34 A.D. 167 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
On December 10, 1897, at a meeting of the inhabitants of school district Ho. 1 of the towns of Castleton and Middletown, Richmond county, a resolution was passed authorizing the trustees of the school district to purchase a new site and build a new schoolhouse thereon, and for that purpose to raise the sum of $80,000 by tax upon the district. Thereafter the trustees of the school district entered into a contract with the relator for the construction of the school building for the sum of $79,500, payments to be made as the work progressed, on the certificate of the engineer and the architect in charge .of the construction of the building. The.relator commenced the prosecution of the work, and in February, 1898, received a certificate from the. engineer and the architect that he was entitled to a payment of at least the sum of $750. This certificate was presented to the. comptroller for payment, and to the auditor, of the borough for audit. The comptroller refused payment, and the auditor declined to act on the claim. Thereupon the relator applied to the Special- Term for a writ of mandamus to the auditor and comptroller to ascertain and certify the value of the work performed and materials furnished by the relator under -his contract, and to audit and allow; such value as ascertained, not exceeding the amount certified by the engineer and the architect. From an order granting the writ, of'mandamus as prayed for, this-appeal is taken.
The first claim of the appellants is that the relator’s remedy is by action and not by mandamus. The rule that a mandamus will not be- granted where the party has a remedy by action is one addressed to the sound discretion of the court, and is not of universal application. Thus in Matter of Freel (148 N. Y. 165). the comptroller of the city of Brooklyn was required by a writ of peremptory mandamus to approve the relator’s claim for work and material furnished under a contract with the city for the construction of a reservoir, and to make and sign a warrant for its payment. There was no question in that case but that the relator ■ might have sued the city for the claim in an action at law. In People ex rel. Kings
The affidavit of Mr. Coler states that he has examined the minutes of the meeting of the board of school trustees, and that from those minutes it appears that $5,500 was paid for the new site, a plot of about two acres, while the assessed value of the land was only $250 an acre; that a resolution was passed that the new schoolhouse should be built on the old site, and that the resolution authorizing the expenditure for the new schoolhouse was void, because it was passed by the votes of persons who -were not qualified by law to vote on the question; that the plans of the schoolhouse are unnecessarily elaborate and ornate, and not adapted to practical purposes, and that the sum bid for the work is exe'essive. The rule undoubtedly is that when 'a party moves for a peremptory mam damns in the first instance, all allegations of fact in the opposing papers sufficiently made must be assumed as time. But in this case, by the stipulation of the parties, a certified copy of the minutes of the meetings of- the school district was presented tó the Special Term, and is before us on this appeal. The affiant Coler had no personal knowledge of the action of the meetings of the voters of the school district, or of the trustees, but his statements are based solely on an inspection of the records of those meetings. Therefore, where the records are in conflict with the affidavit, the former
The ease is to be distinguished from that of People ex rel. Paving Co. v. Mooney (4 App. Div. 557). There it was sought by writ of mandamus to compel the board of-public works of the
The order appealed from should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.
All concurred.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.