220 A.D. 204 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1927
The equitable remedy of an injunction under section 51 of the General Municipal Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 24; Laws of 1909, chap. 29) is sought by the plaintiffs, who sue as residents and taxpayers to restrain the defendant trustees, comprising the board of education of the school district in which the plaintiffs reside, from selling bonds and taking other steps for the erection of a new school
The burden of indebtedness cast upon this district by the action of its board of education will not be greater than the law permits. If there had been an appeal to the Commissioner of Education under section 890 (formerly 880) of the Education Law and the Commissioner had determined that there is here no threat or purpose of illegality or waste, giving the plaintiffs reason to complain, we would agree with him. Construing said sections 467
The plaintiffs do not allege any rights beyond those of taxpayers who will be liable for the payment of taxes to meet the expense of the new schoolhouse if erected. If they have any capacity to sue in their character as taxpayers whose position is not different from that of the whole body of taxpayers in their district, it must be pursuant to some statutory authority. “ At common law a taxpayer as such has no right of action against a public officer to restrain or prevent the waste of public funds or injury to public property, or to restrain a threatened illegal official act. In England the Attorney-General, in right of the prerogative of the Crown, could sue in equity to enjoin the execution of a trust of property by public corporations or the governors thereof. The taxpayer, however, had no right to demand, either at law or equity, the vindication of the .public right unless the violation of that right affected him injuriously in some peculiar manner in which other members of the community were not equally affected.” (Altschul v. Ludwig, 216 N. Y. 459, 464.)
The first statute adopted in this State on that subject was the act of 1872, chapter 161. Various other acts followed, the substance of which was eventually embodied in sections 1925-1931 of the Code of Civil Procedure. When the Civil Practice Act was passed, sections 1925-1931 of the Code of Civil Procedure were omitted, leaving section 51 of the General Municipal Law as the sole statutory authority for maintaining a taxpayer’s action “ to prevent any illegal official act ” or “ to prevent waste or
The order should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the complaint dismissed, with ten dollars costs of the motion.
Van Kirk, Acting P. J., McCann, Davis and Whitmyer, JJ., concur.
Order reversed on the law, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and complaint dismissed, with ten dollars costs.