4 Wend. 406 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1830
By the Court,
It is settled by the repeated adjudications of this court, that overseers of the poor are a quasi corporation, and as such can sue and be sued.
In the case at bar it was expressly admitted, upon the trial in the court below, that the plaintiffs were not the overseers of the poor when the suit was commenced. The fact also appears on the face of the declaration; for the second breach alleged is, that the successors in office of the plaintiffs expended large sums of money, &c. in support of the bastard child, &c. by means of which the plaintiffs sustained damages, &c.; and the plaintiffs claimed a right to recover for monies expended by themselves while in office in support of the child, and also for monies- expended by their successors for the-same purpose. The court below decided that the suit was properly brought in the name of the persons to whom the bond was executed, although they were not in office at the time it was commenced; and also that they had a right to recover, as well for expenditures of their successors in office as for those made by themselves. To these decisions the counsel for the defendants below excepted.
The preceding cases shew that the decision of the court was wrong in both its. branches.
I think it sufficiently appears on the face of this declaration that the plaintiffs were not overseers of the poor when the suit was brought, and of course that the right of action was not in them, but had passed to their successors.
Judgment reversed.