83 N.Y. 100 | NY | 1880
This case comes here on appeal from a judgment sustaining a demurrer to the complaint. The ground of demurrer is that the facts stated in the complaint do not show a cause of action against the defendant. The action may be called one for money had and received by the defendant to the use of the plaintiff. The averments of the complaint being taken as true, it appears that there was a sum of money belonging to the plaintiff in the official custody of the county clerk of Kings county. The money was the surplus arising upon the foreclosure of a mortgage upon certain lands in the town of New Lots, devised to the plaintiff, which mortgage was laid upon them by the devisor of the plaintiff; it was foreclosed after his death. An assessment had been in form laid upon these lands, to raise money to pay the expenses of a local improvement, by which they were benefited, or supposed to be. This assessment was laid in pursuance of acts of the legislature. (Laws of 1869, chap. 217, § 4, vol. 1, p. 407; Laws of 1870, chap. 619, § 3, vol. 2, p. 1436.) Those acts were unconstitutional and void, and the assessment was of no validity or effect. (Stuart v. Palmer,
We think that it cannot be successfully denied that the plaintiff had a right to recover against some one for the money. It was her's as being the result of a conversion by judicial proceedings into personal property of real estate devised to her. It was taken from her, she neither willing nor consenting thereto, without lawful right. Though taken under the formality of law, the legislative acts were void and the assessment invalid. But we are not now concerned to determine against whom of those other than the defendant, who touched her money, she might properly have brought the action. The question here is, can she maintain it against the town of New Lots? The question was disposed of in the learned court below against her, on the ground that the allegation in her complaint, that the law authorizing the assessment was unconstitutional and void, is not tantamount to an averment that it was void on its face; that she was legally bound to pay the assessment until it was vacated; and that her only remedy is a reversal of the adjudication by which the assessment was laid. But we have held in Stuart v. Palmer
(supra), not only that this assessment was unconstitutional and void, but that its invalidity must at once appear whenever it is brought into a judicial focus; and that, for that reason, a suit in equity to vacate it as a cloud upon title cannot be maintained. There are judgments that to recover back money paid or taken on an illegal assessment, there must first be a vacating of the assessment by judicial power. (Peyser v. The Mayor,
The defendant urges various reasons why the action may not be maintained against it; that the town was only the enforced agent of the State in issuing the bonds and laying the assessment to provide for the payment of them, and had no discretion or interest or voluntary act in the matter; that if the assessment was invalid the town bonds were also so, as they were inseparable parts of one scheme. But these reasons are not good. So towns were enforced agents in raising men for the Union army in the late rebellion, and in issuing their obligations for bounties, yet they were held liable, and the bonds declared to be town charges. (Marsh v. Little Valley,
The defendant also urges that the money never came into the hands of the town. There is an averment in the complaint, as we have above stated, that the defendant had wrongfully taken and received the money, and applied the same to its own use. Now this averment, if it were against a natural person, or against an artificial entity, capable of taking money and applying it to its own use, would be sufficient, with the other facts alleged, to show a cause of action. Nor must it be construed in any other way, because of the character and capacity of the defendant against whom it is asserted. We know, to be sure, that a town, by the law of the State, is not a full corporate body; that it has no treasury or treasurer; that nearly all acts done for it and in its name are by certain officers whose offices are created by statute, such as supervisor, clerk, commissioners of highways, overseers of the poor and the like, who receive the moneys raised for the public purposes of the *106
town, and disburse them for the public good or to meet public duties. But an averment that the town of New Lots took and received this money, and applied it to its own use, is of more effect than to say that some officer of that town, supervisor, commissioner or the like, took, received and applied it. A receipt by any of those authorities of the town, and an application by them to the purposes of the town might not raise a liability against the town as a political division of the State. They, it is said, do not stand for the town. Their functions are prescribed by statute. They receive and pay out money as officers, in the performance of their own official duty. The town may not be liable for the receipt, nor for the failure to pay, nor for the ill-judged or unlawful payment. Therefore, this action against the town itself, by an averment in the complaint that the money was paid to the public authorities thereof, might appear to be without cause. So we held in The City of Rochester
v. The Town of Rush (
It is not to be denied that the legislation of the last two *107 decades of years, wise or otherwise, has affected, I may say has changed, the character and capacity of the simple township of former days. The legislature has imposed liabilities and obligations and corresponding duties upon it, that have made it something different from a mere political division of the State, and brought it in character and capacity nearer to a municipal corporation. The legislature has commanded a town in the State to issue bonds. They are to be the bonds of the town; when issued they are the bonds of the town; not of any officer of the town, not of the persons dwelling at the time in the town, not of the property situated there. So far, then, the township has been, by legislative power, made an entity, with capacity as a town to incur a debt and make an obligation, and become liable to pay. With this capacity must of need go the power to pay, the power to get money to pay, the power and capacity to receive money for its use in making payment. And therewith must go all incidents that follow that power and capacity. If by chance it gets the money of any one without the right to it, for the purpose of meeting its obligations, and applies that money to its own use in meeting them, it follows that it incurs a liability to that person therefor, as well as would a natural person, or any municipal corporation, doing the same thing. To this end are the cases just above cited.
The judgments sustaining the demurrer should be reversed, the demurrer overruled, with leave to the defendant to answer over on payment of costs.
All concur, except EARL, J., not voting.
Judgment accordingly.