People v. . Sutherland

100 N.E. 440, 207 N.Y. 22, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 1407
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 17, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 100 N.E. 440 (People v. . Sutherland) 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 v. . Sutherland, 100 N.E. 440, 207 N.Y. 22, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 1407 (N.Y. 1912).

Opinion

Willard Bartlett, J.

This action is brought by the Attorney-General, pursuant to section 1969 of the Code of Civil Procedure, to recover public moneys alleged to have been illegally paid to the defendant as county clerk of the county of Westchester in the years 1902 to 1907 inclusive. (People v. Wood, 121 N. Y. 522.) There was no allegation of fraud or collusion, and the case was treated as an action founded upon an implied contract to repay money unlawfully received, the issues being duly referred to a referee to hear and determine.

The complaint alleges that during the incumbency of the defendant in the office of county clerk he obtained and received from the county of Westchester and the board of supervisors certain sums of money for the alleged services or disbursements specified in the complaint, which are set forth in 104 separate items and which aggregate $66,465.63; that the bills containing these charges were audited and allowed by the board of supervisors, and were apparently made for the same character of services and at the same rates as had been charged by the county clerks of Westchester county prior to the incumbency of the defendant; and (in paragraph IY of the complaint) that “each and every of said payments was made illegally and without authority of law, and that said defendant has without right obtained and *26 received and converted the aforesaid sums of money, which prior to his receipt of the same were held and owned for and in behalf of a governmental interest by a domestic municipal corporation, to wit, the county of Westchester, and by an officer and board of a county of the state, to wit, by the treasurer and board of supervisors of the county of Westchester.”

The answer, after some immaterial admissions, denies each and every allegation contained in paragraph IV of the complaint just quoted; and for a further and separate defense alleges that in the first year of defendant’s official term as county clerk the committee of the board of supervisors having supervision of the affairs of his office did with the approval and sanction of the board agree with the defendant, which agreement was fully ratified by the board, that if the defendant in order to facilitate public business and serve public convenience would employ a sufficient number of skilled clerks and assistants in his office the defendant would be reimbursed the amounts paid by him for then’ salary and wages by the allowance, audit and payment of bills at the rates charged for in the bills subsequently rendered by the defendant to the board of supervisors; and that in reliance upon this agreement the defendant employed such clerks and assistants to whom he paid in wages and salaries sums of money aggregating between $8,000 and $12,000 in each year. The answer interposed the defense of the Statute of Limitations as to $15,212.64, part of the cause of action stated in the complaint.

Upon the trial before the referee the plaintiff relied upon the defendant’s bills themselves as furnishing sufficient evidence of their unlawful character as charges against the county; and only four witnesses in all were sworn, who testified briefly as to methods of business in the defendant’s office and as to the circumstances relating to particular items in the bills. The defendant introduced no evidence whatever, relying implicitly upon the *27 conclusiveness of the audit by the board of supervisors in the absence of any allegation of fraud or collusion against him. The referee dismissed the complaint on the merits, finding that each of the bills of the defendant had been audited by the board of supervisors of the county of Westchester; that the work charged for by the defendant and thus audited was actually performed by him or deputies appointed by him in the regular conduct of the business of the county clerk’s office; that there was no fraud or collusion in the audit, and that the board had jurisdiction thus to audit all said bills.

The judgment entered upon this decision has been affirmed by the Appellate Division in an opinion which indicates that a majority of the members of that court agreed with the referee in deeming the audit conclusive, and the case now comes to us from the judgment of affirmance.

The action of a board of supervisors in auditing a claim against the county is not open to collateral attack, in the absence of fraud or collusion, in cases where the alleged performance of the services or the quantity of service performed or both depend upon conflicting evidence, or even where the legality of the charge depends upon the determination of a question of fact, as may sometimes happen. But the familiar doctrine of the conclusiveness of an audit by a board of supervisors does not extend so far as to embrace the audit of charges illegal upon their face or charges clearly prohibited by law. (Board of Supervisors, Richmond Co., v. Ellis, 59 N. Y. 620.) Nor can I find any sanction for the proposition advanced in behalf of the respondent that, where such illegal charges constitute items in a bill containing other charges which the board unquestionably had jurisdiction to audit, the audit of the whole bill places the illegal charges beyond further question. The learned justices of the Appelllate Division seem to have considered that such was the effect of Bank of Staten Island v. City of New York *28 (68 App. Div. 231; affd. without opinion, 174 N. Y. 519), but I cannot adopt their view of that case in this respect. The bill there in question was that of a coroner against the county of Richmond. In the audit the board of supervisors deducted $160 therefrom; and Mr. Justice Woodward, who wrote for the Appellate Division, said at the end of his opinion: The evidence is by no means conclusive that the charges made, less this amount, were not technically within the statute which provides the fees for coroners.” (p. 239.) This was a sufficient basis for upholding the claim, without recourse to the somewhat startling doctine that the audit of a hill containing some valid charges is equally conclusive as to charges therein which are manifestly illegal on their face. Such a doctrine shocks the moral sense and it is an error to suppose that it finds support in the affirmance of the judgment in the case cited.

Whenever the question whether a charge by an officer constitutes a county charge or not is dependent upon the determination of questions of fact, then the audit of the bill by the board of supervisors involving, as it does, a decision of questions of fact, is conclusive and cannot be disputed collaterally; but when the bill represents a charge illegal upon its face, the audit does not affect its character. In that event its validity may be controverted notwithstanding the audit.

This seems to he the case here so far as certain classes of charges contained in the defendant’s bills are concerned. For the services rendered by the defendant in the performance of what may be termed distinctively court duties as clerk of the Supreme Court and clerk of the County Court, his compensation is limited to the fees prescribed by statute and cannot he enlarged by the. hoard of supervisors. Section 3280 of the Code of Civil Procedure, now section 252 of the Judiciary Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 29), provides that each clerk of a court ‘

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Bluebook (online)
100 N.E. 440, 207 N.Y. 22, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 1407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-sutherland-ny-1912.