Wadsworth v. Board of Supervisors

115 N.Y.S. 8
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 30, 1908
StatusPublished

This text of 115 N.Y.S. 8 (Wadsworth v. Board of Supervisors) 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
Wadsworth v. Board of Supervisors, 115 N.Y.S. 8 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1908).

Opinion

BENTON, J.

Action by a taxpayer to restrain the levying, assessment, and collection of claim of Henry B. Curtis for $5,470.94 pursuant to a resolution of the board of supervisors passed December 12, 1906. Said Curtis was county clerk of Livingston county from 1899 to 1905. His compensation consisted of fees. On December 7, 1899, the board of supervisors of said county appointed a committee of three, among other things, “to take such action as [11]*11they may deem advisable for making new indexes for deeds in the county clerk’s office.” On March 12, 1900, said committee entered into a written contract, dated that day, with Henry B. Curtis to make and complete a full, proper, and legible index of all deeds on record in the office from the year 1821, inclusive, to 1900. The contract provides specifically how the index should be made and the .compensation to be paid Curtis, which was agreed to be at the rate of six cents each “for names of all grantees or grantors or of the wives and husbands of said grantors or grantees in said deeds expressed.” This work was to be completed within four years from the date of the said agreement, but by a supplementary agreement, dated January 12, 1903, this provision was waived, and it was agreed that the work should proceed to completion at an average rate per year, but not less than the work theretofore performed under the said contract. The books have been completed. They consist of 20 volumes, and include the period from and including 1821 to 1905. The county provided the necessary books. The claim of Curtis amounted to $14,465.88. He has been paid to apply on said contract $8,057.94.

In November, 1905, Curtis prepared a verified claim and presented it to the board of supervisors for the balance due under said contract, namely, $6,407.94. This claim was referred to a committee, who obtained the opinion of counsel, which opinion was to the effect that the contract was void, and that .neither the board of supervisors nor its special committee had power to enter into such a contract or to bind the county of Livingston by such a contract. After various hearings on January 11, 190'6, the said board of supervisors duly adopted a resolution rejecting and disallowing entirely the claim so presented, on the ground that the contract was illegal and void. On March 16, 1906, Curtis sued out a writ of certiorari to review such proceedings, and on July 2, 1906, a return was made to such writ, but no further proceedings were taken in court thereunder. In November, 1906, the matter again came before the board of supervisors, and Mr. Curtis appeared and offered to compromise. On January 12, 1906, the board of supervisors passed a voluminous resolution, providing, among other things, that:

“For the purpose of effecting an adjustment of said litigation, and in accordance with said arrangements, that the claim of Henry B. Curtis be and is- hereby audited and allowed at $5,470,94, and that an order be issued payable to said Curtis therefor,” etc.

In the meantime, and on December 3, 1906, the said board of supervisors passed a resolution directing the county clerk to use the work, and the books have been since, and are still, in use in the county clerk’s office of Livingston county. Curtis’ term as county clerk expired on December 31, 1904. At that time the work had not been completed. He continued it, and the value of the services rendered after the commencement of the year 1905 was “six hundred and fifty-odd dollars.”-

Section 26 of the county law (Laws 1892, p. 1751, c. 686) provides for the copying of books and records, and enacts that the board of [12]*12supervisors “may authorize county officers having the official custody .or control of any such books or records, etc., to cause copies thereof to be made and certified for the public use, and it shall be the duty of such officers to cause the same to be made or certified, whenever by reason of age, exposure or any other casualty, the same should be necessary.” Any officers making such transcripts are by the act “to be paid such sum therefore as shall be just, but such payment shall not exceed a sum to be certified by the county judge, or a justice of the Supreme Court of the judicial district, as reasonable therefor. Said board of supervisors shall not accept any pay for said work until the work shall be examined and approved as to its manner and form of execution by such judge or justice, nor shall any board of supervisors order any such work to be done until such judge or justice, after said examination, shall certify to such work bping necessary for the safety and security of the public records.”

The complaint alleges that these indexes were not copies within the meaning of section 26. This allegation is denied in the answer, and is one of the issues litigated upon the trial.' I hold that said Curtis did not make copies of said books or records. The committee was not appointed to cause copies to be made, but to “take such action as they may deem advisable for making new indexes,” and the provisions of the contract are consistent with the making of new indexes, and not the copying of the old. Mr. Curtis testified as follows:

“Q. In making the indexes, the new ones, of what use were the old indexes? A. They were used on the two comparisons. Q. What were the comparisons? A. A comparison of the slips made from the records, and the last comparison with the new indexes. Q. In the progression of this work for the making of the new indexes, it then became necessary to examine every record in the office? A. Yes, sir. Q. You would" begin with the first volume of deeds and go through it? A. Yes, sir. Q. And then make your new index directly from the deed, did you not? A. No; we made the slips from the records. Q. And the slips were copied into the new indexes? A. Yes, sir; after further comparison with the old indexes. Q. Aside from the names of the grantors and grantees, where the old indexes were correct, to what extent are the new ones copies of the old? A. They are copied from the same records.”

It would appear that the old indexes, instead of being a help, from which they copied, gave them additional work, with the two comparisons made for the purpose of obviating every possible mistake. The old records consisted of two parts, each in eight volumes, four grantors and four grantees; the first running from 1821 to 1870, and the second from 1870 on. The .books were nearly filled, so that a new set would soon be needed. Furthermore, leaves had become loose in them and errors had been discovered, in that deeds had been omitted or that deeds had been indexed wrong, as, for instance, upon sheriff’s sales, instead of the name of the actual owner, whose interest the sheriff sold, some were indexed in the name of the sheriff as grantor. In addition to what was contained in the old indexes, the new set contained the Christian name of the grant- or’s or the grantee’s wife, as the case might be, and also the name of the town in which the real estate was situated. It was never [13]*13intended that these new indexes should be certified as copies for public use, nor by reason of age, exposure, or other casualty had it become necessary to make certified copies to be used in the place of the originals with like effect as is the purpose of section 26.

Again, before the appointment of the committee to make the contract, no judge or justice of the Supreme Court, after examination, had certified that such work was necessary for the safety and security of the public records.

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Bluebook (online)
115 N.Y.S. 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wadsworth-v-board-of-supervisors-nysupct-1908.