26 N.Y.S. 122 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1893
These are proceedings by writ of certiorari to review the action of the board of town auditors of the town of Pelham, in Westchester county, by which the claims of these three relators for services as commissioners of highways of that town were disallowed and rejected. The facts upon which our decision must be based are undisputed. These relators each presented a bill to the board of town auditors for services as commissioners of highways. Those bills specified the date when the services were claimed to have been rendered, and the charge for each day, but did not specify the particular service or duty performed. As the bills failed to name any place where the services were rendered, and the auditors had knowledge that no appropriation was made for the highway purposes in the years covered by the bills, they were not satisfied that the services for which the charges were made, or any of them, had been rendered. Thereupon they passed a resolution requiring their clerk to notify the relators to appear before them on a certain day. They were so notified, and they appeared in pursuance of such notification. They were then examined by the board of auditors in relation to their bills, and requested to specify the places where their services were rendered. In reply to such request the relators simply stated that their services were rendered upon the highways of the town of Pelham, and declined to furnish more specific information. Thereafter the board continued the consideration of the bills from time to time until the 22d day of December, 1892, when they passed auditing the bill, and every item thereof, and disallowed each one of the items. The defendants state in their return that they disallowed each and every item of the account because they did not believe that any day’s services therein charged had been in fact rendered; that in so acting upon such bills and account they intended to pass upon and audit each and every item thereof upon the merits thereof, and upon the matters of fact and evidence set forth in the return. They then state that they made and signed a certificate to the effect that the accounts had been wholly rejected by the town board, and filed the same in the office of the town clerk. There is no claim here that any legal rule of action or procedure has been violated by the board of auditors, or that they have adopted any erroneous principle in their action. The claim of the relators is that the board has rejected the claim without sufficient reason. We must determine whether they have done so. These relators were commissioners of highways, and their compensation is fixed by law at $1.50 a day, as there were three in the town. Laws 1892, p. 2264, § 178. Therefore the only open question for the determination of the board of auditors was the number of days actually and necessarily spent by the relators in the performance of their official duties. With that question the auditors grappled and struggled. They knew that but little money was expended upon the roads during the period covered by the
We have thus examined and determined the case upon the merits, because we thought it due to the parties interested and the questions involved; but we have not overlooked a legal obstruction in the path of the relators, which we deem insurmountable. To secure a review of the action of a board of town auditors by certiorari the writ must be obtained while yet the board retains jurisdiction of the proceedings. Such jurisdiction terminates with the delivery of the abstract of accounts to the clerk of the board of supervisors, which is the last act of the board of auditors. Laws 1892, p. 2261, § 170. After such delivery, therefore; the writ will be ineffectual and fruitless. Osterhoudt v. Rigney, 98 N. Y. 230; People v. Auditors of Town of Hannibal, 65 Hun, 418, 20 N. Y. Supp. 165; People v. Queen’s Co. Sup’rs, 82 N. Y. 277. The board of town auditors of the town of Pelham delivered the abstract-of the accounts and claims presented to and audited by the board to the clerk of the board of supervisors of Westchester county on the 16th day of January, 1893. The amount allowed was levied and included in the warrant of the town collector before February 27, 1893. Such warrant was delivered to the collector, and he was engaged in its execution, before the 15th day of April, 1893, when the application was made for this writ of certiorari. The certiorari, therefore, brought nothing up for review, because the jurisdiction of the board of town auditors over these claims had terminated, and nothing re