76 N.W. 1051 | N.D. | 1898
This is an action to recover damages for a personal
Upon these facts the appellant’s counsel in their brief state their contentic : as follows: “We contend that the record in this case does not discicv'.c that any claim has ever been presented to be considered by the board of audit of the City of Fargo in this case. Until such presentation has been made, such board of audit has no jurisdiction to pass upon the merits of the claim; and, until such jurisdiction has been conferred, no action of want of action on the part of che board of audit can warrant the prosecution of an action upon the claim in any court.” In explanation of what is meant by counsel by the statement in their brief that “the record does not disclose that any claim has ever been presented to be considered by the board
Counsel further argue that, inasmuch as the presentation of this class of claims is a necessary preliminary to the institution of an action to collect the same, the presentation is therefore assimilated to a process summons or notice, which must be served personally, or in some manner pointed out by the statute. We think this point is too far-fetched. The language of the charter is simply that this class of claims shall “be presented to the mayor and council.” The statute, as has been seen, leaves the manner of such presentation wholly optional with the claimant.
Counsel further argue that, when the mayor and council sit as a board of audit upon this class of claims, they are a distinct and independent body, in which the mayor is an active member, having a vote, and over which he is not necessarily the presiding officer. We deem this point wholly immaterial to a decision of this case. The mode of organizing this independent body, if it is such, is not prescribed in the statute, nor are the times and places of its sessions prescribed, nor is the mode of calling it together laid down in the law. Nor does the statute, in terms or by implication, accord any hearing to the claimant before any independently organized body upon the merits of his claim. As has been seen, the claimant is required by statute, after putting his claim upon paper, and verifying it, to present the same to the “mayor and council,” without specifying whether such presentation shall be made at a session of either one body or the other, — if, indeed, the law ever contemplated the existence of two distinct and independent bodies in this connection. Without enlarging further upon the case, it will suffice