86 N.Y.S. 967 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
An alternative writ of man damns commands the defendants as officers of the town of Eye to convene as a town board and “ give your consent in the manner provided by law to the payment ” of a claim of the relator. As the defendants have demurred, the facts,
Overwork on Locust avenue (near residence of Le Roy
E. Ganun....................................... $46 00
Overwork on general repairs to highways.............. 217 25.
Overwork on Elm street,........................... 218 75
Overwork oh Glenwood road...................... 494 50
Overwork on Kirby avenue.......................... 234 00
Total........................................ $1,210 50
The said work, labor and services were expended by the said relator as such commissioner of highways upon the said highways for the repair of the said highways, which then were in a dangerous and unsafe condition, and the said relator has duly presented his said claim to the town board of the town of Rye, and has duly requested the said town board of the town of Rye to give their consent 'to the payment of his said claim, and the said Town
The grounds of the demurrer are :/ (1) That said writ does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, or sufficient to-justify the commands of the writ, or any part of such commands (2) that said writ is issued to a person, officer or board to control a discretion conferred by law upon them; (3) that said writ com-, raands the doing of an act which the respondents have no power to perform, and (4) that the mandamus herein was not, and a mandamus is not, the relator’s proper remedy. The demurrer was overruled and the defendants appeal. I think that the demurrer should, have been sustained. ■
■ The consent in the manner provided by law is that specified by-section 10 of the Highway Law (Laws of 1890, chap. 568, as amd.. by Laws of 1899, chap. 84), which' reads as follows: “If any highway or bridge shall at any time be damaged or destroyed by the elements or otherwise, or become unsafe, the commissioner of' highways of the town in which such highway or bridge may be may cause the same to be immediately repaired or rebuilt, if consented', to by the town board, but if the expense thereof exceed five hundred dollars, it shall be done under a written contract therefor,., which must be approved by the town board, and the commissioners-of highways shall present the proper vouchers for the expense-thereof to the town board at their next annual meeting, and the-, same shall be audited by them and collected in the same manner as-amounts voted at town meetings.” I think that this statutory consent is not satisfied by a confirmation or approval, after the work has been done, but that the statute requires an assent to the doing-of the work, inasmuch, as the giving of the consent involves a determination whether the work is or was proper. Consent supposes a physical power to act, a moral power of acting, and a serious, determined and, free use.of these powers. (Bouvier Law Diet;). Consent, as a substantive is the synonym of assent, acquiescence, concurrence,, and means an agreement or harmony of opinion or sentiment..
The learned counsel for the respondent argues that if the board had refused consent, mandamus would have issued to compel consent. .Even if the act was “ plainly administrative and mandatory, and not .discretionary,” and was, therefore, imperative, to quote the language of Andrews, Oh. J., in People ex rel. Keene v. Supervisors (142 N. Y. 271), that argument, available in case the town board had refused fits consent after opportunity had been afforded to it to pass upon the
While it is entirely true for the purpose of the demurrer that the facts as stated in the petition are to be taken as true, namely, that the highways were in a dangerous and unsafe condition, yet aside from the consideration of the demurrer it may be germane to say that the court would have no power to relegate the judicial act of consent into the ministerial act of mere approval. And yet the court has, in its alternative writ, done exactly this thing by “ commanding” the board to convene and to gime its consent in the manner provided iy la/w to the payment of the claim. It requires no citation of authorities to support the statement that judicial action may be directed, but the resulting judgment cannot be dictated by the mandamus. This appeal does not hang upon the good faith of the commissioner, to whom no wrongdoing is ascribed, but upon the legality of the practice of seeking to bind the town for work upon, the ground that it was necessary, disregarding the plain, statutory provisions which are prerequisite to the initiation of such work.
The' order should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.
All concurred. ,
Order reversed and proceeding dismissed, with costs.