71 N.Y.S. 1049 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
To determine with reasonable certainty the intention of the Legislature, as expressed in -the act above quoted, it is necessary to bear in mind the facts as they existed and were known to the Legislature at the time the act was passed. It is to those facts that the law has reference, and the inquiry must be what remedy did the Legislature intend to provide % It was known to the Legislature when the
■ It must he also borne in mind that the facts disclosed show a meritorious claim. Landos," J. (in 45 App. Div. 86), had said in respect to .this claim, before the passage of this act, “ Thus an honest unauthorized claim like the one before us must sometimes be held up in order that dishonest ones may not succeed through the same methods.” That there was no intentional evasion of the law on the part of the claimant nor on the part of the Superintendent of Public Works is disclosed by the record, and this was doubtless íknown to the Legislature. It furnishes no light upon the intention ■of the Legislature to refer to other acts passed "relating to other •claims, for this act is peculiar in its wording and was made to fit the particular facts in the knowledge of the Legislature.
" The Court of Claims has said in the opinion handed down, “ The claimant must, therefore, prove a cause of action against the State Without aid from the special law.” In other words, the act of the Legislature was only a device to deceive the claimant. The court •of last resort had already disclosed that no t; cause of action ” could be proved without the aid of a special law which in effect removed the bar created by the Executive Law. I think the Court of Claims was in error in holding, as it apparently did, that the special act was purposeless and fruitless and void of honest intention to furnish any ■adequate relief. The case should be tried upon the theory that the Legislature was honest and the act itself has some virtue in it.- It is not difficult to discover the legislative intent as we have shown. It intended to enable the claimant to reach its equitable rights. It intended to remove the bar created by the Executive Law as the ■only possible.wav by which such equitable rights could be reached, and in the light of all the facts known to the Legislature I do not think it failed in the use of appropriate language to express that intention.
This enabling act does not in express terms ratify and validate the act of the Superintendent of Public Works in making this pur
The judgment of the Court of Claims should be reversed and a, new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
All concurred, except Chase, J., in result, and Parker, P. J., and Smith, J., dissenting.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, costs to appellant to abide event.