16 N.Y.S. 364 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1891
Lead Opinion
This action was brought to recover an alleged balance of salary from January 1, 1870, to November 1, 1873, due to the plaintiff as, one of the police justices of the city of New York. Upon the trial the plaintiff alleged that the salary of the office was $10,000 per annum, payable in monthly installments, and that he was paid the salary named until the 31st of July, 1871, from which date to the 1st of November, 1873, he was paid at the rate of $5,000 per annum. The defendant denied that the salary was $10,000 per annum, and alleged that such salary was $5,000, all of which liad
There are questions presented by this appeal as to the constitutionality of the act, which w'ill hereinafter be discussed, and also questions as to the right to maintain this action, no demand having been made after thepassage of the act, which it will not be necessary for us to consider in view of the conclusion we have reached in construing the act in question. In Cox v. Mayor, etc., 103 N. Y. 519, 9 N. E. Rep. 48, it was held that the common council had no power to increase the salary of the police justices, as they attempted to do by the so-called resolution of December, 1869, above referred to, and it was further held that the payment of the increase to the police justices, which had been continued for some time, could not be recovered back by the city, because the money was received in good faith, there was no mistake of facts, and the payments were made voluntarily by the city officials out of moneys lawfully placed in the city treasury for that purpose. Subsequently, in May, 1888, the legislature passed an act (chapter 412) which provided that all payments made by the mayor, etc., from January 1, 1870, to September 1, 1871, (those being the dates between which the increase had been paid by the city,) to the persons then police justices at the rate of salary fixed by resolution of the common council dated December 31, 1869, were declared to be lawfully paid, and said resolution was thereby legalized, ratified, and confirmed.
It is claimed that by this legislative action life was breathed into this resolution as of the time when it was originally passed, and that the plaintiff and others who were then acting as police justices might recover the salary remaining unpaid at the rate of $10,000 per annum. We think upon an examination of the act, in view of the circumstances under which it was passed, that no such construction can be put upon it. In the construing of statutes, the principle is well settled that the legislative intent must govern, even where such construction seems to run counter to the letter of the law. People v. Lacombe, 99 N. Y. 45, 1 N. E. Rep. 599, and cases cited. It is not to be presumed, in the construction of this act, that the legislature intended to make a gift to the persons who occupied the office of police justice between the 1st of January, 1870, and the 1st of Xovember, 1873, and if any reasonable construction can be placed upon the act without giving it this interpre
Daniels, J., concurs.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur with the presiding justice in his construction of the act of 1888, and I think it clear that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover. The act of the common council in attempting to pass the resolution known as the resolution of December, 1869, was without authority. Their act was therefore void, and there was no resolution passed. The legal salary of plaintiff was $5,000 per year. Por that he was to perform the services required of him by law as police justice, and he received such compensation for such services. In 1888, when the act in question was passed, there was no resolution in existence, but for a certain period plaintiff had been paid upon the assumption that the resolution fixing such salary at $10,000 per year was legal. The act proceeds to legalize such payment, and declared that the plaintiff was lawfully paid the amount that he was to be paid under the void resolution. The act then provides that said resolution is hereby legalized, ratified, and confirmed. How for the first time there is legal resolution; for the first time there is anything that is binding upon the municipal corporation. There is no intention expressed that the act should have retroactive effect, except so far as to legalize the payments that had been actually made; so that the position is that on May 26, 1888, a resolution is adopted whereby it is resolved that “the salary of each of the police justices be, and is hereby, fixed at the same rate as now paid to the city judge.” The services that the plaintiff had rendered, and for which he seeks to recover in this action, had been rendered, and his term of office had expired, long prior to the passage of the act. This act, if it was to take effect as of the date of its passage, could not affect his right to compensation rendered before it was passed. Had it been the intention of the legislature to give, by the mere legalization of the void resolution, the retroactive effect claimed by plaintiff, the legalization of the payments by the city officers would have been unnecessary. All that would have been necessary would have been to legalize the passage of the resolution as of the date at which it was attempted to be passed; and when the legislature provided that the payments made on the assumption that the resolution was valid