Thе question in this case was mainly one of fact, and has been disposed of by the jury in favor of the defendant. The proceeding was by mandamus, to compel the defendant to audit and allow a claim of the relator alleged to exist against the county of Broome for $6,300. It is averred in the writ that in the month of January, 1865, the relator, in the defendant’s employment, mustered into the service of the United States, under the then existing lаws, nine three-years’ men for the county of Broome, and which were credited to said county, for which the defendant agreed to pay the amount claimed, which was payable, on the 1st of February, 1868. That the relator has fully complied with his contract, and the defendant has refused payment. This averment was put in issue, and the case was tried before Mr. Justice Murray and a jury, in the county of Broome, with the result before stаted. Upon the trial it seems that the point chiefly litigated was whether the nine soldiers, on whose account the bounty was claimed, were actually mustered into the service of the United States and credited to the county of Broome. That they were mustered in and actually went into the service of the United States seems to be very clear, but whether they were credited to the county of Broome in such form as that the county had the benefit of the credit presents a question of more or less difficulty.
*224 The enlistments were made under the proclamation of the president of the United States of the 19th of December, 1864, calling for 300,000 men, and it appeared on the trial that on the 13th of January, 1865, the board of supervisors of the county of Broome passed a resolution to the effect that the county treasurer be authorizеd to pay to each volunteer from this county under the call before named, on the presentation of the certificate of the provost marshall that such volunteer has been accepted and mustered into the service of the United States and credited to the county of Broome, $500 to volunteers for one year, $600 to volunteers for two years, and $100 for volunteers for three years. The further prоceedings had by the board of supervisors material to the question now involved were, in substance, as follows: At the annual meeting held on the 24th of November, 1865, a claim of the relator for nine volunteers at $100 each was audited at $5,400, and on the twenty-seventh of the same month the resolution auditing the relator’s account at $5,400 was reconsidered, and it was referred to a committee to ascertain whether the volunteers, for which the relator claimed pay, had been actually credited and allowed to the county of Broome, and the State bounty received by the county treasurer, and if such was found to be the fact, the committee were authorized to draw on the treasurer in favor of the relator for $5,400. At a meeting of the board the committee reported in favor of the claim, and the report was adopted, and a report was also made recommending the levy of a tax upon the county, and it may be assumed that tax was ordered to be levied. On the 4th of December, 1866, the board reconsidered the resolution allowing the claim of the relator, and referring the same back, and upon a report that the nine men in question had been transferred from Broome and credited to Chemung county, and that the city оf Elmira had paid bounties for the same men, the board finally, on the 6th of December, 1866, rejected the relator’s claim. I have thus particularly stated the action of the board of supervisors of Broome in respect to the claim in question, because it is insisted by the learned counsel for the *225 relator that the claim having heen once audited by that body it had no power afterwards to rescind and annul its actiоn in that regard, and if this claim is well founded it will dispose of the whole case in favor of the relator and render the consideration of various other questions unnecessary. The suggestion by the counsel for the defendant that the claim of the relator was never in fact audited by the board is, I think, without substantial foundation.
It is argued that, in auditing and allowing claims against the county, the supervisors act in a judicial capacity, and thеir powers are restricted like inferior judicial tribunals, who, having once given judgment, may not review or reverse their own action, even if erroneous, or grant new trials, unless especially empowered to do so by statute. In a very largely qualified sense, it may be true that in such matters the action of the supervisors is quasi judicial, but I think not in any such sense as renders an erroneous and improper audit or allowance incapable of correction by the body committing the error. Boards of supervisors are not judicial tribunals any more than is the legislature of the State to be regarded in any of its action a court of justice, although it may audit, allow or reject claims against the State, and in any case repeal or reconsider its action when found to have been erroneous. The board of supervisors are mere lоcal legislative bodies, in many respects of limited power; but where they have jurisdiction, they may act for their county precisely as the legislature may act for the State. If they act without jurisdiction their acts are void, the same as is the action of the legislature when in violation of any provision of the Constitution. If having jurisdiction, if by fraud or falsehood, or any misconception of a fact, a wrong thing is done, therе is no reason in law or morals or in public policy, why they may not, on discovering the error, at once correct it. There is no substantial reason for hampering such a body, in its power to correct its own errors and to do right, by applying to it the technical rules which pertain to Justices’ Courts, and other inferior judicial tribunals, supposed to proceed according to the course of the common law, and whose *226 mere errors can only be corrected by a direct proceeding in review.
It, perhaps, proves nothing to say that if a party presenting a claim against a county having done no service, and having-no right, whatever which the supervisors allow, their action is void, and it was so decided in
The People
v.
