46 N.Y.S. 622 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
The purpose of this action is to restrain the delivery by the defendants of $620,000 in bonds of the town of Newtown, authorized to be issued in pursuance of a vote of the trustees of the town and of a resolution of the board of supervisors of the county of Queens. It is disclosed by the record that at a regular annual town meeting of the town of Newtown, for the election of town officers' and for the transaction of other business of the town, lield on the
We come, therefore, to a consideration of the vital question in the case : Was it required', in order to authorize the resolution passed by the board of supervisors-, that a majority of all of the votes cast and counted for' the highest town office should have been cast for the bonding proposition, or was it sufficient that a majority only should be had of those votes cast and counted, upon the proposition to bond? The answer to be given depends upon the construction of the statute under which the vote-was taken. The statute upon the subject, prior to its amendment in 1896, is found in section 69 of the County Law (Laws of 1892, eliap. 686), and reads as follows:
“ The board may, upon the application of any town, or towns liable to taxation for constructing, building or repairing any highway or bridge therein, or upon its borders, pursuant to a vote of a majority of the electors thereof at any annual town meeting, or special town meeting called for that purpose, or upon the written request of the commissioners of highways and town board of such-town or towns, authorize such town or towns to construct, bui'ld. and repair such highway or bridge, and to borrow such sums of money for and on
This, section provided for two contingencies in which a town might be authorized to borrow money and issue its obligations therefor. First, upon application made to the board pursuant to a vote of the electors of the town. Second, upon the written request of the commissioners of highways and the town board of the town. This remained the law until 1896, when this section was amended. (Laws of 1896, chap. 178). While' the phraseology is changed in some slight particulars by the amendment, it remains,.so far as important" to any question presented by this case, precisely as it formerly stood, except as there is added to such section this clause: “ But in the county of Queens a vote of a majority of the electors of any such town or towns, voting at an annual town meeting, or special town meeting called for that purpose, must first be obtained before the board can authorize such town or towns to borrow any money for, or on the faith and credit of such town or towns for the purposes above mentioned.”
The only substantial change worked by this amendment is the requirement that in the county of Queens no resolution shall be passed by the board of supervisors pledging the credit of the town, except there be a vote of the electors of the town authorizing the same. The only change which could in any view otherwise affect the construction of the amendment arises out of the addition of the word “ voting ” at an annual town meeting, in substitution of the language “pursuant to a vote of a majority of the electors,” etc. The result would be the same upon a vote in either case. If a majority of the whole number voting is required by the words in one case, it is in the other. If at an annual town meeting a majority of all "who voted for any given office did not vote upon the special proposition,
In Carroll County v. Smith (111 U. S. 556) the court considered the effect of a similar constitutional provision, using this language : “ The assent of two-thirds of the qualified voters of the county, at .an election lawfully held for that purpose, to a proposed issue of municipal bonds, intended by that instrument, meant the vote of two-thirds of the qualified voters present and voting at such election in its favor, as determined by the official return of the result. The words ‘ qualified voters,’ as used in the Constitution, must he taken to mean not those qualified and entitled to vote, but those qualified
To the same effect is St. Joseph Township v. Rogers (16 Wall. 644). Such, also, .is the rule applicable to private corporations. (Field v. Field, 9 Wend. 394; 1 Morawetz on Priv. Corp. § 476.) It was said by Chancellor Kent that the same.principle prevails in incorporated societies as'in the community at large, and that acts of the majority in cases within the .charter power control, the majority meaning the major part of those present at the meeting who act. (2 Kent’s Com. [14th ed.] 293.) We think, also, that the reasons assigned by the court in Smith v. Proctor (130 N. Y. 319) logically carry the construction of, this statute to the same result. Counsel for the appellant relies upon People ex rel. Hetfield v. Trustees (70 N. Y. 28) as establishing a contrary doctrine. It is to-be observed that this case arose under an act authorizing towns to bond in aid of the construction of railroads. The courts of this State in construing these statutes have uniformly held that a strict compliance with the statute was essential, as' the purpose of such legislation involved an incumbrance of the taxable property of the town in aid of a private enterprise. Such expenditure of public money, or pledge of "public credit, was quite foreign to any-purpose of governmental expenditure for the. public good and came in time .to meet an absolute constitutional prohibition' based-upon principles of. public policy. The case is clearly distinguishable from the present, statute. The Railroad Act, 'authorizing the town-to bond, required that the “ taxable inhabitants of said village may at such meeting, by a majority vote, decide to raise a sum not exceeding twenty thousand dollars for the purposes provided in this act.” And further : “ In case a majority of said taxable inhabitants shall vote to raise such sum for said purpose,” etc. It is noticed that the right to incur the debt -is'limited to a specific class of inhabitants i. 6., those who were to pay the debt; and it is clear, as the court held,;that the object of the statute was to obtain a majority expression of such persons before a debt could be saddled upon them, and that it would be satisfied with nothing less. In the present case the object of the expenditure is for a purely governmental purpose which inures to the general good of the public at large. The-right to .vote upon the proposed expenditure is not limited to any
We do not attempt to reconcile wliat is irreconcilable. There is no want of harmony in the' decisions of this State, so far as they have gone, and we are led to the conclusion that the reasoning of the cases we have cited expresses the correct rule of law. Extreme cases may he supposed where a technical majority might exist, and yet where the court would feel constrained to hold that the statute had not been complied with. If only one or two votes should be cast upon a proposition, and those for it, in a case where there existed thousands of electors, the court might well hold that there had been no expression by the people upon the subject. Such cases are not likely to arise, and such is not the present one. Here the vote was large and the majority substantial.
.This prompts us to say that the statute was satisfied and the resolution of the board was authorized by a majority' vote of the electors who voted upon the proposition to bond at the annual town, meeting.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs,