182 A.D. 431 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1918
Lead Opinion
Section 133 of the Town Law requires the town board to meet “ for the purpose of auditing accounts and allowing or rejecting all charges, claims and demands against the town.” The town board makes duplicate certificates of all claims allowed, one of which is filed with the town clerk and the other delivered to the supervisor, to be by him laid before the board of supervisors, which causes to be levied and raised upon the town the amount specified in the certificate “ in the same manner as they are directed to levy and raise other town charges.”
Section 170 defines, town charges and provides for their payment from money raised by taxation after audit by the town board, under which charges are: “ 4. Every sum directed by law to be raised for any town purpose. 5. All judgments duly recovered against a town.”
The defendant contends that the plaintiff can only realize its claim by applying to the board of town auditors, and that this action cannot be maintained.
Ordinarily the commissioner of highways is not the agent of the town and cannot make contracts binding upon the town. His duties ordinarily are to disburse the moneys which have already been raised by the town for his use. (Acme Road Machinery Co. v. Town of Bridgewater, 185 N. Y. 1.) But here he has had nothing to do with the construction of this
The bonds issue pursuant to a vote at a town meeting as provided by section 142 of the law, and are to be sold by the supervisor. The town board does not handle the town funds or pay the town accounts. Those duties are charged .upon the supervisor (§ 98), and he is required to give a bond to faithfully account for the moneys received by him. (Town Law, § 100.)
The requirement of section 138a that the town board shall pay the additional cost out of moneys raised by taxation is satisfied by considering it as a direction to put it in process of payment, that is to audit it and put it in line to be laid before the board of supervisors so that it may levy it against the town.
The caption of section 138a, “ State and county highways of additional width and increased cost at expense of town,” and the- fact that the town is requiring the State to build a State highway in a manner directed by the town, is also persuasive evidence that such additional construction is for a town purpose and is imposed upon a town by direction of law. The law requires that the amount stated to the town board by the Highway Department shall be paid by the town through taxation. Perhaps that direction may not ordinarily leave much for the town board, but there is not much discretion with the town board as to whether a judg
Independent of the statute, concededly the matters alleged in the complaint do not form a town account; but the statute has provided that those facts make a town liable. The plaintiff is, therefore, seeking to recover a “ sum directed by law to be raised for any town purpose.” It cannot, therefore, maintain the action; its sole remedy is through the board of town auditors.
The order should, therefore, be reversed, with costs, and the complaint dismissed, with costs.
All concurred, except. Woodward, J., dissenting with an opinion.
Since materially amended by Laws of 1916, chap. 461.— [Rep.
Dissenting Opinion
The State of New York brings this action to recover the balance claimed to be due to it for the construction of an added width of highway through the town of Frankfort, under the provisions of the Highway Law. There is no dispute that the State of New York had under consideration the construction of State highway No. 5219, known as the Ilion
The question involved is the proper construction of section 138a of the Highway Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 25 [Laws of 1909, chap. 30], as added by Laws of 1911, chap. 375),
Section 138a of the Highway Law, as it existed when this transaction occurred, provided that whenever the Commission should have determined upon the construction or improvement of a State highway or section thereof or had approved the resolution of a board of supervisors for a county highway, and had prepared plans and specifications therefor, notice should be given to the several town boards; that if such town boards desired to make a change in such plans, they might proceed by petition to the Commission for an estimate of the increased cost of the change. It was made the duty of the Commission to make an estimate of the additional cost and submit the same to the town board, and the town board was then authorized to adopt a resolution by a vote of a ■ majority of all the members of such board authorizing the construction of the highway under the changed plans at the expense of the town for the additional cost. That the Legislature understood that this was an independent and complete statutory power, entirely apart from the ordinary duties of a town board, is entirely obvious, for it provides that “ If the town board deems that the additional cost as estimated by the Commission should be raised by the issue and sale of town bonds, it may present a proposition for the issue and sale of town bonds, in an amount not exceeding the amount specified in such proposition, at an annual or special town meeting, and if such proposition is adopted the bonds of
The statute here provides its own audit; it provides all of the conditions, and when such conditions have been fulfilled it' directs that the town board shall pay the added expense. There is no possible reason for looking to the Town Law for further conditions; the Highway Law provides all that is necessary for the protection of the town, and the whole scheme of the act clearly indicates an intention on the part of the Legislature to construct improved highways only to the extent that there is available money for carrying on the work. This appears not only from the provisions of section 138a, but from those of sections 137, 138, 142, 129, and the general language of the act, as amended. The matter involved in this action is not a town charge, within the meaning of the Town Law, for it is not. a sum directed by law to be raised for a town purpose; it is an obligation which the town was permitted to incur under special conditions, and the act under which this was accomplished provided that the final audit should be made by the Commission of Highways, leaving to the town board no other duty than to pay the amount fixed out of the funds raised by taxation or by the sale of bonds.
The order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granted, with costs.
Since materially amended by Laws of 1916, chap. 461.— [Rep.