105 N.Y.S. 16 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1907
Lead Opinion
I think it reasonably clear that the moneys which are the subject of this controversy were paid to the town by the city of New York as damages for the increased obligation imposed upon the town for maintenance of the highways substituted for those submerged, and not for the purpose of creating a trust fund to provide for said maintenance, as contended by the appellant. The town and the city recognized that the latter was .not bound to maintain said substituted highways, and it had so been held (Matter of Gilroy, 43 App. Div. 359; affd., 164 N. Y. 576), but the increased expense of maintaining guardrails and a greater length of highway was deemed sufficient to support a claim for damages. The method of determining said damages cannot change the fact that the money was paid in settlement of a claim, from which the city was released in consideration of such payment. When said settlement was consummated the city had no further interest in the matter, because it was not concerned in how the town obtained the money to discharge the obligation of maintaining said substituted highways. The cases relied upon by the appellant to show that a trust was impressed upon the fund are not in point, if I am right in what has already been said, for in each it appeared that authority had been given the municipality to acquire property for a specific purpose. However, the authority of the town officers to expend said moneys, presents a different question. Manifestly, we must look to the statute for that authority, and, as it seems to me, to the particular statute passed for the specific purpose of conferring it. That statute is chapter 396 of the Laws of 1905, which authorizes the supervisor, by and with the consent of the town board, to invest said moneys in a specified class of securities, and to collect the interest from said investments., and ip mandatory ternas directs -that the income there
1 do -not think that the courts can direct.- upon' what' highways said income shall be expended, for the statute provides for the determination of that question by the town board and highway commissioner, but as the defendants propose to expend .the principal,' the ¡fiaintifl: was entitled to an injunction restraining them from sc doing. .
■ Woodwaed and Jenks, JJ., concurred; . Rich, J., read for affirmance, with whom Hibsohbeeg, P. J., concurred.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent. The evidence abundantly sustains the findings of .fact made by the learned trial' court, and the only question meriting serious consideration is whether the town -board has authority to expend the money in question for the purpose intended. It is argned that such authority does not exist for the reasons, first, that the moneys proposed to be expended.are not surplus moneys; second, that the town board is merely a governing board, possessed only of such ¡lowers as are.specifically conferred upon it by statute, and that the making of contracts for and improving of roads is not a governmental but á corporate function, and, third, that -the jurisdiction' of the highway commissioner in repairing and improving the public highways of the town is exclusive. . S
All of these questions are disposed of by chapter 164 of the Laws of 1891 if the fund proposed to he expended is “surplus money”.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Hieschbeeg, P. J., concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event. ‘