The People v. . Allen

42 N.Y. 404
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 42 N.Y. 404 (The People v. . Allen) 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
The People v. . Allen, 42 N.Y. 404 (N.Y. 1870).

Opinion

Foster, J.

It is objected, on the part of the appellant, 1st. That, by the true construction of the statute in question, the comptroller was not bound to make the loan (irrespective of the question whether the act was constitutional) until after the erection of the observatory by the relators; and, 2d. That, in any event, there was no legal liability on the part of the StateJto loan the money, notwithstanding the passage of the law; and that, at most, the State, by the law, has only a%ithorized the comptroller, as its agent, to make the loan, and *409 that in the exercise of that authority he had a discretionary power, which the court would not control by mandamus.

I think that neither of these points are well taken. The act declares, whenever the conveyance of the site shall be made to the relators and certified as required by the act, that then the comptroller is not only authorized, but required, to make the loaú upon the security of the mortgage. It is true that the mortgage is to be upon the observatory and site/ but it was not necessary, therefore, that the observatory should be built before such a mortgage could be given. The legislature, doubtless, supposed that the relators would faithfully expend so much of the $60,000 to be loaned as would be necessary to complete the building, and trusted to their honor that it would be done; and there was no reason, under such circumstances, why the observatory to be erected should not be, in terms, included in the mortgage; and, besides, a mortgage upon the land alone would include any permanent erection thereafter to be placed thereon; and, at all events, if any ambiguity existed in that respect, it was controlled, I think, by the express direction of the act, that when the certificate and mortgage were presented to the comptroller he should then make the loan.

ISTo question is made but that the mortgage was executed, and the certificate given, in precise conformity to the language of the statute in question, and if thé act did hot violate any provision of the Constitution, it was mandatory and required the obedience of the comptroller. The cases to show that a mandamus will not issue, in cases supposed to be like this, do not apply. In People v. Mayor, &c., of New York (25 Wend., 680) the mayor and common council were indebted to Lynch for salary as a judge, pursuant to a statute, and which required the common council to pay it. And the question was whether he must'pursue his remedy by action (which he might have done), or by mandamus, as he did ; and the court held, that he had a legal right of action, and must recover his salary in that form, and that mandamus could not *410 "be allowed as a substitute for an action to recover money legally due.

In Reeside v. Mather (11 How. U. S. Rep., 272) the decision was, that when a verdict was recovered by the defendant against the United States, plaintiff in the action, a mandamus would not lie to compel the secretary of the treasury to credit the amount to the defendant on the books of his department, and to pay him the amount; the more especially as no appropriation had been made for its payment; and that the verdict merely laid the foundation for a seire facias.

The case of The People v. The Contracting Board (27 N. Y., 378) only decided that when the statute required tho contracting board to award contracts for repairs to “ the lowest bidder who will give adequate security,” and it having made an award, a lower bidder, who has given the security required, is not entitled to a mandamus; but that he was entitled to damages, if anything, for refusing him the contract ; and that the contract being already let to another, it could not then be let to the relator.

And in The People v. The Contracting Board (33 N. Y., 382) the court, when a party claimed that he was lowest bidder for a contract, and the board rejected his proposals as being deceptive and fraudulent, held, that mandamus would not lie, because the law had committed to the judgment oí the board the decision of the question as to what bids were most advantageous to the State; and that the legislature had given them full authority, whenever, in their opinion, proposals made were excessive and disadvantageous to the State, to decline them; that when they contracted it should be with the lowest bidder; but that that did not imply that the lowest bidder could invoke the powers of the court to compel the board to enter into a contract with him.

The only remaining questions are, 1st. "Whether the act in question is void as being in conflict with article 9 of the Constitution of the State; and, 2d. Whether it is in conflict with section 16 of article 3 of that instrument.

Article 9 commands that the capital of the common school *411 fund shall be preserved inviolate, and that the revenues of the said fund shah be applied to the support of common schools.

It is claimed for the relators, if the consideration upon which the legislature proposed to base the loan in question is to be inquired into, that it doubtless took into consideration the fact that the money was to be loaned and used for the purpose of increasing the means of education in the science of astronomy, and that such use should be taken into account in determining the extent of the security or benefit the State would receive for the loan. I think, however, that it is without force in the direction in which it is sought to be applied, while on the other hand, if the legislature did consider that as any inducement for the loan, and a substitute for pecuniary security, it was in that respect a violation of the Constitution, which directs that the income of the common school fund shall be applied to the support of common schools. If such a consideration would be good in part, it would, for the same reason, be good, if standing alone, and the consequence would follow that the legislature might loan the whole school fund for such purposes upon that security only, and thus entirely divert the school fund to the purposes of science, or to any other purpose, which the legislature might suppose formed an equivalent for pecuniary security.

The legislature may donate any portion of the general fund of the State, or loan it upon any kind of security which it chooses, and such donation or loan will be valid, provided the act be framed and passed pursuant to the .requirement of the Constitution. But it will hardly be contended that it can pass a valid act, in the/b?’m of a donation, which shall diminish the capital of the school fund, or that an act would be constitutional which should in terms authorize a loan of $60,000 of that fund for a term of years upon the security of a mortgage, or bond and mortgage, in the total amount of $6,000.

The act in question is sought to be likened to acts which have been passed, authorizing the capital of this fund to be *412

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42 N.Y. 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-allen-ny-1870.