People ex rel. Sherrill v. Guggenheimer

47 A.D. 9, 62 N.Y.S. 11
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 47 A.D. 9 (People ex rel. Sherrill v. Guggenheimer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Sherrill v. Guggenheimer, 47 A.D. 9, 62 N.Y.S. 11 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.:

This proceeding was commenced by the relators, as taxpayers of the city of New York, upon an order to show cause directed to the appellants, as members of the riitinicipal council of the city of New York, by which they were required to show cause why a peremptory writ of mandamus should not issue, requiring them and each of them forthwith to approve and adopt a resolution theretofore adopted by the board of aldermen for the issue of corporate stock of the city of New York, to' pay an award made in condemnation proceedings taken pursuant to chapter 481 of the Laws of 1892, and the act amendatory thereof. By the affidavit upon which .this proceeding was instituted it appeared that a proceeding was commenced under chapter 481 of the Laws of 1892, as amended by chapter 669 of the Laws of 1893,, to acquire, for the-city of Brooklyn the use of certain reservoirs, Wells, machinery, pipes, franchises and other property of the Long Island Water Supply Company. The commissioners were duly appointed under said act, who made an award as for the value of such, property to be acquired, which was duly confirmed by the Supreme Court. The act of 1892 (Chap. 481,.'§ 12) provides that “ The proper officers of the city of Brooklyn are hereby authorized and directed to issue and to sell, in the same form and manner as is now provided for issuing and for selling duly authorized water bonds of said city, water bonds sufficient to pay the amount, or amounts, directed by -the final order tO'~be paid.” The award of the commissioners having been confirmed by' the, Supreme Court, and the order of the court having directed a sum of money to be [11]*11paid for the property, the municipal officers of the city of Brooklyn were required by section 12 of the act before referred to, to issue and sell water bonds of the said city sufficient to pay the amount directed by the final order to be paid. By the charter of the city of New York (Chap. 378, Laws of 1897) it is provided that all the powers or duties conferred or charged upon the common ■council of the city of Brooklyn, or upon any board, body or officer of any of the municipal and public corporations or parts thereof by said act consolidated with the city of New York, as theretofore known and bounded, were and are to be exercised and performed by the municipal assembly of the city of New York (§ 46); that all laws or parts of laws theretofore passed, creating any debt or debts of the municipal and public corporations' united and consolidated as aforesaid, or for the payment of such debts or respecting the same, should remain in full force and effect, except that the same should be carried out by the corporation thereby constituted, to wit, the said city of New York (§§ 4, 5); and that whenever it is. lawful for any of the several municipal or public corporations which thereby became part of the city of New -York to issue bonds for public purposes, which bonds had not been issued prior to January 1, 1898, it shall be lawful for the said city to issue corporate stock of said city for the same purpose, and such corporate stock should be, unless otherwise provided by the charter, issued by the eomptroller only to the extent to which he might be thereunto authorized by resolution by the municipal assembly and the board of estimate and apportionment. (§§ 169, 170.)

The corporation, counsel appeared upon the argument of this appeal and insisted that as he is by the charter the recognized legal adviser of the municipal assembly, the duty is imposed upon him to furnish to the municipal assembly and to every department, board and officer of the city, all such advice and legal assistance as counsel and attorney, in or out of courts, as may be required by them or either of them, and that no officer, board or department of the city, unless it be therein otherwise especially provided, should employ any attorney or counsel (Charter, § 255); that these appellants had no standing in court to separately appear and be heard upon the application, and had no right to appeal from an order or judgment of the court directing them as the municipal council of the city of [12]*12Hew York to perform an official act. The relator also insists that the appeal should be dismissed, as under the charter the couneilmen have no right to appear by private counsel, and have thus no right to be heard in opposition to the motion granting the mandamus, and none to appeal from the final order in the proceedings.

As before stated, this proceeding was instituted to require the ■municipal council as a branch of the legislative department of the city government to obey an act of the Legislature requiring the city of Hew York to issue bonds for a public purpose. These appellants, as individuals, had no interest in the proceeding. As public officers they were required to perform a public duty and the proceeding w;as to compel the performance of that public duty. It was the municipal ^council as a body that was before - the court, and it was1 the official acts of such municipal council that the court was asked to control; and while the writ necessarily ran to each individual member of the council, it was directed to him as a member of the. council and in his public capacity as one of the council of the city of Hew York. By the charter (§ 255) it is expressly provided that the corporation counsel shall be the legal adviser of the mayor, the municipal assembly and the various departments, boards and officers, and it was his duty to furnish to the municipal assembly, and to every department, board and .officer of the city, all such legal advice and legal assistance as counsel and attorney, in or out of court, as might be required by them or either of them. It thus became the duty of the counsel to the corporation - to appear for the municipal assembly, or either of its branches, or its members when proceeded against as members of either of 'such bodies, as their attorney and counsel, and the section of the charter then continues : -‘Ho officer, board or department of the city, unless it be herein otherwise especially provided, shall have or employ any attorney or counsel.” It would seem that under this express legislative declaration these public officers, when proceeded against in their official capacity, must be represented in court by the corporation counsel, and are expressly prohibited from appearing by any other attorney or counsel; and any such appearance was unauthorized. It appears from the order that this objection was expressly taken in the court below, as it is there stated, and “ William J. Kelly, Esq., having, been heard ex gratia on behalf of Joseph Cassidy, Martin F. Conly, William A. [13]*13Doyle and Bernard 0. Murray, members of said council, in opposition to the motion.” There is nothing in the record to show that these four appellants had appeared separately in. the proceeding, or that private counsel were authorized to act as- attorneys of record for these four appellants. The fact that the court allowed Mr. Kelly, as a matter .of favor, to be heard upon the argument of the motion, would not justify an inference that the court had allowed these four council men to appear in the proceeding by attorney separate from the corporation counsel, whose duty it was to appear for them.. The corporation counsel did not oppose the motion in the court below, nor did he appeal from the order granting the mandamus. Annexed to the record there is a notice of appeal signed by three of" the four appellants and by William J. Kelly as attorney for the four appellants.

It would seem that this appeal was entirely unauthorized.

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Bluebook (online)
47 A.D. 9, 62 N.Y.S. 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-sherrill-v-guggenheimer-nyappdiv-1900.