to do so, when he knows that the service in payment of which the warrant is drawn has not been performed, and that in this case, it being considered that the work was not performed in conformity to the contract, the mayor cannot be compelled to countersign.

The 22d section of the amended charter of 1857 creates a department, in the city government, of finance, under the control and management of the comptroller of the city.

[380]*380All accounts rendered to or kept in the other departments are made subject-to the inspection and revision of the department of finance. It is authorized to settle and adjust all claims in favor of or against the Corporation, and all accounts in which the Corporation is concerned as debtor or creditor.

It also provides for a bureau in the same department, for the reception of all moneys belonging to the city, and for the payment of moneys on the warrant drawn by'the comptroller and countersigned by the mayor and clerk of the Common Council, —the chief officer of which is the chamberlain.

The same section provides for another bureau in the same department, to be called the auditing bureau. It is authorized to revise, audit, and settle all accounts, in which the city is concerned as debtor or creditor. It is further provided, that all moneys drawn from the city treasury shall be upon vouchers examined and allowed by the auditor, and approved by the comptroller, and filed in his office.

By section 18, subd. 4, it is made the duty of the mayor to exercise a constant supervision over the conduct and acts of all subordinate officers.......and generally to perform all such duties as may be prescribed for him by the charter and city ordinances, and the laws of the State and of the United States.

Section 32 provides that, until the Common Council shall otherwise direct, the existing ordinances shall apply to the departments therein mentioned, so far as they are applicable, and not inconsistent with the said act.

When this question arose, an ordinance in the words following was in force, to wit: the comptroller of the city shall draw and sign all warrants on the chamberlain for moneys which he is authorized to draw from the treasury, and present the same, with the vouchers, to the mayor, to be countersigned by him and the clerk of the Common Council respectively.

Why does the Legislature require a warrant on the treasury, to be countersigned by the mayor and clerk of the Common Council ?

These officers have nothing to do with auditing or settling accounts or claims, so that, they can thereby be informed of their justice or propriety. The object, however, must be as a guard against fraud, to secure the treasury against the negligence or dishonesty of those officers who are intrusted with the settle[381]*381ment of claims against the city. If, however, the mayor and clerk have, as is contested, no right to refuse to countersign warrants of the comptroller, how can they act as a guard against fraud on the treasury ? If they have no discretion, then they are bound to countersign every draft drawn in proper form. The accounts of the clerks in the mayor’s office, and in the office of the clerk of the Common Council, are required, by law, to be audited by some officer in the finance department. Row, suppose a draft is presented to either of these officers, in favor of one of his clerks, for services which he knows the clerk has never rendered, is he to countersign it? Is he to close his eyes to the fraud, and become a participator in perfecting it?

Such a proposition cannot, it seems to me, be supported. If the object, in requiring these officers to countersign, was to prevent abuse,—to protect the treasury from being plundered to pay unfounded or fraudulent claims,—we must give effect to the intent, by holding the officers to be clothed with the right to refuse to countersign a warrant on the treasury, drawn to pay a claim which they know to be dishonest, or which they are not satisfied is an honest and legal one.

I understood the relator’s counsel to admit that these officers were not bound to countersign a warrant which they knew to be drawn to pay a fraudulent claim; but he is of the opinion that it is the only case in which they are at liberty to refuse. Does it matter whether the claim is utterly unfounded, or whether the amount allowed is grossly extravagant ? Either is fraudulent; and it is the duty of the mayor and clerk to interfere and prevent its successful accomplishment, as well in the one case as in the other. It may be said that it is the right of the mayor and clerk to refuse to countersign in the cases supposed, but that they have no such right when a claim has been audited and allowed by the proper officers, and a warrant drawn therefor. In other words, that it is the duty of those officers to countersign in all cases, except when they know the claim to be fraudulent, in whole or in part.

If these officers are to act as guardians of the treasury,—if they are to protect, so far as in them lies, the city from the payment of unfounded and dishonest claims,—they must have the means of knowing whether the claim is one proper to be paid; and it is their duty to inform themselves in regard to it, and [382]*382countersign or refuse; as they may deem proper,' after such investigation. In this way, and in this way only, can these men effectually protect the treasury.

It is said, that to require these officers to investigate every claim, to pay which a warrant is drawn, and to permit them to suspend all payments until their investigations are made, is to block the wheels of government and prevent all payments from the treasury.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Abb. Pr. 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-green-v-wood-nysupct-1862.