Wadsworth v. . Bd. of Supervisors

112 N.E. 161, 217 N.Y. 484, 1916 N.Y. LEXIS 1335
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 24, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 112 N.E. 161 (Wadsworth v. . Bd. of Supervisors) 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
Wadsworth v. . Bd. of Supervisors, 112 N.E. 161, 217 N.Y. 484, 1916 N.Y. LEXIS 1335 (N.Y. 1916).

Opinion

Chase, J.

In 1900 the indexes of deeds of conveyance in use in the office of the clerk of the county of Livingston contained many errors, and were consequently unreliable.

On the 12th day of March, 1900, the board of supervisors of said county, by a committee duly authorized by said board, entered into a contract with Henry B. Curtis, the duly elected and acting clerk of said county, by which Curtis agreed ‘1 to make and complete a full, proper and legible index of all deeds of conveyance on record in the *488 office of the clerk of the county of Livingston, filed and • recorded during the period of time between the year 1821, inclusive of that year, and the first day of January, 1900; said index to include indices of every name, whether of grantors or grantees, or of wives or husbands of said grantors or grantees, in said deeds contained; to include the towns in which all property forming the subject-matter of said deeds is situated; and to include the certain years in which the aforesaid deeds were recorded together with references to the respective book of deeds and page therein their records containing.”

Said Curtis further agreed to complete said index within the period of four years from the date of the agreement. The board agreed to pay therefor at the rate of Six cents each for all names, whether of grantors or grantees or of the wives or husbands of said grantors or grantees, in said deeds expressed,” and said board also therein further agreed to supply and furnish all index hooks, stationery and materials of every name and nature ■ necessary for the construction and completion of said index.

The defendant Curtis took office as county clerk of said county on January 1, 1899. His term of office expired with the end of the year 1901, but he was re-elected for a term óf three years. He ceased to hold office as such county clerk at the end of 1904.

On the 13th day of January, 1903, the hoard of supervisors entered into a further and supplemental agreement with Curtis waiving the period provided in the agreement of March 12, 1900, in which said index should be completed and providing therein that in lieu thereof Curtis should proceed to the completion of the index at an average rate of speed per year not less than that by which the work had theretofore been performed under said agreement. The agreement was not wholly consummated when Curtis ceased to hold office as county clerk at the end of 1904. He continued in the perform *489 anee of his agreement with the hoard of supervisors after the expiration of his terms as county clerk without objec-. tion, so far as appears,' from the newly-elected county clerk and said index was completed during the year 1905. The county paid to Curtis from time to time on account of said contract $8,057.94. In the month of November, 1905, Curtis presented to the board of supervisors a statement of his services under said contract for indexing, amounting to $14,465.88, from which he deducted the payments that had been made thereon, leaving a balance alleged to be due him of $6,407.94. The amount included in the account rendered by Curtis for work performed after the expiration of his terms as county clerk was about $650. Thereafter and on January 11, 1906, the board rejected and disallowed the said account. Said Curtis thereupon procured a writ of certiorari directed to the individuals composing the board of supervisors and to the clerk of the hoard requiring them in substance to make return of all of their proceedings in and about the making of said contract and the receipt and rejection of said account. A return thereto was duly filed, but before any hearing was had in said proceeding, and at the regular session of the board of supervisors in 1906, a resolution was passed reciting at length the presentation of said account and a history of said contracts and the work done in pursuance thereof and of the litigation growing out of the rejection of the account and an offer by Curtis, as a compromise of his account, to deduct therefrom $1,500.

The resolution then in terms audited and allowed the account at $5,470.94, which is $1,500 less than the amount then due and unpaid on said account as claimed by Curtis, and directed the payment thereof. The resolution also provided that immediately upon the payment of said account the attorney for the board of supervisors join with the attorney for Curtis in the discontinuance of the certiorari proceeding. Before the account was actu *490 ally paid this action was brought hy the plaintiff as a resident and taxpayer of the county of Livingston to prevent the payment of said account.

The contract provides for general compensation to Curtis for the work therein described. It is not confined to the payment of money necessarily expended by him.

The account of Curtis is based on the contract. It is well settled that the audit cannot be sustained simply because the work pursuant to the contract has been executed. (Hart v. City of New York, 201 N. Y. 45, 55.) It must rest upon the power of the board of supervisors to make the contract with Curtis on which the account is based.

The board of supervisors of a county is vested with such powers of local legislation and administration as are conferred upon it by the legislature. Its power is co-extensive with the power expressly granted to it or which is necessarily or reasonably implied from the powers so expressly conferred. (Chemung Canal Bank v. Supervisors of Chemung County, 5 Denio, 517; Board of Supervisors, Richmond Co., v. Ellis, 59 N. Y. 620; People ex rel. Hotchkiss v. Supervisors, Broome Co., 65 N. Y. 222, 225; People ex rel. Wakeley v. McIntyre, 154 N. Y. 628; People v. Sutherland, 207 N. Y. 22; People ex rel. Smith v. Clarke, 174 N. Y. 259, 262; People ex rel. Sweet v. Board of Supervisors, St. Lawrence Co., 101 App. Div. 327; People ex rel. Slosson v. Board of Supervisors, Westchester Co., 116 App. Div. 844; Woods v. Board Supervisors, Madison Co., 136 N. Y. 403.)

A county is a municipal corporation “ formed for the purpose of exercising the powers and discharging the duties of local government, and the administration of public affairs ¿onferred upon it by law.” (County Law, § 3.) Its powers and duties, except as otherwise provided by law, are exercised by its board of supervisors. There is no provision of the legislature giving to the county of Livingston or its board of supervisors express power to *491 make" the contract with Curtis which it made. It is. claimed that such power is necessarily or reasonably implied from subdivision 1 of section 12, section 26, and subdivisions 9 and 15 of section 240 of the County Law. Section 12 of the County Law (Chap. 11 of the Consolidated Laws, formerly Laws of 1892, chapter 686), so far as it is applicable, is as follows:

“ § 12. General powers.— The board of supervisors shall: 1. Have the care and custody of the corporate property of the county * *

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Bluebook (online)
112 N.E. 161, 217 N.Y. 484, 1916 N.Y. LEXIS 1335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wadsworth-v-bd-of-supervisors-ny-1916.