Taylor v. . Mayor, Etc., City of New York

82 N.Y. 10, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 320
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 21, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 82 N.Y. 10 (Taylor v. . Mayor, Etc., City of New York) 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
Taylor v. . Mayor, Etc., City of New York, 82 N.Y. 10, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 320 (N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

Folger, Ch. J.

This is an action to recover for services rendered and materials furnished. They were rendered and furnished by the Transcript Association; some part thereof for the county of New York, and some part thereof for the city of New York. Wherever the original liability to pay therefor, it now rests entirely upon the city, by reason of the act of legislature consolidating the government of the county and city of New York. (Laws of 1874, chap. 304, p. 360, § 2.) The debt or *15 demand was assigned by that association to the plaintiffs in this action. But before that assignment the county had a debt or demand, and the city had a debt or demand, against that association ; both of which, by virtue of the act just cited, now belong to the city. (§ 1.) The city seeks to set off these against the debts sued upon by the plaintiffs; and the main question raised in the case is, whether this can be done under the statute of set-offs ? It is not claimed by the plaintiffs that there is that in the nature or condition of these demands of the city which will shut it out from the benefit of the statute. The plaintiffs rely entirely upon the letter of the fifth subdivision of the eighteenth section, which is, that a set-off can be allowed only in actions founded upon demands which could themselves be the subject of set-off according to law (2 B- S. p. 354, § 18, sub. 5), and they say that the letter of this subdivision applies, for that the debts upon which this action is founded could not, before the assignment of them by the association to the plaintiffs, have been set off against the demands now held by the city and sought to be set off by it. They rest this contention upon the assertion, that at no time before the assignment to the plaintiffs of the debts upon which this action is founded could the association have brought and maintained an action against the county on that part owing by it, or against the city upon that part owing by it. They also state it in this wise: that the association did not then have a cause of action, or a right of action against either the county or the city. Though once said, it may well be repeated, that this assertion has no basis in the nature or condition of the debts themselves. It rests entirely upon the situation, as that of debtors at that time not liable to action, of the county and of the city; in which situation they were placed by the effect of certain statutes of' the State. Those statutes are different, as to the city, from that as to the county.

We will first state those as to the city. It is first contended that the city could not have been sued for the debt owing from the county, until the act of 1874 above cited; and the assignment to the plaintiffs was in 1872; and thus, it is said, the *16 county claim now owned by the plaintiffs could not have been set off by their assignor, in an action against it then brought by the city. It is true that upon the county debt there was no right to sue, nor any cause of action against .the city, until that act, which was passed after the assignment to the plaintiffs. We do not* think that that fact now affects the question before us. When the city became liable for the debt originally existing against the county, it became liable therefor in the condition in which the debt then was; and if it was then a claim on which the right of action had before that accrued against the county, or if it was then a claim which could have been set off against a demand sought to be enforced by the county, all the advantage or disadvantage to the holder of the claim flowing from those facts adhered to him and to it, and went with it into the hands of the assignees. The change of liability from county, to city was but a political change in the entity of the artificial debtor. By force of the act of 1874, the city was made to be the same as the county had been, and having all the liabilities of the county put upon it, it had also all its rights and defenses in regard thereto, given to it. The cause of action, if it had accrued against the county, was not abolished ; it was made enforceable on a different object. And so, if the right of set-off existed when the debt was a charge against the county, that right was not affected by the statute.

The other statute as to the city is of more effect. Chapter 383 of Laws of 1870, pages 896-8, section 17, declares, that no action shall be maintained against the city unless the claim on which it is brought has been presented to the comptroller, and he has neglected for thirty days thereafter to pay the same. The debt against the city now sued upon by the plaintiffs was not thus presented before the assignment of it by the association. The association could not have maintained an action upon it. The contention of the plaintiffs is, that because the association could not have maintained an action against the city on this debt, it therefore had no cause of action or right of action against the city; and having no cause or right of action on the debt, the debt was not in a condition to be the *17 subject of a set-off.' The rule has been stated in general terms, that to compel a set-off of two demands, there must be a mutual right of action upon them at the same time. In Myers v. Davis (22 N. Y. 489), it was said by Demo, J.: “ The rule is, that when such claims exist in perfect condition at the same time,-either party may insist upon a set-off.” The learned judge has been understood to mean by the phrase “perfect condition,” that state of a demand when it is of right demand-able by its terms and conditions, and may be sued upon. In Patterson v. Patterson (59 N. Y. 574), it is said that mutual debts in the purview of the statute of set-off are not merely those that are owing, but those that are due and payable also, on each of which the cause of action has accrued and exists at the same time; and that the cause of action implies the right to bring an action, and prosecute it with effect. It is not always well to take particular phrases and sentences from an opinion and read them as giving the core of the judgment. Thus, in 22 N. Y., supra, it is plain that what was meant was, that the two demands were to have become mutual, by each having become due and payable; by which latter word is meant that there is nothing in the terms or conditions of the debt that calls upon the owner to wait longer before demanding payment and taking the steps needful to enforce it. So in 59 N. Y., supra, the current of the opinion runs to this: that to compel a set-off, both debts must have been due and payable at the same time, and before a change in the ownership of either. It is there said of the phrases, cause of action has accrued,” and cause of action has arisen,” that they do not mean the contracting of the indebtedness, for a cause of action does not accrue or arise from the making of the contract of indebtedness, but from the non-performance of it as well. In Jordan v. Nat. Bank (74 N. Y. 467), commenting on 59 N. Y., supra, this court said: It was shown there that the rule was established in England that none but mutual debts could be set off against each other, and that by mutual debts was meant those which were on each side at the same time due and payable; it was deduced from the weight of authority in this State, that *18

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Bluebook (online)
82 N.Y. 10, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-mayor-etc-city-of-new-york-ny-1880.