282 A.D. 94 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1953
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court, entered upon the decision of an Official Referee, in favor of appellants who were bidders upon a contract for the construction of a public building, directing that their bid check, or the proceeds thereof, amounting to $7,500 be returned to them. The judgment also enjoins and restrains the appellants from declaring the respondents’ bid check forfeited, and from transferring the proceeds into the general fund of the State of New York.
The complaint alleges that respondents submitted a written bid for the construction of a public building at Harriman State Park, which included labor and materials. The amount of their bid was $148,790. In connection with this bid they filed a certi
So far as the merits of the case are concerned it seems quite clear that respondents made an honest mistake in measuring the quantity of brick necessary for the work by using the fraction 8/12 to indicate the number of bricks per lineal foot of each brick course instead of the figures 12/8, the correct quantity of brick per lineal foot. The quantity of brick reduced by this error of computation ran into something over one hundred thousand bricks. If it were not for the issue of jurisdiction we should say the evidence justified the judgment.
However the issue of jurisdiction is raised by the State and presents in our view an insurmountable obstacle to affirmance. It will be noted that the appellants are sued not individually but in their official capacity. This points almost conclusively to the proposition that the real defendant is the State, and if so the Supreme Court has no jurisdiction. The test was stated in Breen v. Mortgage Comm. (285 N. Y. 425, 429): “ If the real defendant is the State, then, of course, it may be sued only as it has consented to be sued, to wit, in the Court of Claims. (Adler, Inc., v. Noyes, 285 N. Y. 34.) In many of these cases the problem presented for determination is whether the action is against an agency of the State, or whether it is against a public official in his personal capacity. In the latter event, the action may be brought where it can be maintained against the public official as a private person, whereas if the action is brought
It is impossible, we think, to escape the application of this test under the conceded facts of this case. Concededly here the appellants were at all times acting as public officials and they are sued in that capacity. Every act they performed was in compliance with statutory authority and nowhere has it been pointed out that they acted illegally except, of course, the respondents claim that they should be required to return the bid check or the proceeds thereof. Respondents cite section 879 of the Civil Practice Act as authority for injunctive relief against State officers. We cannot see where this section has any application whatever. It simply provides that where a duty is imposed by statute upon a State officer an injunction to restrain him from the performance of that duty or to prevent the execution of the statute shall not be granted except by the Supreme Court. Obviously this has nothing to do with a claim for the payment of money. It would be applicable only if the Supreme Court had jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action.
Respondents cite a case which is closely analogous. In Levine v. Parsons (258 App. Div. 1003) this court held that the Supreme Court, in the exercise of its equitable jurisdiction, might relieve a bidder upon public works from a material mistake of fact and direct the return of his bid check. However in that case the issue of jurisdiction was not raised, and the judgment directed the return of a specific check. Ferend Co. v. State of New York (251 App. Div. 13, affd. 277 N. Y. 593), cited in support of the judgment came up from the Court of Claims and the issue of the Supreme Court’s jurisdiction was not involved.
Respondents have also cited a number of cases against municipalities where the Supreme Court has, in the exercise of its equitable jurisdiction, directed the rescission of bids and the return of bid checks or their equivalent (Harper, Inc., v. City of Newburgh, 159 App. Div. 695, affd. 222 N. Y. 670; Martens & Co. v. City of Syracuse, 183 App. Div. 622; Moffett, Hodgkins & Clarke Co. v. Rochester, 178 U. S. 373). Those cases have nothing to do with the issue of whether the State has consented to be sued in any other court except the Court of Claims.
In Adler, Inc., v. Noyes (285 N. Y. 34) these facts were revealed. An applicant for a milk license deposited a license
It seems to us the conceded facts in this case fit precisely into the foregoing language. Where the opinion says the fee paid was absorbed “ into that general fund ” it was not referring to the general fund of the State but to a single fund of the commissioner. In other words after the commissioner had deposited to his credit in a single fund all license fees he had received, then no part of a license fee thereafter had a severable character. And that is the situation here. Once the Superintendent of Public Works had turned over the bid checks of the three lowest bidders to the Comptroller and the latter had deposited them in a special account, they lost their severable character. The checks could not thereafter be returned and any claim for the proceeds thereof was necessarily against the State because even a special account in the name of the Comptroller is actually an account of the State.
From the foregoing we draw the conclusion that the Supreme Court had no jurisdiction to render the judgment appealed from. Bespondents ’ remedy, if any, was in the Court of Claims. It is urged that the latter court has no equitable jurisdiction, and therefore the respondents had to bring this action in the Supreme Court or be without a remedy. Even if respondents’ first premise is correct it would not suffice to confer jurisdiction on the Supreme Court; but sections 8, 9 and 12 of the Court of Claims Act confer very broad jurisdiction upon the Court of Claims to hear and determine all claims against the State, and we think this broad grant of power necessarily implies the right to afford equitable relief where the same may be incidental to a claim for a money judgment.
The judgment should be reversed and the complaint dismissed on the law and without costs.
Bergae, Cooe, Halpere and Imbie, JJ. concur.
Judgment reversed and complaint dismissed, on the law, without costs. The findings of fact are affirmed.