Philips v. Wickham

1 Paige Ch. 590, 1829 N.Y. LEXIS 330, 1829 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 51
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedAugust 28, 1829
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 1 Paige Ch. 590 (Philips v. Wickham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Philips v. Wickham, 1 Paige Ch. 590, 1829 N.Y. LEXIS 330, 1829 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 51 (N.Y. 1829).

Opinion

*The Chancellor :—By the answer of the defendants, which has been read in opposition to this motion, it pretty satisfactorily appears that the defendants are, in good faith, pursuing the course, in draining the drowned lands, which they believe to be the best, and the least expensive to the owners or proprietors. The statute has committed that question to their decision, and unless they are exercising the right illegally, or unconscientiously, this court ought not to interfere, although the Chancellor might differ with them in opinion. This is not the proper tribunal to correct mere errors of judgment in officers entrusted with discretionary powers.

But it is insisted, by the counsel for the complainants, that the power of the owners or proprietors of the drowned lands to elect commissioners and to proceed in the prosecution of this work, under the laws of 1807 and 1826, is at an end in consequence of their neglect to elect commissioners in 1828. And I shall now proceed to examine this question, without stopping to inquire whether the establishment of that proposition would furnish to the complainants any ground of relief in this court.

By the act of 1807, the commissioners, who were to be elected annually on the first Tuesday in June, were, during the year they should respectively be elected to act, to possess all the powers granted to the first commissioners. The peculiar phraseology of this statute seems to be inconsistent with the idea that they should hold over until others were elected in their stead. And were it not for the strong intimations to the contrary by some of the justices of the Su[595]*595preme Court in The People v. Runkle, (9 John. Rep. 147,) and The Trustees of Vernon Society v. Hills, (6 Cowen’s Rep. 23,) under the act respecting religious incorporations, the language of which appears to be equally clear, 1 should have supposed that the functions of these commissioners ceased at the end of the year for which they were elected. There are undoubtedly some common law officers who are to be elected or appointed periodically, but who, from the necessity of the case, continue to exercise their functions until others are *elected or appointed to fill their places. In the anonymous case, (12 Mod. Rep. 256,) it is said a constable is not discharged until his successor is appointed and sworn in; because the parish cannot be without an officer. There are many cases in the books relative to the magistrates of boroughs and other incorporated places; in some of which cases it has been decided that those officers held over, and in others that they did not. But I apprehend all these cases depended upon the peculiar provisions of their respective charters, and not upon any general principles of common law. In the case of The Queen v. The Corporation of Durham, (10 Mod. Rep. 146,) the court said the office of town clerk was an office for life, unless restrained by charter or proscription. And although by the custom of the borough he was to be elected annually, he might continue in office, and would do so, until another was chosen. But they said if'the return had been that he was elected for one year only, his office would have expired at the end of the year, whether a successor had been appointed or not.

In the case of The Corporation of Tregony, (8 Mod. Rep. 127,) the mayor was to be elected annnally, but there was an express provision in the charter that he should hold over until another was duly elected. But in the Banbury case, (10 Mod. Rep. 346,) where there could be no election without the presence of the old mayor, who was not authorized by the charter to hold over, and the day prescribed was permitted to pass without an election, the corporation [596]*596was held to be dissolved. I am not aware of any general principle of the common law which authorizes all civil, or corporate officers to hold over after the expiration of the time for which they were elected, until their places are supplied by others; and the numerous statutes both here and in England giving such authority in express terms, seem wholly inconsistent with any such common law principle. But the question I am about to consider is entirely distinct from that which relates to the right of the old commissioners to hold over. It is not necessary to express any opinion on that point; or if they had not the right to inquire whether their acts were void, or only voidable.

*The owners or proprietors of the drowned lands, under the act of 1807, are quasi a corporation; but the objects to be accomplished by the act can only be attained through the agency of the commissioners, who are to be elected annually. If the presence of the commissioners was necessary to the validity of an election, or any thing was to be done by them preparatory thereto, such as giving notice of the time and place, &c., there could be no election if the commissioners neglected to attend, or to give the requisite notice; a fortiori there could be no election if there were no commissioners in office; and in that case the powers granted by the act would be virtually at an end. But if the corporators have the power without the presence of their officers, or any act on their part, to assemble and choose officers to carry into effect the object of the law, their rights by a neglect to choose officers would be merely suspended. Although they may be forfeited by non-user or otherwise, they cannot be taken from them except by a direct proceeding, and judgment against them declaring the forfeiture.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Paige Ch. 590, 1829 N.Y. LEXIS 330, 1829 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philips-v-wickham-nychanct-1829.