60 A.D. 56 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
Lead Opinion
This case as it comes before us presents the questions whether the facts alleged, in what the plaintiff calls his “supplemental and amended complaint,” are sufficient to constitute a cause of action. To that complaint the defendant Coler demurred upon the ground that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action as to him, which demurrer was sustained and an interlocutory judgment entered with leave to the plaintiff to serve an amended complaint. Such amended complaint not having been served, the issues of fact raised by the answers of the other defendants came on for trial at Special Term, and the Special Term dismissed the complaint as to these defendants. By the decision filed upon such dismissal it was recited that all the allegations of the complaint having been duly admitted, and no proof having been interposed by the defendants, or either of them, and the defendants having moved after the plaintiffs opening to dismiss the action on the ground that the supplemental and amended complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against the said defendants or either of them, the court found as a conclusion of law that the amended and supplemental complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against the said defendants or either of them, and directed final judgment dismissing the complaint; and upon this decision and the decision sustaining the demurrer interposed by defendant Coler, final judgment was entered from which the plaintiff appeals.
Upon this appeal, therefore, we have presented the single question as to whether the complaint alleges facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against the defendants or either of them. The
The statute (Laws of 1892, chap. 301) authorizes a taxpayer to commence an action against the officers, agents, commissioners, or other persons acting or who have acted for and on behalf of any municipal corporation to prevent any illegal official act on the part of said officers or other persons, to prevent Waste or injury to, or to restore and make good any property, funds or estate of such municipal corporation. By this statute there are two distinct causes
The complaint then' alleges that “ there exist good and sufficient defenses to the said claim, or to a large portion thereof, which will reduce it in any event if properly interposed and presented, to a sum much below the said sum of $4,000.” It can hardly be claimed that this is an allegation of a fact which would justify any relief. The allegation that there exist good and sufficient defenses to the said claim is a conclusion of law, and it was for the responsible law officers of the city to determine what defenses should be interposed and how the action should be defended. As was. said in Bush v. O’Brien (supra;) : “ The corporation counsel has the supreme power of determining the nature of the defense that shall be interposed to any action that shall be brought thereon.” Before a taxpayer can interpose to compel the restitution to the city of any of the city money under and in pursuance of any legal proceedings facts must be alleged to show that there has been waste or injury to the property, funds or estate of the city, and there is here no allegation of a fact which, in the absence of fraud or collusion on the part of the officer of the city whose duty it was to present such defenses, is sufficient to support a finding that waste or injury had resulted. It would appear from the allegations of the complaint that when this judgment was entered an action to enforce such claim was on trial, and the offer of judgment that was made would appear to be an offer made by the corporation counsel during such trial. There is no allegation that the evidence in the case thus on trial did not show that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the amount that .the corporation counsel offered to allow it to recover, and the fact that a continuance of the trial and prosecution of the defenses of the city would reduce the claim below the sum of $4,000' is not an allegation of a fact that the judgment against the city would have been less than the $4,000, for this sum of $4,000 was fixed as including all interest and costs. There is nothing in the facts alleged which would tend in the slightest degree to impugn the good faith of any of the city officials who had to do with the determinatipn of how much was due upon this claim, no fact alleged from which it could
It follows that the judgment appealed from must be affirmed, with costs.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the result reached by Mr. Justice Ingraham in this case and generally in the law as stated therein, but I cannot concur in that portion of the opinion in which it is suggested that where the action is brought to restrain an illegal official act, and it appears that the act had been consummated before the injunction was obtained, there would be no cause of action. I do not think that the act should be so limited, nor is it necessary in this to decide that question. The statute authorizes an action to prevent an illegal official act. It is not limited in terms to a contemplated illegal act, and I can conceive of cases where the illegal act may have been done, so far as the officers of a municipal corporation are concerned, and yet the consequences of it may be such that a taxpayer’s action might be necessary to prevent the evil effect of such consequences, although they did not amount to a waste or injury of the property of the town. There is nothing in the statute, either expressly or by fair implication, which precludes the court, in a proper case, from granting a mandatory injunction requiring the undoing of an official act which has been completed, if the welfare of the municipal corporation requires that it be done. It is not necessary in this case to limit the construction of the act in the regard mentioned or to pass upon that question, and, therefore, I do not concur with so much of the opinion as lays down the law in that regard.
Van Brunt, P. J., and Patterson, J., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.