126 N.Y.S. 460 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1910
There is absolutely- no legal or equitable reason why this plaintiff should recover in this action., He claims to have been employed under a resolution of the common council of the defendant in 1893
Assuming for the purposes • of this discussion that the city of Mount Vernon owned the cemetery* and was charged with the'duty of caring for the same,, the employment. alleged in the complaint is not the employment'which the resolution of the common council directed, nor that which it may be..deemed to have ratified. The resolution of the. common council was that “ the Board of Health of this City be, and they hereby are authorized, empowered and directed to employ on behalf of this City, a Sexton to take charge and keep in order- the public cemetery adjoining St: Paul’s Cernetery at Eastchester at a compensation not to exceed Twenty-five .dollars .per-month until such time, as this' City-can properly acquire title to said. property, and a sexton therefor is-duly and legally employed.” “Compensation” is defined-as “ A recompense or reward for some loss, injury,-or service, especially when it is given by statute.” (6 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law [2d ed.], 369.) When the common council of Mount Vernon enacted that the board of health -should be authorized to hire a man “at a compensation not to exceed Twenty-five dollars per month,” it necessarily excluded the ■ idea of any other or further compensation for taking charge of and keeping “ in order the public cemetery,” and yet the plaintiff’s complaint -alleges* and ' the testimony supports the allegation, that the contract made with the plaintiff by the health officer of the board of health was that “ prior to the 15th day of December, 1898, the plaintiff-was engaged by the defendant through its duly-authorized officers to act as City Sexton at Mount Vernon City Cemetery, at Eastchester,'M. 'Y., at the-compensation of $25.00-per month,.
It is not seriously questioned that the common council could not delegate the power to employ the plaintiff to the board of health, assuming that it was authorized to employ him at all, but the case was submitted to the jury on the theory that the defendant could ratify the action of the board of health in hiring the plaintiff. The evidence shows that the health officer of the board of health, assuming to act under the authority of the resolution of the common council above quoted, entered into the contract alleged in the complaint with the plaintiff, and that he reported “ having employed Eugene M. Holley as keeper of the cemetery at Eastchester,” and that “ On motion the Health Officer’s action was approved.” There is nothing here to show that the board of health ever had any notice that the contract gave to the plaintiff the authority to keep to his own use revenues which-belonged to the cemetery organization, or to the employer of the.plaintiff,' and "the only evidence attempted to be adduced in support of a ratification of the common council is found in the bills which were presented and paid by that body during the years from 1893 to 1898. These bills gave no notice of the contract entered into between the health officer and the plaintiff ; they read: “ To services as city sexton from March, 15th to April 15th, 1894, $25.00.” .The only possible ratification, therefore, is the ratification of the employment of the plaintiff to “ take charge and keep in order the public cemetery,” while the contract actually made with the plaintiff was that he was to have-
• But there is a more fundamental difficulty with the plaintiff’s cause of action, and that is that neither the pleadings'nor the proofs show' any authority on the part of the city of Mount Vernon to employ a “ Sexton to take charge and keep in order the public cemetery adjoining St., Paul’s Cemetery at Eastchester, * * * * until such time as this City can properly acquire title to said property and' a sexton therefor is duly and legally employed,”, for the very good reason that it appeared upon the face of this resolution that the city of Mount Vernon did not- own this cemetery,- and the evidence' clearly indicated that the title was in some one other than the defendant* The Constitution of this State provided (Const. [1S84] ■ art. 8, § 11), and now provides (Const. [1894] art. 8, § 10, as amd. in 1899, 1905, 1907 and 1909) that “No county, city, town or village shall hereafter give any .money or property, or" loan .its money or credit to or in aid of any individual, association or corporation,” .and if ..the cemetery in question did not -belong to the defendant, then it clearly had no authority under the Constitution
. The judgment and order appealed from should be reversed and a new trial ordered, costs to.abide the.-event. :
•Burr and Carr, JJ., concurred ; Hirschberg, P. J., and Thomas, J., dissented. . . ’;
Judgment and order of-the County Court of Westchester county • reversed and nevv trial ordered, costs to abide the event.