People ex rel. Wiffler v. Miller
This text of 68 Misc. 445 (People ex rel. Wiffler v. Miller) 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.
Opinion
It appears that, during the fiscal years 1908 and 1909, certain departments of the city government of Yonkers, including that of the commissioner of public safety, purchased certain supplies for city use after having exhausted all moneys appropriated to such departments, respectively. One of the debts or claims thus incurred by such commissioner was to the relator herein for feed for the horses used in the department of such commissioner.
Under section 19 of the Second Class Cities Law, which applied to and governed that city in those years, the making of any expenditure, or the incurring of any debt by a city officer or department in excess of the amounts appropriated for the fiscal year then current, is made unlawful and invalid to bind the city. The Legislature of the present [447]*447year passed an act, known as chapter 254 of the Laws of 1910, entitled “An act to authorize the issuance and sale of bonds of the city of Yonkers, in the principal sum of forty thousand dollars to provide moneys for the payment of certain debts and expenses of said city, and to authorize the audit of said debts and expenses.”
Section 1 of said act authorizes the city of Yonkers to create a funded debt by the sale of bonds to the amount of $40,000, and to apply the proceeds resulting from such sale “to the payment of any debts and expenses of said city incurred during the fiscal years nineteen hundred and eight and nineteen hundred and nine remaining unpaid after appropriations applicable to the payment thereof have been exhausted.”
It was estimated at the time that the liabilities so incurred by the various departments of the city government, in excess of the appropriations, amounted approximately to the sum of $40,000.
Section 2 of the act provides that the claims for such debts and expenses may he audited as other claims against the city are by law to be audited, and shall not be paid unless so audited.
The city authorities, under such act, have issued and sold the bonds and have in hand the proceeds thereof, which are sufficient to meet all such claims. The relator’s claim has been duly audited, hut the comptroller refused to pay the same because of a protest made to him by the United Taxpayers’ Association of the Oity of Yonkers. Thereupon the relator, upon due notice, applies here for a peremptory writ of mandamus to compel the comptroller to pay his claim. The association has been permitted to intervene and oppose, and briefs have been submitted in behalf of the relator and of the association.
After carefully considering such briefs and the language and history of the act, viz., chapter 254 of the Laws of 1910, I conclude that the writ should issue.
Two questions appear to he presented for determination, viz.: (1) Whether or not such a claim as that of the relator is within the purview of the act; and (2) whether [448]*448or not that act, if it he construed so as to cover such a claim, is constitutional.
As to the first question, it seems to me that the act was, by its express terms, intended to apply to debts incurred “ after appropriations applicable to the payment thereof have been exhausted,” and, therefore, that it does embrace within its benefit the claim of the relator. Except for the words just quoted, I would hold with the contention of the learned counsel for the association- that the term “ debts ” in the act must be construed to mean only legal debts of the city and, therefore, not to cover the relator’s claim, which by the provisions of said section 79 was not a legal debt of the city. Inasmuch as by that section no debt incurred beyond the appropriation could be a debt of the city in a strict legal sense, the express terms of the act of 1910 extend its purpose and benefit to the debts incurred beyond that limit. Indeed, the terms of the act appear to have no other possible meaning, as the clause “remaining unpaid after appropriations applicable to the payment thereof have been exhausted” is an absolute and general limitation; and the balance of the $40,000, if any, after the payment of such debts, can be used only “ as the Board of Estimate and Apportionment may direct.”
As to the second question, that of constitutionality, I think that the act of the Legislature in recognizing such claims, which are technically illegal, but morally meritorious, in that the city has had the benefit of the materials charged for — here feed used in supporting its horses — was within the constitutional power of that body within the doctrine of the Court of Appeals in Matter of Borup, 182 N. Y. 222. In that case that court held that it-was competent for the Legislature to pass an act requiring towns to pay to landowners damages for changes of highway grade previously made, although, when such a change was made, no such liability existed or could under any law have been imposed or assumed. The opinion of that court in that case (at p. 226) said: “There is no provision of the Constitution- that restricts the legislature from providing for the payment by a municipality of claims against it that [449]*449are founded in equity and justice and which could have been authorized originally.”
Here, in the case at bar, the city of Yonkers was not legally liable to the relator for the feed furnished when it was furnished; but the city had the benefit of such feed, and, therefore, the relator’s claim to he paid by the city therefor is clearly one “founded in equity and justice and which could have been authorized originally” (meaning, doubtless, moral justice and authorized by the legislature). The doctrine of that court is not, as contended by the learned counsel for the association, limited to claims “ where the power exists to create them, but the statutory proceedings are not strictly pursued or for some reason are informal and defective.” This is manifest, because in the Borup case there was, when the change of grade was made, no power at all by any sort of proceeding to create a liability by the town to the damaged landowner. In that case the counsel for the town urged upon that court such limitation, but ineffectually.
The application or motion for the writ is, therefore, granted.
Motion granted.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
68 Misc. 445, 124 N.Y.S. 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-wiffler-v-miller-nysupct-1910.