11 Barb. 117 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1851
By the Court,
At the last July term, in the case of Hayes v. The Superintendents of the Poor of Jefferson county,
In the case under consideration the plaintiff’s claim is not embarrassed with any such difficulty. The action is brought by Loveland Paddock as the assignee of a demand for provisions furnished for the poor-house of Jefferson county by one Howk, on a contract with the superintendents. Mr. Howk was a witness, and distinctly swore that he sold the superintendents of the poor fifteen barrels of pork, in the spring of 1848, at $14 per barrel; that all the superintendents were together, during the negotiation; and that the bargain was completed by two of them. The sale was to be a cash sale; or if an order was taken, it was to answer as cash. The two superintendents, then, as superintendents of the poor, gave him an order on the treasurer
The superintendents are the agents of the county in contracting the debt for the supplies of the poor-house, and are liable to be sued as a corporation, representing the county, on all such contracts. They gave the ordinary draft on the treasurer of the county, in payment and satisfaction of one of their contracts. The draft was not paid, for the want of funds. In such a case we entertain no doubt that the county is liable, on the contract made by its authorized agents, in the business specially com
Pratt, Gridley, Allen and Hubbard, Justices.]
We reverse the judgment, and send the case back for a new trial.
Reported 9 Barb. 260.