People on rel. Baldwin & Jaycox v. Haws

15 Abb. Pr. 115, 24 How. Pr. 148
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 15 Abb. Pr. 115 (People on rel. Baldwin & Jaycox v. Haws) 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.

Bluebook
People on rel. Baldwin & Jaycox v. Haws, 15 Abb. Pr. 115, 24 How. Pr. 148 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1862).

Opinion

By the Court.—Ingraham, P. J.

The relators apply for a mandamus against the comptroller to draw his warrant in their favor for an award made against the Corporation for damages sustained by the relators, in consequence of the refusal of the Common Council to award to them a contract for building a gate-house at the new reservoir.

This claim arises under the provision of the 4th section of the act passed to facilitate the taking of lands and building such gate-house, &c., passed in April, 1860. (Laws of 1860, 772, ch. 449.) This section provided, among other things, “ that for the purpose of adjusting and determining the damages that the contractors to whom the gate-houses and aqueducts, &o., were awarded by the Croton Aqueduct Board, &c., which they may be equitably entitled to recover of the city of Rew York by arbitrators, one to be chosen by the mayor, one by the parties [117]*117claiming such damages, and the third by the two arbitrators chosen as aforesaidand the same section, after directing the arbitrators to be sworn, to hear the case, and to make their award and file the same with the county clerk, allows an order of confirmation to be entered, of course, and then adds: “ If such report shall be in favor of the party claiming damages, such party shall be entitled to recover the same, and upon presenting a certified copy of such report and order of confirmation to the comptroller of the city of New York, it shall be the duty of said comptroller to draw his warrant for the amount thereof, and to pay the same.”

In pursuance of this act, three arbitrators were appointed in the mode directed by the statute.

These arbitrators proceeded to hear the case. No notice of the hearing was served on the counsel of the Corporation, and no appearance was made by him on behalf of the city. Notice; however, was served on the mayor and comptroller.

On such hearing, the arbitrators awarded, as damages, to the' relators, $61,821, against the city of New York.

The report was filed, order of confirmation entered, a copy of the report and order served on the comptroller, a demand made of him for a warrant therefor, which he refused, and the relators moved at special term for a mandamus. Which motion was denied.

The relators appeal from such order. In order rightly to understand the questions presented in this ease, it is proper to remember that this claim is not one against the county, or one which the supervisors have any thing to do with, either as regards the auditing or paying the same.

The contract was made, if made at all, in regard to property belonging to the city of New York; was under the direction and control of the Croton Aqueduct Department, a branch of the city government; and was to be paid for, when the work was completed, out of the city treasury. This was expressly held in regard to the work in question. The chancellor says the dam and tlie aqueduct must be considered the property of the defendants, and, as the owner of such premises, the Corporation of New York is properly answerable for the damage which others have sustained thereby; and that case (Mayor, &c., of N. Y. a. Bailey, 2 Den., 433) was decided upon the [118]*118ground that this work and the lands taken therefor belonged to the Corporation of the city, and as the owners of property, they were liable for any evils resulting from its improper construction or use.

The present claim is one of a similar character, arising out of an alleged contract for work on another portion of the aqueduct, to which the same principles are to be applied.

It is not material, in the examination of the questions which affect this appeal, to decide whether the relators had, by virtue of their offers to the Croton Aqueduct Board, to do the work on the reservoir, acquired any rights which entitled them to damages against themity.

Whatever claim of that kind they might have, could properly be enforced by an action.

The questions material to the decision of the present appeal are: 1st, Whether the statute providing for the appointment of appraisers was legal; and, 2d, If it was, whether the remedy by mandamus is proper.

The statute which provided for the arbitration directs that it shall be held for the purpose of adjusting and determining the damages which the contractors to whom the gate-houses were awarded, might be'equitably entitled to recover of the city of Rew York, and if an award is made in their favor, directs the comptroller to pay the same.

It must be taken for granted that the intent of the statute was that the comptroller should pay the same out of the city treasury, although the provisions of law are such that he has not the power, without the concurrence of other officers, to draw from the treasury any moneys whatever. Ro one would suppose for a moment that the intent of the Legislature was to compel the comptroller to pay such claim out of his own means, and yet, in fact, such a provision would be no more in opposition to the fundamental law of the State, than to compel the Corporation, by an act of the Legislature, to pay a claim for damages for which they deny any liability, and which has not been adjudged by a legal tribunal to be a valid one.

It is contended by the relators, that questions of a similar character have been adjudged in their favor, both in the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals, and in support of these views they cite the case of The Town of Guilford a. Cornell [119]*119(18 Barb., 615; 13 N. Y., 143), and the case of McSpedon & Baker a. Haws, comptroller (11 Abbotts’ Pr., 114).

But these cases, and many others of a similar character which might have been cited, related not to the right or power of the Legislature to compel an individual or corporation to pay a debt or claim, but to the power of the Legislature to raise money by tax, and apply such money, when so raised, to the payment thereof. We could not, under the decisions of the courts on this point, made in these and other cases, now hold that the Legislature had not authority to impose a tax to pay any claim, or to pay it out of the State treasury ; and for this purpose, to impose a tax upon the property of the whole State or any portion of the State. This was fully settled in People a. Mayor, &c., of Brooklyn (4 N. Y., 419); but neither that case nor the case from 13 N. Y., 143, in any manner, gave a warrant for the opinion that the Legislature had a right to direct a municipal corporation to pay a claim for damages, for breach of a contract, out of the funds or property of such corporation, without a submission of such claims to a judicial tribunal. In the case last cited, Denio, I., says: “The proceeding ..... is not aimed at, and cannot affect the corporate rights or corporate property in the town.” Here, however, the act of 1860 directs that the claim of the relators, when adjusted by the arbitrators, shall be paid by the comptroller.

This is in direct violation of those provisions of the Constitution which say:

I. That no member of the State shall be deprived of any of the rights secured to a citizen, unless by the law of the land.

II. Ho person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law. (Const., §§ 1, 6; 1 lien. Stat., 51.)

Both of these sections have been the subject of examination by the Supreme Court. (Taylor a.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 Abb. Pr. 115, 24 How. Pr. 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-on-rel-baldwin-jaycox-v-haws-nysupct-1862.