Peck v. . State

137 N.Y. 372 | NY | 1893

On the trial before the Board of Claims, the claimant introduced no evidence but the judgment in the mandamus proceeding against the Board of Managers of the asylum, and the certificate made by them as commanded by that judgment; and upon that evidence the Board of Claims based its award.

The important question to be determined upon this appeal, is, whether the judgment in the mandamus proceeding against the Board of Managers is binding upon, and estops the state. The learned counsel for the claimant, upon his argument in this court, has called our attention to no authority which sustains his claim that that judgment is res adjudicata against the state; and we know of no principle of law that gives it such force. The state was not a party to that proceeding, and in that proceeding the asylum managers did not represent the state. It was a proceeding against them to compel them to discharge what was claimed to be a duty resting upon them under the law of their creation and the contracts into which they had entered. While they represented the state in making the contracts with Linus Jones Peck Co., they did not stand in the place of the state in any suit brought against them, either for misfeasance or nonfeasance in the discharge of the duties devolved upon them by law. No provision is found in any statute giving them authority to represent the state in any litigation, or giving the consent of the state to be bound by any adjudication to be made against them. A state cannot be sued in its own courts, except by its consent; and this rule is founded upon public policy of great importance, and it would be greatly impaired, and could be largely nullified, if the state could be bound by judgments rendered against its agents or officers. Such judgments may bind the officers and compel them to discharge their duties, and thus frequently they enable claimants to obtain payment of their claims against the state and other rights to which they are entitled by law. But the adjudication in such actions never estops the state on the principle of resadjudicata. And so it has been frequently held. (James v.Campbell, 104 U.S. 356; Louisiana v. Jumel, 107 id. 711; *376 Cunningham v. Macon, etc., R.R. Co., 109 id. 446; Hans v.Louisiana, 134 id. 1; North Carolina v. Temple, Id. 22;Pennoyer v. McConnaughy, 140 id. 1; People v. Dennison,84 N.Y. 272; Corkings v. State, 99 id. 491; Rexford v.State, 105 id. 229; Gates v. State, 128 id. 221.)

In People ex rel. v. Squire (110 N.Y. 666) we held that a judgment in a mandamus proceeding against the commissioner of public works of the city of New York did not bind the city for the reason that it was not a party to the litigation. InParmenter v. State, recently decided in this court, we were of opinion, although it was not necessary there absolutely to announce it, that a judgment in a mandamus proceeding against the comptroller of the state was not res adjudicata against the state, and did not create an estoppel against it for the reason that it was not a party to the proceeding, although the attorney-general appeared there in defense of the comptroller. That the state is not bound by the adjudication in the mandamus proceeding is also shown by the case of Carr v. U.S. (98 U.S. 433).

But it is further said on behalf of the claimant that the state was bound by the certificate given by the managers of the asylum under the compulsion of the judgment, without reference to the circumstances under which it was made. There is nothing in the act by which the managers of the asylum were constituted which makes their certificate thus given binding upon the state or even evidence against the state. It was not a certificate based upon their judgment or upon any examination made by them, or upon any exercise of their discretion, but a certificate compelled by a judgment not binding upon the state and not evidence against the state. There is nothing in the contracts requiring the managers to give such a certificate. Under the first contract the firm of Linus Jones Peck Co., were to be paid for certain kinds of stone delivered seventy-five per cent of the price thereof monthly, upon the estimate of the supervising architect or superintendent of the quantity delivered the month preceding such estimate; and the remaining *377 twenty-five per cent thereof monthly after the same shall have been laid in the wall and measured and accepted by the supervising architect and superintendent of the building; and for other kinds of stone they were to be paid seventy-five cents per cubic foot to be measured by the supervising architect or superintendent and paid for at the end of each month after the same had been delivered upon the ground and approved by the supervising architect and superintendent. The contract contains the further provision, that the board of managers "hereby covenant and agree with the party of the second part to estimate and measure all stone delivered monthly after the delivery thereof as aforesaid, and to pay for the same in accordance with the provisions of this contract hereinbefore mentioned." Under the second contract for cutting the stone it was provided that the board of managers should cause monthly estimates to be made at the end of each current month by the supervising architect and superintendent of all work done or completed during the month, and to pay ninety per cent of the amount thereof on the first of the ensuing month, and, further, to have the work measured in the wall, or so much thereof as should be laid monthly, at the end of each current month as the work progressed, by the supervising architect and superintendent, and on the first of the succeeding month pay in full for the work, less ninety per cent previously paid upon the monthly estimate for the same work, to the end that there might be final settlements monthly of the work as it progressed until its completion.

It is very clear from these provisions in the contracts that the estimates and measurements were to be made by the superintendent and supervising architect. They were to inspect and accept the work and material, and it was upon their estimates and certificates that payments were to be made. There is no provision whatever for certificates to be made by the managers as a necessary preliminary to the payment of the amounts due the contractors; and the practice under the contracts was in accordance with these views. As the materials were delivered and the work performed, the supervising architect and *378 superintendent made the measurements and ascertained the amounts due for the work and materials and certified the same to the board of managers. The board of managers thereupon caused vouchers to be made for such measurements and estimates, and delivered the same to the firm from time to time, and made the payments of seventy-five per cent under the first contract and ninety per cent under the second contract as provided therein. The vouchers thus made and presented to the firm upon which payments were made to them were, after the payments, returned to the managers. It cannot, therefore, be said that the cause of action of the claimant first accrued when the certificate was executed by the board of managers under and in pursuance of the judgment in the mandamus proceeding. The payments of seventy-five per cent and ninety per cent were due to the firm when the material and work were accepted, measured and certified to by the supervising architect and the superintendent, and certainly when the vouchers were made by the managers upon which they made payments to the firm. When the remaining sums, to wit., twenty-five per cent under the first contract and ten per cent under the second contract, which are the sums mainly now in controversy, became due according to the terms of the contract, the contractors were entitled to payment of the same; and if upon their demand payment was refused, they could have instituted proceedings before the State Board of Audit and could thus have had their claim adjudicated, and could have obtained payment of any award made to them. Even if upon a hearing before the State Board of Audit it would have been requisite for them to have the vouchers showing the amounts due them for materials and work, those vouchers were in existence, either with the managers or with the state comptroller, and could easily have been procured for evidence before the State Board of Audit. But still further, having delivered the materials and performed the work, all of which had been accepted by the state, even if the contractors had needed the certificate of the managers as a condition precedent to the payments, they could have demanded it, and its unjust refusal would have enabled *379 them to prosecute their claim before the State Board of Audit without it. (Thomas v. Fleury, 26 N.Y. 26; Nolan v.Whitney, 88 id. 648; Smith v. Alker, 102 id. 87; Flaherty v. Miner, 123 id. 382.)

If we assume that the certificate of the asylum managers was competent evidence against the state of the amounts due upon the contracts, then it only shows what amounts became due to the contractors about fourteen years before its date, and does not establish that they became due for the first time at its date.

Assuming, therefore, that all these facts which appeared in the judgment rendered in the mandamus proceeding were properly in evidence, it is clear that this claim was barred by the Statute of Limitations long before it was filed in the Board of Claims. (Laws of 1883, chap. 205, § 7.) Unless the judgment in the mandamus proceeding is res adjudicata against the state, there is absolutely no basis upon which this award can rest, and having reached the conclusion that it is not, the award must be reversed and a new trial granted before the Board of Claims, costs to abide the event.

All concur, O'BRIEN and MAYNARD, JJ., not sitting.

Award reversed.

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