66 N.Y.S. 221 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
An analysis of chapter 101 of the Laws of 1881, as amended, shows that the primary purpose of the Legislature was to supply the city of Amsterdam with water, and that the board of water commissioners is the agency created by the Legislature for the accomplishment of that purpose.
The duties of the commissioners, as prescribed by the act, are to examine and consider all matters relating to supplying the city with water; to adopt plans for procuring such supply; to purchase and to acquire- by condemnation proceedings property required for the purpose of the act; to borrow money upon the credit of the city and to execute bonds to secure the payment of the same; to establish a scale of rents for water, to collect the same and to apply the receipts, above expenses, to the payment of the interest of the loans and the creation of a sinking fund for the payment of the principal; and to file annually a detailed statement of their accounts with the clerk of the city of Amsterdam. The act provides that all property purchased by the commissioners or acquired by them through condemnation proceedings shall belong to the city, and the amount of any award made for such property shall be a liability against the
From these provisions it will be seen that the board of water commissioners, in the performance of its duties, acts solely for the benefit of the municipality.' The city owns the property acquired by the board, is liable for the debts contracted, and to it the board is accountable for the funds which it administers. The board is not an independent body, but is merely an arm to supply one of the wants of the municipal body. Apart from the needs of the city, there is no reason for its existence. In the charter it is recognized as a department of the city government (Laws of 1885, chap. 131, tit. 8), and within the authorities it is a department for. whose misfeasance the city is liable. (Deyoe v. Village of Saratoga Springs, 3 T. & C. 504; Bolton v. Village of New Rochelle, 84 Hun, 281; Pettengill v. City of Yonkers, 116 N. Y. 558.) Nor does the fact that the board was created a body corporate in any way affect the question of its agency. It is as competent for the Legislature to make a corporate as it is an unincorporate board a department or instrumentality of the city government. The various boards of cities are not infrequently, by their charters, made bodies corporate. I think, therefore, that the Special Term was right in sustaining the demurrer to the second defense:
The demurrer to the third defense was also properly sustained. The defendant contends that, the plaintiff’s only remedy for the injury complained of is that provided for by the statute through the medium of commissioners of assessment. While the method of obtaining compensation provided for in the statute for property taken by the water commissioners is, I think, exclusive (Calking v. Baldwin, 4 Wend. 668 ; Heiser v. Mayor, 104 N. Y. 68), it
The direction in the interlocutory judgment for entry of final judgment in the event of defendant not serving an amended answer and paying costs was erroneous, for the reason that the answer contained a general denial and an issue remained to be disposed'of. (Code Civ. Proc. § 1021.) This was probably through inadvertence, and would have been corrected had an application been made. The interlocutory judgment should be modified by striking out that direction, and as thus modified should be affirmed, with costs of appeal to the respondent, and with the usual leave to amend on payment of costs.
All concurred.
Interlocutory judgment modified by striking out the direction for entry of final judgment, and as thus modified affirmed, with costs of appeal to the respondent, and with the usual leave to amend on payment of costs.