People Ex Rel. McCabe v. . Matthies

72 N.E. 103, 179 N.Y. 242, 17 Bedell 242, 1904 N.Y. LEXIS 1090
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 18, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 72 N.E. 103 (People Ex Rel. McCabe v. . Matthies) 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
People Ex Rel. McCabe v. . Matthies, 72 N.E. 103, 179 N.Y. 242, 17 Bedell 242, 1904 N.Y. LEXIS 1090 (N.Y. 1904).

Opinion

Martin, J.

Although there were many important and interesting questions presented upon the argument of this appeal which relate to the rights and liabilities of the parties, still, with our view of the case, its present determination rests upon the question of remedies rather than the ultimate rights of the parties. It seems quite plain that the appellants have mistaken their remedy, and that the court below properly so held. “ The remedy by mandamus is of an exceptional character, and the writ issues only in that class of cases where a clear legal right is made to appear and there is no other adequate and legal means to obtain it.” (People ex rel. McMackin v. Bd. of Police, 107 N. Y. 235, 239.) If a relator may obtain .relief by appeal, writ of error,or certiorari,^ he will not be entitled to mandamus. (2 Spelling on Extraordinary Remedies, § 1374.)

• The town of White Plains entered into a written contract with the relators for the improvement of certain roads in that town outside of the village of . White Plains. In doing this work they used several thousand cubic yards of stone more than at the time of the contract they contemplated would be necessary. Eor the value of such stone they filed a claim with the town board of the town of White Plains, which by statute is the board of town auditors. This body refused to audit the claim, and the relators procured a peremptory writ of manda *245 mus, directing its examination and audit. Pursuant to the mandate of that writ, the respondents met as the town board of the town of White Plains, the town clerk produced the record touching the matter in controversy, together with the original notice of claim verified by the relators, and the terms of the contract between the relators and the town were then discussed and considered by the board. An examination of the papers presented disclosed that in the contract between the parties it was, among other things, agreed and recited that the quantities of materials stated in the estimate of the engineer were given with as much accuracy as possible; that such quantities were approximate only, and that bidders were required to form their own judgment of the quantities and character of the work by personal examination of the ground and of the specifications and drawings relating to such work; that the price agreed to be paid per lineal foot for the completed road must include the cost of all excavations, of all materials of whatever nature, and the furnishing of whatever labor was necessary for its full completion in the manner stated therein ; that the prices named by the contractors were to cover the cost of furnishing all labor and materials and performing all the work under the contract in accordance with the plans and specifications, and every expense incidental to the execution of the work; that there should be no allowance for extras in any account, or for any extra work or materials, except where there ivas a special agreement made before said extra work ivas done or materials furnished ; that the contractors declared in writing over their signatures that the prices named in the contract Avere intended to cover all labor, materials and expenses of every kind necessary to the completion of the contract, including all claims that might arise through damage or any other cause whatever, and they also agreed that they would make no claims on account of any valuation between the quantities of the approximate estimate and the quantities of the work as done, nor on account of any misconception or misunderstanding of the nature and character of the work to be done or the character or place where it was to be done. At a meet *246 iug of the town board the bids of the appellants for such work were opened, their bids or proposals were accepted and a contract ivas ordered prepared for the completion of the work in the "manner and form set forth in and by the said specifications, and the said contractors signified their willingness to accept such contract and do and perform every act and thing and furnish all labor and materials necessary for the }3roper completion of the work in accordance with the pilans and s23ecifications as 2>ro23ared by the engineer empiloyed by the town board. The said contract ivas signed and executed by the said relators on August 8, 1899. The ap23ellants thereby agreed to carry out and perform said agreement as set forth in their bid or pro230sal to the satisfaction of the engineer in charge of the work and to the satisfaction of the town board of the town of White Plains, and agreed to furnish all labor and material necessary for the proper and complete performance of said work to the satisfaction of the board. It was likewise further agreed and distinctly understood between the parties that no claim for extra Avork of any kind should exist in favor of the apipellants unless the same had been ordered by the toAvn board at a meeting duly called for the 23nrpose or a regular meeting of such toAvn board, and that no such claim should then exist until a certified copiy of the resolution duly piassed authorizing such extra work should have been served upon the appellants. This provision was never complied with as to the extra material claimed to have been furnished and for which the relators recovered at Trial Term. It was also agreed that the Avork covered by the specifications and pilans, not only during its pirogress, but on its final completion, must conform truly to the lines and levels as given by the engineer, and must be built according to the pilans and specifications furnished.

This brief statement as to some of the material terms, conditions and agreements which, under the contract, were to be kept and performed by the relators, discloses quite pilainly that the question whether, under the contract, they had any legal claim against the town of White Plains for excess of *247 material used by them, if the amount used was in excess of the amount originally contemplated, was presented to the board for its determination. On the presentation of the relators’ claim to the board, it became its duty, especially under the mandate of the writ of mandamus first served, to examine that claim under and in view of the terms and provisions of the contract, and to first determine whether such claim was a proper one against the town, and if so, then to determine the amount to be allowed thereon. So that the first question which the board was called upon to determine related to the propriety or legality of the claim against the town. That question the board of auditors passed upon and held that under the provisions of the contract the relators had no valid or proper claim against the town, and we are now called up)on to determine whether that decision could be properly reviewed and reversed in a proceeding or action instituted by a writ of alternative mandamus.

In compelling the performance of a public duty by an inferior officer or tribunal, the question arises whether the duty is of a judicial or of a merely ministerial character. “ If the duty be of a judicial character a mandamus will be granted only where there is a refusal to perform it in any way ; not where it is done in one way rather than another, erroneously instead of properly.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 N.E. 103, 179 N.Y. 242, 17 Bedell 242, 1904 N.Y. LEXIS 1090, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-mccabe-v-matthies-ny-1904.