6 Daly 230 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1875
Plaintiff sued to recover his salary as assistant sergeant-at-arms of the board of aldermen, for four months (from September 1st, 1871, to January 1st, 1872), at the rate of $2,500 per annum (viz., $833 33), upon account of which he acknowledged a payment of $500, and recovered a judgment for the balance. He accepted that sum, viz., $500 (although as he says under protest) under and in pursuance of the action of the board of apportionment and audit created by chapter 9 of the Laws of 1872, and gave a receipt as in full. He was then, so far as appears, without remedy, except as it was obtainable under that act, or as such payment in subserviency to and in accordance with its terms was so made to him. So far as that board was concerned, various considerations may have'influenced it in its judgment; to wit, that plaintiff’s salary had not been properly fixed beyond the rate allowed; that he had not fully performed his services for the whole period of four months; or that no appropriation, beyond the sum allowed to be raised and paid in pursuance of that act, had been previously made as required by law for the payment of his salary. The position of the parties was not that of mere private creditors and debtors, but was one in which the plaintiff, while acting as a public servant, became entitled to payment therefor out of the public treasury, of such salary (a just compensation for his services) as the law had allowed to him, and the defendants, as also such public servants and agents, were, by some public statute, bound to pay the plaintiff from funds in their hands raised by taxation, or which they were so authorized to raise for that purpose. A municipal corporation is a creature of the law for public pur
Charles P. Daly, Ch. J., and Larremore, J., concurred.
Judgment reversed.