147 N.Y. 203 | NY | 1895
The plaintiff brings this action for himself and as assignee of others to recover the salaries alleged to be due them as aldermen of the city of New York for the year 1877. The claim is that they were elected to such offices pursuant to the act of the legislature, contained in chapter 137 of the Laws of 1870, as amended by chapter 574 of the Laws of 1871; which provided for the election, upon a general ticket from the city at large, of a board of fifteen aldermen. The defense of the city is that those laws were repealed by chapter 335 of the Laws of 1873 and, further, that pursuant to the latter act, which contained a charter for the city, other persons were duly elected as aldermen, at the election at which the plaintiff and his associates claimed to have been elected; who entered upon and executed the duties pertaining to the office of an alderman of the city, and were paid the salaries claimed by the plaintiff.
When the action came on for trial no evidence was given. *207 The whole case was agreed to be contained in the pleadings; it being expressly admitted by the plaintiff that the salaries claimed by the plaintiff in his complaint had been paid by the city to other persons, assuming to have been elected and who acted as a board of aldermen under the charter of 1873. The complaint was thereupon dismissed by the court, upon the motion of the defendant.
Section 4 of chapter 335 of the Laws of 1873 provided for a system of minority representation in the board of aldermen of the city of New York, by restraining the right of a voter to vote for all the aldermen to be elected. It is unimportant to more particularly refer to the provisions of the section, as the system was, not long thereafter, abolished. (Chap. 403, Laws of 1882.) The plaintiff's propositions are that those provisions were unconstitutional and void, for being in violation of that part of the Constitution of the state, which guarantees to every qualified voter the right to vote for all officers that may be elected by the people (Art. 2, sec. 1), and that the acts of 1870 and 1871 remained in force; under whose provisions he and his associates were elected and became the legally constituted board of aldermen and, as such, were entitled to their salaries. The determination of the question of constitutionality, however, is not necessary to the determination of the case, and as the ground upon which the decision of the General Term of the Supreme Court has been placed is clearly presented in the case and is perfectly tenable, our judgment may and should rest upon it. We should not pass upon the constitutionality of a statute, if the question is immaterial to the case. (Frees v. Ford,
This action is to recover the salaries of the plaintiff and his associates as aldermen of the city for the year mentioned and, *208
if we should assume all they claim as to the unconstitutionality of the provisions of the fourth section of the charter of 1873 and the validity of their election and that they were de jure
aldermanic officers, there is the answer that others assumed to have been elected, received their certificates of election, were inducted into and occupied the office, exercised its duties and, as officers de facto, were paid salaries. That is a complete answer and one which has the sanction of the authorities. Their title cannot be questioned collaterally in such an action and, even were the action of such a nature as to permit the question, the payment already made to the de facto officers of the salary belonging to the office would be a good defense to the claim of the plaintiff. The case of Dolan v. The Mayor (
The appellant, however, undertakes to meet this phase of the matter by the suggestion that if section four of the act of 1873 was unconstitutional and void, no legal office of alderman was created by its provisions and, therefore, there could *209
not be either a de jure or a de facto incumbent thereof. But that office as a part of the local government existed by law and was not created by the act of 1873. In the case of Norton v.Shelby County (
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed. *210