23 N.Y. 318 | NY | 1861
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *320
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *321
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *322 Assuming that the grant of the land under water executed to the defendant Varnum may have been either void or voidable for any or all the reasons suggested in the complaint, the question which presents itself in the first instance, is whether the plaintiff sustains such a relation to the subject as will enable him to maintain a suit to set the conveyance aside. He is a resident citizen of the city of New York, and is the owner of real and personal property which is liable to be assessed for taxes therein; and he is moreover, a creditor of the city to the amount of more than $100. The defendants' counsel maintain that neither of these characters entitle him to sue for such a cause.
I. As a resident citizen, and a person liable to be taxed, he has no other rights than such as are common to all the people of that community who own property; and we have decided upon full consideration that it requires some individual interest, distinct from that which belongs to every inhabitant of the town or county, to give the party complaining a standing in court, where it is an alleged delinquency in the administration of public affairs which is called in question. (Doolittle v. Supervisorsof Broome County,
The difference between a municipal corporation and the ordinary official agencies for the government of a local division of the State consists, mainly, in the capacity of the former to sue and be sued, and to contract under a common seal and in a common name. This circumstance does, no doubt, expose a community thus governed to some suits to which the latter is not exposed. Thus it has been held in a great many cases that a city, or an incorporated village, may be sued for negligence in not repairing the streets, sidewalks, c. But this distinction does not aid the plaintiff in this case. His difficulty is, not that the corporation is not the proper party representing the public to be sued, provided a cause of action exists which the plaintiff can enforce. The defect is the want of a proper party plaintiff. The corporation represents the interest liable to be affected by the remedy sought; but the plaintiff does not represent the whole public, who are the parties claimed to be aggrieved. I am very confident that the plaintiff cannot sustain this action, in his character as a resident citizen and taxpayer.
II. The right to sue, as a creditor holding shares of the city stock, depends upon other considerations. The persons similarly situated are probably numerous; but the rights which *327 they have belong to them as private individuals, and not as members of the community. If, therefore, the complaint discloses facts which would have given the plaintiff a right of action if he had been the sole creditor of the corporation, he is not, I think, precluded from suing because there are a great many others having the same common interest with him. In such a case the action may be brought by one or more for the benefit of the whole, according to section 119 of the Code, which is only the enactment of a rule as to practice which has long prevailed in courts of equity.
The question, then, is, whether the plaintiff, as a creditor, has stated a title for the relief which he claims against the defendants. His case, according to the complaint, is, briefly, that property, the proceeds of the sales of which were pledged and appropriated for the payment of the city debt, has been sold for less than its value, and that, in making the sale, precautions provided by law for securing an adequate price have not been taken. This, and the charge that an office-holder under the city government, who was prohibited by law from being concerned in the purchase of city property, was interested in this purchase, constitutes the whole of the case. It is not stated that there has been any default in the payment of interest, or that the principal of the debt has become due, nor that the debt is in any way insecure, nor that the plaintiff is under any apprehension that he will sustain a loss. It is, indeed, averred that the debt of the corporation is much larger than its property; but public or municipal debts are not based upon accumulated property, but on the faculty of taxation and the pledge of the public faith.
