102 A.D. 298 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
This action is proper. (Port Jervis Water Co. v. Village of Port Jervis, 151 N. Y. 111.)
I cannot find in the Public Health Law (Laws of 1893, chap. 661, as amd.) express authority for the employment of attorneys by the local boards of health. The authorities cited by the learned coun- .. sel for the respondent do not sustain his contention. Thus, in Kent v. Village of North Tarrytown (50 App. Div. 502) the plaintiff rendered services concerning nuisances, and made a map of certain lands under water, and the court held that such information was necessary to the determination of whether there was a nuisance, that the services were within the contemplation of the statute and laid stress upon that provision of section 21 which I shall hereafter notice. In People ex rel. Lester v. Eno (84 App. Div. 55) the services rendered were by a physician employed by the board in a town threatened by smallpox. Griffith v. City of New York (73 App. Div. 549) involved clerical services to the board of health. In these cases the services were strictly within the duties cast upon the boards of health, and the said provision of section 21 was comprehensive enough to warrant the employment. We are also cited to Boyce’s Health Officers’ Manual (p. 222), in which it is stated that this provision authorizes the employment of counsel, but no authorities are given. This provision of section 21,
If actions for penalties must be brought in the name of the village, if the recoveries must be paid to the village, if all the expenses of the board of health (and consequently all legal expenses) are a charge
The evidence is meager as to certain services which may possibly have been required in some peculiar and special instances “ to carry ■into effect ” the “ orders and regulations ” of the board. And it is too meager either to modify the judgment and affirm it as to such services, or to hold absolutely that such services might not liaye been ' thus required. If they proved to be such, however, as a corporation counsel of the village could as a lawyer have rendered, then there can be no recovery. The plaintiff then cannot recover for such services, or for services in prosecution upon ordinances, or for services as counsel to the board, or for services in attending at court to advise as to the legal status of the board, or the outcome of a lawsuit. I only advise a new trial for the reason that there may have been some peculiar special service fairly within the provisions of section 21, ut supra, which may have been exceptional and without the general rule which I have sought to indicate.
Bartlett, Rich and Miller, JJ., concurred; Hooker, J., not voting.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
As amd. by Laws of 1895, chap. 203, and Laws of 1903, chap. 383.— [Rep.
As amd. by Laws oí 1897, chap. 169, and Laws of 1903, chap. 383.— [Rep.