Lawrence
(
It has come to pass in our law that many inferior tribunals and officers clothed with powers to summarily act and operate upon the property and rights of others, such as assessors, commissioners of highways, and the like, have by the courts been phie1flp.fi from the consequences of palpable misconduct by the cover of the 'judicial ermine. It has thus happened that town assessors, commissioners of highways, and even path-masters in the several districts of a town (and many other inferior officers), have been regarded as exercising the judicial function, in that degree that forbade all inquiry into the propriety of their conduct or their motives in a civil action for an alleged wrong. This rule has become very obstinate, and, I think, very oppressive in many cases; and in the case of
The
*227
National Bank of Chemung
v.
The City of Emira
(
The cases cited to sustain the position contended for do not, I think, give it much support. Assuming that the case of
The People
v.
The Supervisors of Schenectady
(
The case of the
Supervisors of Chenango
v.
Birdsall
(
The case of the
Supervisors of Onondaga
v.
Briggs
(
In the present case the supervisors, in the first instance, allowed the relators’ claim upon a presentation of the fact showing that the nine men, for whom the bounty was claimed, had been duly credited to the county of Broome, and in that case it was very obvious that the claim was a just one to be paid by the county. It, however, turned out afterwards, so far as it appeared to the board of supervisors, that these credits of nine volunteers had been by the military authorities transferred, with the consent of the relator or his associates, from the county of Broome to the county of Chemung, and that they, or some of them, had received the bounty from the city of Elmira for these identical nine volunteers. Under this condition of things, the sujoervisors reconsidered their action and rejected the claim, as I think they had the power, and as it was their duty to do upon the fact as it appeared to them. If such power did not exist, I think it follows, of necessity, that there is no known way to reheve the county of Broome from the payment of bounties to volunteers for whom they had no credit, and for all of whom bounties were actually paid by the city of Elmira, or the county of Chеmung.
Beaching this conclusion, it must now be assumed that the action of the supervisors respecting the relator’s claim was conclusive upon neither party, and it is obvious that the issue of fact, tried at the Circuit, was framed upon this theory. The mandamus alleges, with the marked conciseness of an artistic special pleading, the contract with the relator, the performance and the breach. This the defendant meets, with a like regard *231 to intelligent pleading, with a flat denial of the alleged fact, and upon this issue the case went to the Circuit for trial before a jury. It is said that the relator did not plead the alleged estoppel, and for that reason it could not avail him in any event, but this was not necessary, for as an instrument of evidence it was, if an estoppel at all, just as available as if formally pleaded.
The relator gavе in evidence all the proceedings of the board of supervisors in respect to his claim, hut did not rest his case there, and gave further evidence relating to the entire transaction with the board of supervisors of Broome, and the defendant gave evidence tending to controvert some material facts claimed to exist on the part of the relator. I think the evidence is entirely clear, not only thаt the contract alleged was made, but that, in the first instance, the volunteers for whom the bounty was claimed were mustered into the service of the United States and credited to the county of Broome. It is, I think, equally clear that upon the refusal of the treasurer of Broome to pay the bounty demanded the very identical volunteers were transferred and credited to the county of Chemung, and the bounty actually pаid by the city of Elmira which is now claimed by the relator. It is said, that having been once credited to Broome the rights of the parties were fixed and they could not, thereafter, he transferred to Chemung to the prejudice of the relator’s rights. That may be on a given state of facts, hut if the relator consented to the transfer, as the jury have found, he has no just cause of complaint, even if some of his associates hаve not done him full justice, as is probably the fact. After a careful examination of the evidence I think it was a question for the jury to say whether the transfer of these men from Broome to Chemung was or was not made with the knowledge, acquiescence or consent of the relator. The learned judge at the Circuit, I think, gave the case to the jury upon the evidence, with great clearness and impartiality, and said: “ If it (thе evidence) proves to your satisfaction that Hazard and Hotchkiss were a party to this transaction by which Mr. Layten transferred these credits and sold these men to the city of *232 Elmira, then they are bound by it and the relator in this case is not entitled to recover. If, on the other hand, as is contended by the relator, they, nor either of them, had any connection with this sale and it was entirely the act of Layten himself as a separate and independent transaction from any thing in which they were engaged, then the relator is entitled to recover,” and under this direction the verdict passed for the defendant. I think the charge, in this respect, was too favorable to the relator, for, under the contract, the county was not required to pay, as I think, until there was a substantial credit for the number of men for whom the bounty was agreed to be pаid. This credit was to be procured by the relator in performance of his contract, and if it was done and then undone by any action to which the supervisors were not privy, I do not see that the right of the relator was made out. But as the verdict of the jury was -in favor of the defendant it is not material to pursue the subject.
The views above presented seems to render the consideration of any other of the minor questions in the case unnecessary, and it follows that the judgment of the Supreme Court must be affirmed, with costs.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.
