136 N.Y.S. 1019 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1912
The main purpose of this action is to require an accounting of the entire fund produced by assessment on property benefited by the West Side sewer; and to require those defendants, whose certificates have been paid in full, to restore to the fund an equitable proportion of such payment for the benefit of the plaintiff and others in like case, whose certificates have not been paid in full, to the end that a ratable adjustment of payments of said fund upon such certificates may be decreed.
Plaintiff is the owner of thirteen certificates of indebtedness, which I will hereafter refer to as bonds, issued by commissioners of sewerage, pursuant to the statutory authority conferred upon them for the purpose of raising funds to construct a sewer in certain wards of the city of Bochester and the town of Gates, known as the West Side sewer. Each bond was of the denomination of $500 bearing interest at the rate of six per cent per annum payable semi-annually and serially numbered. The total issue'of bonds was $453,500.
The construction of the sewer was authorized in the first instance by chapter 603 of the Laws of 1892. Amendments or supplementary legislation to this statute were successively made by chapters 55 and 368 of the Laws of 1893, chapter 438 of the Laws of 1895, chapter 144 of the Laws of 1895, chapter 650 of the Laws of 1896, chapter 315 of the Laws of 1898, chapter 620 of the Laws of 1904 and chapter 421 of the Laws of 1908. Broadly speaking, the general scheme of the statute was similar in general purport to that usually found in statutes authorizing local improvements benefiting limited areas or districts in a municipality, the expense of which is to be met by local assessment upon property benefited within the assessment district. So far as material for our present purpose the statute provided for the appointment of commissioners of sewerage having power, among other things, to construct the sewer and pay the expense thereof from assessments by them levied, which were to be made by them from their determination of the value of benefits and of the probable cost and expense of the work before they entered upon the construction of the sewer, and which were to be a lien upon the lands assessed and a personal liability of the individual owners. They were also empowered
By the terms of the bond the commissioners as commissioners acknowledge an indebtedness in the amount of the bond, and as such commissioners promise to pay .the same and the interest coupons as they should become due; but there is no corporate or personal obligation to pay the same. The owner of such a certificate had as his sole ultimate recourse for its payment the proceeds of. assessments levied for the improvement, to which he with the owners of other certificates had an absolute contract right. (People ex rel. Security Trust Co. v. Treasurer, etc., 191 N. Y. 15, 19.)
The bonds matured in ten years and contained a further provisión that “ the right of paying this bond at any time when interest is payable, after the expiration of two years from the date hereof,” was reserved. The date of the bonds was August 1, 1896. '
The sewer was completed and in 1898- an act which I have referred to above was passed providing, as stated in its title, for the transfer to the treasurer Of the city of Rochester of certain powers of the commissioners of sewerage. By this legislation the commissioners were required within twenty days to transfer all records, etc., the assessment roll, all moneys collected thereon
It will be recalled that the right to pay the bonds issued by the commissioners at their option would mature at the date
Plaintiff insists that the payment in full of these bonds by the treasurer was unwarranted and made in violation of a trust obligation existing for the benefit and protection of the holders of all the bonds to apply these funds ratably upon all bonds, if' payment was to be made at all. He also claims that the statute only authorized the treasurer to pay all the bonds from the proceeds of the new issue of bonds authorized to be made by. the treasurer together with the available moneys in his hands as successor of the commissioners; and the payment of a part only from assessment proceeds alone was unauthorized. This claim is based largely upon the primary claim 'that these assessment funds were charged with a trust' in the hands of the treasurer for the benefit of each holder of the bonds in ratable proportion to the extent of his holdings. But it seems to me that this position' is not tenable. During all the time that Williams acted as treasurer he had the authority to issue new bonds in ah amount sufficient with such assessment funds as he then had on hand to take up all the outstanding bonds
Other phases of the controversy as well as -that I have set forth above are discussed by Mr. Justice Foote in his opinion (11 Misc. Rep. 552) delivered at Special Term, and I agree with his conclusions.
A point is made that the allowance of costs was unwarranted and should have been limited to a single bill. Plaintiff asked in his complaint for costs against each defendant separately, except the county treasurer, who is exempted from this demand. Those parties, appearing by separate attorneys were awarded separate bills of costs. I think the allowance was well warranted. Their interests were several and appearance by an attorney of his choice was the right of each defendant. His succéss reasonably entitled him to costs.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred; Foote, J., not sitting.,
Judgment affirmed, with costs.