Strough v. Board of Supervisors of Jefferson County

23 N.E. 552, 119 N.Y. 212, 28 N.Y. St. Rep. 967, 74 Sickels 212, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1079
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 28, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 23 N.E. 552 (Strough v. Board of Supervisors of Jefferson County) 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
Strough v. Board of Supervisors of Jefferson County, 23 N.E. 552, 119 N.Y. 212, 28 N.Y. St. Rep. 967, 74 Sickels 212, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1079 (N.Y. 1890).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

The county treasurer of Jefferson county, from 1873 to 1887, omitted to perform the duty imposed upon him by the fourth section of chapter 907 of the Laws of 1869, -as amended by chapter 283 of the Laws of 1871, to apply the taxes assessed during those years on the property of the Clayton and Theresa Railroad, within the town of Orleans in said county, and collected and paid over to him, either to the purchase of the bonds of said town, issued-in aid of the construction of said railroad, or in the purchase of other bonds to be held as a sinking fund for their redemption. The aggregate taxes so col *215 lected from the railroad for state and county purposes, was $4,845.31, and were paid out by the treasurer for general county purposes, including state taxes. It is one of the agreed facts, that at the times the moneys were so ajiplied, neither the county treasurer nor any officer of the county was cognizant of the duty imposed by the act of 1871, and that there was no intentional misapplication of the taxes in question. The warrants issued by the board of supervisors, under which they were collected, were in the usual form, and required the collector to pay over certain specified sums to various town officers, and a certain sum to the county treasurer on account of the state tax levied on the town of Orleans, and, to pay to the treasurer the remainder of the moneys collected, not otherwise particularly appropriated. There was no specific direction in the warrants in respect to the disposition to be made of the taxes collected from the railroad, and they were included in the aggregate sum paid to the treasurer and there was no separate application of those moneys by him, to state or county purposes, but the same were applied with, and as a part of, the other moneys raised in the town.

In the year 1872 bonds of the town of Orleans, to the amount of $80,000, were issued in aid of the construction of the 'Clayton and Theresa Railroad. Litigation arose as to the validity of the proceedings to bond the town, and no taxes were raised in the town to pay the interest or principal of the bonds until the year 1879, which was after the decision of the United States Supreme Court affirming the validity of the bonds, in the case of Orleans v. Platt (99 U. S. 676), made in 1878. The attention of the board of supervisors and of the county treasurer was first called to the provisions of section 4, of the act of 1871, in the fall of 1887, when a demand was made upon the board, in behalf of the town, for repayment into the treasury of the county, of the taxes collected in said town from the railroad, and used in payment of state and county taxes. Thereafter, the plaintiff, as supervisor of the town of Orleans, and the defendant, the board of supervisors of Jeffer *216 son county, made an agreed case for the submission of the controversy between the town and the county to the determination of the court, under section 1279 of the Code. The General Term sustained the claim of the town to have the moneys cob lected from the railroad, and used for the payment of state and county taxes, refunded by the defendant, but the court limited the recovery to moneys so misapplied within the period of six years prior to Hay 1, 1888, the date of the submission, and awarded judgment against tlie defendant for the amount of the taxes diverted during these years, with interest, and directed- that the sum recovered should be paid to the county treasurer, to be applied as required by the act of 1871. Both parties have appealed, the plaintiff from the part of the judgment limiting the recovery to six years, and the defendant from the whole judgment.

The constitutionality of the act of 1871 was considered by the court In re Clark v. Sheldon (106 N. Y. 104). That was a proceeding by petition under the act of 1869, against a county treasurer to compel him to appropriate taxes collected in the town of Sodus, Wayne county, from railroads in that town, as required by the act, and it was decided that the relief should have been granted.

It is insisted, however, that the plaintiff, as supervisor, cannot maintain the action. There can now be no controversy that the legal rights of the town of Orleans were disregarded in the application of the sums collected in that town from the Clayton and Theresa Railroad. This was an injury to a property • right of the town, and may, we think, be redressed, if actionable at all, at the suit of the supervisor -of the town, as the representative of its interests. The bonds issued were the obligations of the town. They are a charge upon the taxable property within the town, and there is no other resource for their payment. The act of 1869, as amended in 1871, relieved towns which should issue bonds in aid of the construction of railroads therein to some extent from the burden of the obligation, by appropriating the taxes on the railroad property therein as a special fund for the payment pro tamio of the *217 bonds issued. It is true that the taxes are collected from individual and private property, and not out of the corporate property of the town, but the statute, in substance, gives the town in its corporate capacity the beneficial ownership of the fund when it directs its application to discharge a corporate obligation. The case of Bridges v. Board of Supervisors of Sullivan County (92 N. Y. 570) sustained an action brought by the plaintiff as supervisor of one of the towns of that county, to recover from the county money raised in the town by taxation on the property of the Hew York and Oswego Midland Railroad, and applied by the board of supervisors to county purposes, contrary to the provisions of chapter 296 of the Laws of 1874. By that act “ all moneys to be collected (by taxation) upon the real or upon the real or personal property of the said corporation in any towns or municipalities, by which bonds have been issued in aid of the construction of (said railroad), are hereby appropriated to said towns or municipalities respectively.” The act required the collector to pay over the railroad tax, when collected, to the railroad commissioners, who were directed to apply the same to the payment of the interest and principal of the bonds. This is a decisive authority in favor of the right of the present ¡ilaintifi: to maintain this action, as one brought to vindicate and enforce a property right of the toAvn lie represents. Other authorities support the same conclusion. (Hathaway v. Town of Cincinnatus, 62 N. Y. 434, and cases cited.)

The further contention is made that, assuming the misapplication of the money by the defendant, the toAvn of Orleans has lost its remedy by acquiescence and laches. It appears that for a period of fourteen years the toAvn of Orleans was represented by its supervisor in the board of supervisors, who was apprised from year to year of the disposition made by the county treasurer of the railroad taxes in the town, that is, that they formed a part of the aggregate fund out of which the state and county charges were paid, and that the supervisor of Orleans made no objection until the year 1887. It is insisted that the town of Orleans having, during this period, had the *218

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Bluebook (online)
23 N.E. 552, 119 N.Y. 212, 28 N.Y. St. Rep. 967, 74 Sickels 212, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1079, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strough-v-board-of-supervisors-of-jefferson-county-ny-1890.