It will be necessary to ascertain what legal rules apply to the issuing of grants of this kind, namely, of land under water; and, upon a careful examination of the ordinance relating to the sinking fund, it will be perceived that they are distinct from those which regulate the sales of other real estate. Sections 11 to 16, inclusive, of title 4, relate to such grants. The property not required to be put up at auction, and no previous notice is necessary to be given of the time and place of sale, as is the *328 case where other real estate is sold. With the exception of grants to be made in certain specified localities to be immediately noticed, the price is to be arrived at by a report of the Comptroller and Street Commissioner, confirmed by the Commissioners of the Sinking Fund. But a section of the shore of the North river is excluded from the operation of that provision, and it is declared that the rates to be charged for grants in that locality, which includes the premises in question, shall be those specified in a schedule contained in section 12. By that schedule the grant in question was to be charged for at the rate of $14 per running foot of the westerly line of the Eleventh avenue. The length of that line is not given in the description of this grant, but the length of the westerly line of the grant, which is the Thirteenth avenue, is eight hundred and seventy feet and seven inches; and as the figure of the parcel granted shows that it increases in width as it extends towards the centre of the river, it is clear that the price obtained was many times greater than that which would result from applying the data mentioned in the ordinance. The value of this interest had doubtless greatly increased since the adoption of the ordinance. It does not follow from its provisions that the Common Council or the Commissioners of the Sinking Fund could, in good faith, or without exposing the members to grave responsibilities, dispose of these rights at the prices mentioned in the ordinance, if other persons could be found, after reasonable notice or inquiry, who would pay more. The sum mentioned in the schedule should, I think, be regarded as a minimum; but there was no provision for a public sale or for competition; and the duty imposed upon the city officers was similar to that which attaches to any one clothed with authority to dispose of property at private sale not below a given price. But the precise directions of the ordinance — which apply to grants not within the section referred to, and to sales of real estate other than land under water — by which the price is to be determined, have no application to those grants of land under water at the place where the one in controversy is located. The averments, therefore, that no appraisement was made *329 according to the ordinance; that public notice was not given; and that there was no auction sale, are inapplicable, and have no tendency to show the grant to be illegal. They would have been material in connection with an averment of collusion between the officers who made the sale and the purchaser, and a conspiracy to defraud the city by passing the grant for an inadequate consideration; but there is no charge of want of good faith on the part of any person concerned. The statement that the property was of far greater value than the price given, and that some good judges estimated it to be worth $300,000, unconnected with any charges of illegality or of fraud or collusion, does not raise any material issue. The only departure from the provisions of the ordinance, which I can discover, consists in the reservation of interest at the rate of only six per cent, when the ordinance expressly requires that seven per cent should be reserved upon all bonds and mortgages taken upon grants made by virtue of the ordinance. I have not heard any answer to this allegation of illegality.
I am of opinion that Mr. Draper, as a Governor of the Almshouse, was forbidden by the city charter to be concerned in such a purchase. The persons prohibited from being in any way interested in the purchase of any real estate or other property belonging to the corporation are the members of the Common Council, heads of departments, chiefs of bureaus and their deputies and clerks, and any "other officer of the said corporation." (Laws of 1849, p. 483, § 19.) The almshouse department is a branch of the city government, and Mr. Draper was one of its heads or chief officers (id., § 17). If there could be any doubt as to this, he is certainly an officer of the corporation. There is, of course, a far stronger reason for prohibiting members of the Common Council and the Commissioners of the Sinking Fund from being interested in such sales, in which they would have a direct agency by virtue of their offices, than for attaching the disability to one filling the position held by the defendant Draper; but the legislature thought fit to extend it to all the corporation officers, including, of course, the Governors of the Almshouse, and we cannot *330 make an exception. I do not, however, see that the plaintiff has any rights growing out of the violation of the statute in this respect. It is not charged that the grant was made for a less consideration because Mr. Draper was interested, or that the sinking fund has suffered any detriment on that account. It may well be that the city could maintain an action to impeach the conveyance, as being made contrary to law in this respect. But the plaintiff was not in any sense a party to the conveyance, and is not concerned to vindicate the law, unless it can be shown that his pecuniary interests have been injuriously affected. The averments fall short of stating such a case.
This brings me to the consideration of what I conceive to be a fatal defect in the plaintiff's case, putting it in the aspect of a suit by a creditor. He has no specific or general lien upon this property. He has, no doubt, an interest; and I think he has such a legal right to have the funds mentioned in the ordinance correctly administered, in order to subserve the purposes for which they were designed, as might be enforced by the courts, in a proper case. But the title of the city property, including that which was the subject of this grant, was in the corporation. The creditors have not even an equitable title. The duty of the city officers, entrusted by the sinking fund officers with its disposition and management, is a public governmental duty, and not a private one, for which they are generally responsible to the creditors; but if they do an act which produces injury to them, and which cannot be justified as the exercise of a discretion with which they are clothed, the individuals are, no doubt, responsible; and so, if an act is threatened, the direct and necessary tendency of which is to deprive the creditors of their security to an extent which will hazard the realization of their demands, the law, in my opinion, will afford a preventive remedy. But the complaint in this case does not present any such features. It assumes a right, so far as the plaintiff's claims as a creditor are asserted, to question any sale of the portions of the city property referred to in the sinking fund ordinance, as though it was subject to an equitable *331 lien in their favor, whether their pecuniary interests are actually prejudiced or not. Such a view of their rights cannot be sustained.
I am in favor of affirming the judgment of the Supreme Court.
DAVIES, J., took no part in the case; JAMES, J., dissented from so much of the preceding opinion as holds Draper, a Governor of the Almshouse, to be within the statute prohibiting city officers from having an interest in the purchase of corporation lands: all the other judges concurring,
Judgment affirmed.