People of the State of N.Y. v. . Fields

58 N.Y. 491, 1874 N.Y. LEXIS 534
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 10, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 58 N.Y. 491 (People of the State of N.Y. v. . Fields) 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 of the State of N.Y. v. . Fields, 58 N.Y. 491, 1874 N.Y. LEXIS 534 (N.Y. 1874).

Opinion

Folger, J.

The first inquiry is.this: Is the appellant liable to any party, for the moneys or any part of them, obtained and received by him ?

He is not liable unless those moneys were paid to him without authority of law. There was no authority of law for the. payment, unless it is found in the acts of 1869 and 1870. Without those acts the members of the fire companies, whose assignee the appellant was, had no legal claim for any personal compensation. A brief statement will make this plain.

By the act of 1865 (Laws of 1865, chap. 249, p. 395), there was erected the metropolitan fire district of the State of Hew York. The city of New York was comprised within this fire district. (Sec. 1.) Four citizens, residents of the district, were to be appointed by the senate, upon the nomination of the governor, to be “ metropolitan fire commissioners.”- (Sec. 42.) They were to form a metropolitan fire department. They were to possess, all the power and authority conferred upon or possessed by any officers of the then existing fire department of the city of Hew York, and other powers conferred by the act. By this grant of power, they had the right to exercise all powers for the management and direction of the then existing -fire department of the city of Hew York, its premises and property; and they had the sole power and authority thereafter, to extinguish fires in that city. The commissioners were appointed, and in the exercise of these powers, they in October, 1865, organized these fire companies, to perform duty only on alarms of fire, and for an annual compensation to each of the companies, of $1,000. Ho compensation was provided, or *498 meant to be, for any fireman as an individual. The duty to which he was-'called, was considered to be but an occasional one. It was thought to be rewarded, by any privileges and exemption which all firemen might claim, and by the $1,000, given as a whole sum,- to each company in gross. There was no provision made' by these commissioners, for payment of any money to any of these firemen, as individuals; and hence there was no provision of law to that end, until the acts of 1869 and 1870.

It may be insisted that the facts, upon which this conclusion rests, were not proven at the Circuit. There was no testimony given thereto. It is, however, substantially averred in the complaint, wherein the substance of the report of the commissioners thereupon is stated, and the-truth of that report is alleged. To be sure, the appellant’s answer avers, that he has no knowledge nor information sufficient to -, form a belief as to that report; but he does not specifically deny the averment in the complaint, of the truth of the statement therefrom, as - set out in the complaint, as he should have done, to raise issue "and .require proof from the plaintiff. ¡Nor does the general denial at the close of the answer, apply to this averment of the complaint; for that- 'denial includes only those allegations of the complaint “ not specifically answered unto.” Moreover, it is plain that- there was no contention as to these facts, at the trial ;• and the case proceeded upon the recognition, tacit or otherwise, by both parties, of the existence of the facts which are averred in- the complaint, as to the organization, compensation - and disbanding of these companies.

Prior to the act. of 1869, then, there was no law upon which those men could found a ■ claim for any recompense to themselves for services its firemen. The legislature in passing that act must be presumed to have known this; to have known that it was - acting upon an assertion merely, which,had no such support in -law or in.equity, as.-would enable' the claimants to maintain an action in any court. When, then, that act used the word claims,” it did-not mean *499 that which was due of right, and could be maintained as such. It meant no more than something which was asked for, or asserted to be due, for which a pretence vyas set up. As., then, there was no basis in law or in equity, for a demand of payment as of right, it follows that the purpose of the legislature was to give. In doing this, it could fix what sum should be given. And so it did, by the declaration, that it should not exceed the sum of $50,000. Nothing can be more clear, than that it willed to give, but to give no more than that amount. Nor does the restriction as to amount apply only to the act of payment. The words audit and adjust in the act, are as much affected by it as the word pay. The comptroller could no more audit and adjust, in the sense of ratifying and allowing, a sum greater than that fixed, than he could pay more than that. He was required to audit, to hear the claimants as to their claims, for this was needed to ascertain, who were the persons who came within the description of the beneficiaries under the act. He was required to adjust the amount of the gift of $50,000, to the number of claimants and their relative interest therein, so that each should receive his fair proportion and no more. And, furthermore, though doubtless the legislature was apprised of the amount claimed, it is not so usual that the amount demanded, falls short of the amount which can be well based upon the pretence for the demand, that it may well be supposed, that the legislature meant to direct the comptroller to ascertain whether, indeed, the claims upon the gift did in fact come up to its amount, even upon the unreal foundation asserted for them. It might be that, even upon the basis upon which they were put by the claimants, and notwithstanding their apparent amount, an investigation into them would keep them within the sum bestowed by the legislature. Though they might go beyond it, and that fact be apparent upon the examination of them made by him, yet he had no powur from the act, to allow them above that amount, nor thus to ratify them at any sum above it, nor to impose nor to admit an obligation greater than that. He had no power by any act of his, either of audit, adjustment or pay- *500 . ment, to declare or find due from the fire department, nor from the city, nor from other source, more than the sum of $50,000. , Due means owing, and owing must come of a right. There was no right, other than that created by the act making the gift. That was limited to a sum named, and so no more could be found owing, no more could be found due, than that sum. With the purpose plainly declared of paying no more than $50,000, it cannot be that the legislature . meant to authorize an audit and adjustment which would find due more than that, which would create an obligation, upon which payment of more than that could be lawfully demanded. Whatever may be the accurate philological definition of the words audit and adjust, we find them in a connection which affects that meaning. As placed in this statute, in the circumstances in which it was passed, they mean the act of receiving from all these men the statement of their claims, and of the facts making them beneficiaries of the public, and the apportionment of the gift among them. The legislature did not, by the act of 1869, intend to declare the legality of the claims, nor to empower any official person to so act, as to make them an obligation due. The act of 1870 comes in as a supplement to that of 1869. There is no direction in it, for a further audit and adjustment. That which had been found due, on the audit and adjustment under the act of 1869, is authorized and directed to be paid.

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Bluebook (online)
58 N.Y. 491, 1874 N.Y. LEXIS 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-the-state-of-ny-v-fields-ny-1874.