The People v. Fields

50 How. Pr. 481, 12 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 382
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 50 How. Pr. 481 (The People v. Fields) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The People v. Fields, 50 How. Pr. 481, 12 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 382 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1875).

Opinion

Westbrook, J.

— This action is brought to recover moneys which, as is alleged, were illegally and without authority of law paid to the defendant Fields, by the corporation of the city of Hew York, through its chamberlain, upon the check of its comptroller, Richard B. Connolly, countersigned by its mayor, A. Oakey Hall, dated June 3, 1870.

It will be unnecessary, in this ojfinion, to recite in detail the facts upon which the claim is founded, and it is only necessary to state that the defendant Fields received the money ($459,977.79) as assignee of a number of firemen of the city of Hew York, who insisted that under certain acts of the legislature of this State they were entitled to be paid for their services as such. The cause has once before been tried, and resulted in a recovery by the plaintiffs, which was not sustained by the court of appeals. The report of the case in that court (58 N. Y., 491) shows, that the court held that this money was received by Fields, and paid to him without authority of law, and that a cause of action rested “ somewhere ” against Fields to recover the sum so illegally paid (See opinion of Folger, J., pages 497 to 506, both inclusive).

The corporation of the city of Hew York was. made a defendant in the action. It originally answered, but before the first trial of the cause, the answer was withdrawn, and it now makes no defense. The effect of such withdrawal of the answer upon the suit, especially in view of the allegations [483]*483of the complaint, “ that ever since the last mentioned fraudulent payment to the said Thomas C. Fields, the mayor, aldermen and commonalty of the city of Hew York, and all their several officers, if any, who might or could exercise any power or authority in the premises, and the board of supervisors of the county of Hew York, and all their several officers, .if any, who might or could exercise any power or authority in the premises, have with notice and full knowledge of such payment, and of its fraudulent nature, acquiesced, and still do acquiesce, in such fraudulent misapplication of the said moneys, and at all times since such application were and still are colluding and conniving with the said Thomas C. Fields, in the fraud aforesaid, and in protecting him from responsibility for the same by any judicial means or remedies,” was also considered and adjudicated in the court of appeals. It was there decided (see opinion aforesaid, pages, 508, 509) that, as the city had withdrawn its answer, the averments of the complaint we have quoted, even though denied by Fields, must, for all purposes of this action, be taken as true. That the admission thus made (to use the language of judge Folgee, on page 509) “ binds all parties to the actionj the party defendant who has admitted, and also the party co-defendant, because it takes from him the opportunity of saying that if recovery is had in this action against him, he is still liable to his now co-defendant in another action for the same cause.” When the cause was presented to the court of appeals, it rested upon a complaint, which, in its ■ prayer for relief, asked a judgment against the defendant Fields, in favor of the plaintiffs, for $459,977.79, with interest from June 3d, 1870, with costs of suit. Ho recovery, judging from the relief asked, was sought, which would enure to the benefit of the municipal corporation, the money of which had been wrongfully taken; and the judgment actually rendered and taken awarded the recovery to the plaintiffs, uncharged with any trust or duty in regard thereto to the party to whom it rightfully belonged. Upon the present trial — as all the facts [484]*484necessary to a proper adjudication of the cause are set out in the complaint — the plaintiffs ask that the prayer for relief therein may be so amended that they shall demand to recover the judgment therein prayed for for the benefit of the city, and that the recovery and judgment shall show that the moneys awarded thereby, to be paid by the defendant Fields to the plaintiffs, shall be so paid to the latter as the trustees of, and for the benefit of the defendant, the mayor, aldermen and commonalty of the city of New York.” This new position of the plaintiffs involves two questions: First. Could the action in such new form be maintained ? And, Second. Would it be proper at this late stage of the cause to allow the amendment asked for ? These questions will be answered in the order in which they have been stated.

It was claimed during the trial of this action, and more especially upon the argument thereof, by the counsel of Mr. Fields, that the court of appeals had decided in this cause, and also in -that against Ingersoll (58 N. Y., 1), that no such action, even in the proposed amended form, could be maintained by the present plaintiffs. If that court has so held, the discussion must end. It certainly is my duty, as well as my pleasure, to follow the court of dernier resort; and it will be followed, too, without resorting to any quibble whatsoever, to avoid its plain and manifest holding, Has that court held as the counsel for Mr. Fields claims ?

In the case of The People agt. Ingersoll (58 N. Y., page 1) the city of New York was not a defendant, neither was the point now made involved. A reference to page 13 of the volume containing the report, will show that judge Allew starts the discussion of the main question in that cause by showing that the people sought to maintain that action upon the ground that “ the state owned ” the money sought to be recovered therein. This point is established by reference to the brief of the counsel for the plaintiffs; wherein and whereby it was distinctly claimed and urged, that the money could be recovered because the state owned it,” and with [485]*485equal distinctness conceded that the action could only “ be maintained by the party who is regarded as the technical owner of the money; and the party so regarded, in the law, is the party to maintain the action.” It is evident, then, from the absence of the corporation of the city of New York as a party defendant to that action, and the claim made to the court in its support, that no such questions as this cause, .by the amendment to the complaint and the proposed judgment, involves were presented or discussed. All discussion, however, upon the question, that the Ingersoll case decides the point, that the present plaintiffs cannot maintain this action as trustees for the city of New York, is ended by the remark of judge Fol&ee in his opinion in this cause (58 N. Y., 510), which is : “ In The People agt. Ingersoll this court purposely refrained from declaring or even intimating an opinion upon this question.”

Neither, after a careful reading of the opinion of judge Folgeb in this cause, have I been able to reach the conclusion, that the court of appeals has decided that if the complaint therein had, upon the facts therein averred, asked a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, as trustees for the benefit of the city of New York, and had in fact obtained such a judgment, that such judgment would not have been sustained. On the contrary, as I read that opinion, it asserts that the court is foreclosed from considering that question by the form of the complaint and the form of the judgment. On pages 511 and 512 it is said: Upon this appeal we are shut up to the question, whether the plaintiffs, the people of this state, are entitled to a judgment in their favor for the money illegally and fraudulently taken from the city of New York.

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Bluebook (online)
50 How. Pr. 481, 12 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-fields-nysupct-1875.