People ex rel. Sherwood v. Blood

120 A.D. 614, 105 N.Y.S. 20, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1266

This text of 120 A.D. 614 (People ex rel. Sherwood v. Blood) 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. Sherwood v. Blood, 120 A.D. 614, 105 N.Y.S. 20, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1266 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Kruse, J.:

The claims in controversy consist of two. items: $250 for services of the relator a.s health" officer of the town for one year, from November 12,1904, to-November 12,1905, and $20.40 for expenses of the relator in attending the annual sanitary conference,of health officers at Albany, on December 15 and 16, 1904. The board of town auditors, the respondents, rejected both claims.

We think the claims should be allowed.- The relator has acted, as health officer of the town since May 24, 1903, at first without a stated salary or fixed compensation, fees being paid him for services up to the 16th day of June, 1904. On the 6th day'of October, 1904,- the relator’s compensation was fixed by the board of health of the town at $250. a year. Thereafter, and in November of the same year, the relator presented an itemized statement for fees, disbursements and specific services rendered, including an item for salary from June 16, -1904, to November 12, 1904, at the rate of $250 -per year, amounting to $101.38; in all the sum of $125.88. Another claim of $1,600 was presented by him' at the same time, for services rendered by the relator in 1903 in attending smallpox patients during the months of November and December-in that year, The former claim was allowed in full, while.the latter was [616]*616audited at $800. After the fixing of his compensation and. the auditing of his claims in 1904 the relator continued to serve in the capacity ot health officer, and presented the claims in controversy to the board of town officers at their annual meeting in November, 1905, one for services at the fiat rate of $250 per year, as fixed by the board of health, and the other for his expenses in attending the conference above mentioned. ■

Numerous objections are urged against these claims, both as to ' the form in which they were presented, and as to their validity. If the board of health did not have the authority to fix the compensation of the health officer, for his salary in advance of his rendering the services, or did not in fact fix the same, we might agree with the respondents that the claim for services presented should not have been allowed, or at least not allowed in full. But the relator did not base his claim upon the specific services rendered. 'His claim was founded upon the stated compensation fixed by the board of. health, and if he is light there was no necessity for his keeping an account, or furnishing a detailed statement of services rendered by him. We think that the record before us shows that the board of. health did so fix the compensation, and we are further of the opinion that it had the authority to fix the same, and acted providently in so doing.'

The respondents in their return state that the claim presented failed to show that the claimant rendered any services for the town, and that the board of-health had no legal right or authority to fix a stipulated sum as a yearly salary for a health officer; that in auditing and rejecting-the claim they procured information where obtainable, and that they made'use of their own knowledge and such knowledge as they acquired by observation and experience. Upon being required by an order of the Supreme Court to state and return all of the information and evidence, both oral and documentary on which they acted in auditing and rejecting the claim, they made a further return accordingly. While we are concluded upon this review by statements of fact contained in the return of the respondents material to the controversy, yet as regards material facts contained in the petition and admitted by the return, by the respondents being silent concerning the samé or otherwise not controverting them, it is the duty of the court to consider such facts contained in [617]*617the petition and accompanying papers in connection with the máterial facts stated in the return, and mere opinions or conclusions contained in 'a return do not have the effect to controvert material allegations of fact in the petition. (People ex rel. Village of Brockport v. Sutphin, 166 N. Y. 163; People ex rel. Keim v. Desmond, 186 id. 232, 236.)

Applying this rule, the record before us fairly shows" that the relator was duly appointed health officer of the town of Albion on the 16th day of June, 1904, for the term of four years, as is provided by section 20 of the Public Health Law ;

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Related

People Ex Rel. Village of Brockport v. Sutphin
59 N.E. 770 (New York Court of Appeals, 1901)
Stenger v. Buffalo Union Furnace Co.
109 A.D. 183 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1905)

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120 A.D. 614, 105 N.Y.S. 20, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-sherwood-v-blood-nyappdiv-1907.