Town of Solon v. Williamsburgh Savings Bank

21 N.E. 168, 114 N.Y. 122, 23 N.Y. St. Rep. 138, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1075
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 16, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 21 N.E. 168 (Town of Solon v. Williamsburgh Savings Bank) 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
Town of Solon v. Williamsburgh Savings Bank, 21 N.E. 168, 114 N.Y. 122, 23 N.Y. St. Rep. 138, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1075 (N.Y. 1889).

Opinion

Bradley, J.

The relief sought in bringing this action was that certain bonds of the plaintiff, purporting to have been issued pursuant to statute, and held by the defendant, be adjudged void, and that they be surrendered up and canceled.

They, with other bonds amounting in the aggregate to $44,800, were, by commissioners appointed for that purpose, in a proceeding had before the county judge of Oortland county, issued in aid of the Utica, Chenango and Cortland Railroad Company. The proceeding, which resulted in an adjudication and appointment of the commissioners, was had and completed in July, 1870. It was founded upon the statute, which provided that whenever a majority of the taxpayers of any municipal corporation in this state, whose names appear upon the last preceding tax-list or assessment-roll of said corporation, as owning or representing a majority of the taxable property in the corporate limits of such corporation, shall make application to the county judge of the county in which such corporation is situated, by petition verified by one of the petitioners, setting forth that they are such a majority of taxpayers and represent such a majority of taxable property,” etc.’ the .further proceedings may be taken as therein provided, for the requisite adjudication and the appointment of commissioners to issue the bonds of the corporation and invest them in the stock or bonds of the railroad company, in view of which the proceeding was taken. (Laws of 1869, chap. 907.) The adjudication was in due form made, and the commissioners appointed were vested with power to issue the bonds of the plaintiff and invest them in the stock or bonds of the railroad company, if the proceeding was so taken and conducted as to confer jurisdiction on the county judge to entertain and consummate it.

*130 ■The first inquiry which is the subject of controversy arises upon the petition presented to the county judge, and by which the proceedings before him were initiated. It was essential to his jurisdiction and to the validity of the adjudication and its result, that the petition contain a statement of all the facts which the statute provided should be set forth in the application. ° And, as the proceeding rests wholly upon the statute, ¡and is in derogation of the common law, and affects the rights ,of property of individuals, the statute must be strictly pursued in all respects pertaining to the question of jurisdiction, to render the proceeding effectual. (People ex rel. Rogers v. Spencer, 55 N. Y. 1; People ex rel. Green v. Smith, Id. 135; Town of Wellsborough v. n. Y. & C. R. R. Co., 76 id. 182; Craig v. Town of Andes, 93 id. 405.)

The petition was addressed to the county judge and proceeded -.to state that “ The undersigned, representing a majority of the .taxpayers of the town of Solon, in said county of Cortland, whose names appear upon the last preceding tax-list or assessment-roll of said town,” etc. Hothing in the further provisions of the petition is criticised. It was signed by persons •purporting then to be citizens of that town, and upon it was ■the verification by the affidavit of one of the petitioners, which, ¡among other things, stated that “ the persons signing said petition are a majority of the taxpayers whose names appear upon ;the last preceding tax-list and assessment-roll in said town.”

, The contention on the part of the .plaintiff is, that the petition failed to set forth that the petitioners were such a majority of the taxpayers by reason of the insertion of the word •“ representing,” which, it is claimed, so qualified the phrase ■“ a majority of the taxpayers ” following it, as to import that ¡such majority did not themselves subscribe the petition, but ¡(lid it only through the instrumentality of others who were ¡such subscribers, and, in the relation of agency, represented .such taxpayers in thus making the application. If the petition in that respect requires such construction, it was defective .and could not support the proceedings founded upon it. xi (People ex rel. Haines v. Smith, 45 N. Y. 772.) The inser *131 tian of the word representing ” was clearly of no advantage to the petition, and if it had been omitted, there would have been no opportunity for criticism. But the word in its connection and apparent purpose, we think, is not entitled to the interpretation and effect contended for by the plaintiff’s counsel, in giving construction to the instrument. It may be treated as having reference and relation to the term “ majority ” rather than to the persons constituting it. The inquiries, What represents a majority ? How is a majority represented ? in their application to it as a term, might produce as the answer: More than one-half of the whole of any number of persons or things. In that sense it would be within common parlance to say that a majority is represented by a particular body of people, although they are the persons who constitute the majority. That this was the meaning applicable and intended by the statute to be applied in the use there made of it, appears by the provision in the second section of the same act, that if it shall appear satisfactorily to him (the coimty judge) that the said petitioners, or the said petitioners and such other taxpayers as may then and there appear before him and express a desire to join as petitioners in said petition, do represent a majority of the taxpayers,” etc., and in the third section, that “ if the said judge shall adjudge and determine that such petitioners do represent a majority of such taxpayers” etc. The same expression is carried into and repeated in the amendatory act. (Laws 1811, chap. 925, § 2.) The use made of the word in that connection by the statute would seem to be a legislative interpretation of it for the purposes of the act, and thus give to the phrase in question, of the petition, the requisite import, and make it correspond, in that respect, with the affidavit of verification and the adjudication as made by the county judge. The portion of the petition which embraced the names of the subscribers is not in the record, and, in view of the finding of the trial court, it must be assumed that no appearance of agency was there indicated. Apparently, as principals, and in the manner required by the statute, the petitioners, appear in the petition, as owning or representing a majority of the tax *132 able property in the .town, and represent that they desire the creation and issue of its bonds, etc. It is very likely that the exercise of more care in preparing the petition would have been manifested if the criticised word had been omitted; and the same may perhaps be said in respect to the like phrase in the statute. But when it can be ascertained, such meaning must be given to words as is ajiparently designed for them in their connection and use in statutes or other instruments, although it may not strictly conform to their lexical meaning. We think the construction was warranted that the petition set forth that its subscribers then were a majority of the taxpayers of the town, etc., as required by the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.E. 168, 114 N.Y. 122, 23 N.Y. St. Rep. 138, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1075, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-solon-v-williamsburgh-savings-bank-ny-1889.