21 Misc. 271 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1897
The plaintiff who is a resident of the city' of Hornellsville, in the county of Steuben, brings this action as a taxpayer
After said decision was rendered, a meeting of" the hoard of supervisors was called and held on the 14th day of November, 1895, at which meeting the following resolution was- passed by unanimous vote: “ Resolved, That the chairman appoint a committee of three to have in charge the bridge claims of the several towns •against the county, and that said committee be directed to audit all claims for bridges constructed in accordance with the resolution ©f this board passed on'the 5th day of December, 1894.” At the same session the committee appointed by the chairman reported in favor of allowing the claims of the several towns, and the board of supervisors by resolution adopted the report of the committee, and discharged it. On the same day of the adoption of the report, the. following resolution was also passed: <c Resolved, That the -supervisors of the several towns to which bridge claims have been .-allowed, have orders upon the county treasurer for the several -amounts allowed to them.” In pursuance of this resolution, orders were issued upon the county treasurer of said county, payable on ¡the 14th day of February, 1896, to the towns named-in said report, but before any of said orders were paid, this action was commenced, and an injunction order issued restraining the county treasurer of said county from paying- out any of said funds to the -towns. The plaintiff contends that the hoard of supervisors had no legal authority, under the statute as amended, to authorize the ¡raising of said money by assessment upon the taxable property of the county, or to empower the county-treasurer to pay it over to the towns. • T~
I am unable to reach the conclusion that the legislature intended hy this amendment to relieve the counties from liability where the bridges, as in this case, had been constructed previous to the passage'of. the amendatory act. Section 130, before it was amended, imposed upon the county affixed liability where the whole expense for repairs and- construction of bridges over streams -aiid other
The board did not dispute the amount expended by any of the towns, but simply postponed the time of payment until the Court of Appeals -rendered a decision in the said mandamus cases. The rejection of the claims of the towns of Bindley and Addison were placed solely on the ground that they were not a legal charge against the county.
The legislature in amending section 130 of the Highway Baw, aforesaid, could not have intended that it should have a retroactive effect, especially in view of the great amount of injury and injustice that might arise under the law if it were retroactive. The language of the act does not, in my judgment, call for any such severe and unreasonable construction.
In People ex rel. Newcomb v. McCall, 94 N. Y. 587, Judge Earl says: “ It is a general rule, often reiterated and laid down in reported decisions, that laws should be so construed as to be prospective and not retrospective in their operations, "unless they are specially made applicable to past transactions and to such as are still pending.” The rule is that when a law is amended and reenacted, those parts of the law simply repeated are not repealed and re-enacted, but are considered to have continued in force from the beginning, and rights which have accrued under the original statute remain unaffected. Ely v. Holton, 15 N. Y. 595; Moore v. Mausert, 49 id. 335; Goillotel v. Mayor, 87 id. 441; Bullock v. Town of Durham, 64 Hun, 382; Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations, p. 77. If the above rule is applied to this case it seems to me that the original section may be treated as if it were permitted to stand and apply to all past cases, proceedings and contracts that have been made, and rights that have accrued thereunder, and the amended act only applied to future transactions. Reid v. Supervisors of Albany County, 128 N. Y. 373. The amendment^ therefore, under the well-settled .rule of law, operated prospectively, and did not affect any rights which had accrued to the towns pre
Chief Judge Andrews, in the Matter of Prime, 136 N. Y. 355, says: “ Where the amended, act re-enacts provisions equivalent, though in different words, the law will be regarded as having been continuous, and the new enactment as to such parts will not operate as a repeal so as to affect a duty accrued under the prior law, although, as to all new transactions, the later law will be referred to as. the ground of obligation.”
The ease of Quinlan v. Welch, 141 N. Y. 164, was an action to recover damages under the Civil Damage Act of 1873, chapters 646, The cause of action accrued under that act, but the suit was not commenced until after the act had been repealed by the provisions of chapter 403, Laws of 1892. The court held, that the act of 1873 was not penal, and that the plaintiff’s cause of action was not affected by the repealing act of 1892. "That the repeal of a penal statute discharged offenses committed before such repeal and proceedings based thereon, but when the statute is not penal, it falls within the rule which has "long existed and was recognized by this court in the Matter of Miller, 110 N. Y. 216. The question which arose in the last-named case was, whether the beneficiary, who had become liable to pay a collateral inheritance tax under the act of 1885, chapter 483, was released from the -payment thereof by chapter 713, Laws of 1887, which was enacted before payment of said tax. The court held, that “ the rule is considered settled in this State that neither original statutes nor amendments have any retroactive force, unless in exceptional cases the legislature so declare. - The act before "us contains no such declaration, and theré seems no reason to- give the amendment any other force than would he due to the provisions of an independent statute,, and the case should be decided as if the act of 1887 had not been passed.”
If the construction, of the act contended for by the plaintiff were to be adopted, the act should have -been entitled An "Act to relieve" the counties in this state from their obligations to the "towns, and to deprive the towns of any right of .action or proceeding they might have against the counties under section 130 of the Highway Law of 1892. Reinhardt v. Fritzsche, 69 Hun, 565; Ackerson v. Board of Supervisors, 72 id. 621; Bullock v. Town of Durham, supra.
It" is also urged on the-part of the learned counsel for-the defendants that the right of the towns to'this money became, a vested" right,
It seems to me that there can be no question under the recent decision of the Court of Appeals in the case of People ex rel. Root v. Board of Supervisors of Steuben County, supra, but what the towns had a right of action against the county of Steuben when the board of supervisors refused to audit then1 claims. A right of action, therefore; having accrued at that time, which became vested in the towns, raises the. question whether those rights could be legally divested or impaired by any subsequent legislation. I do not deem it necessary, however, to discuss or pass upon this question as the rights of the towns are, in my judgment, fully protected under the statute. If we were to assume that the amended act of 1895 was retroactive, I am inclined to think that the right of the towns to enforce their claims against the county are fully protected by the saving clause in the Statutory Construction Law of 1892. It will be seen from the context of that act that it applies to all future statutes. Section 1 of the Statutory Construction Law (1 R. S. [Banks’ 9th ed.], page 110), provides that “ this chapter shall be known .as the Statutory Construction Law, and is applicable to every statute unless its general object or the context of the .language construed or other provisions of the law indicate that a different meaning or application was intended from that required to be given by this chapter.” In limiting the effect of the repealing statute, section 31 of said act provides that “ the repeal of a statute or a part thereof shall not affect or impair any act done or right accruing, accrued or acquired, or liability, penalty, forfeiture" or punishment incurred prior to the time such repeal takes effect, but. the same may be asserted, enforced, prosecuted or inflicted as fully and to the same extent as if such repeal had not been effected; and all actions and proceedings, civil or criminal, commenced under or by virtue of any provision of a statute so. repealed and pending immediately prior to the taking effect of such repeal, may be prosecuted and defended to final effect in the same maimer as they might if such provisions were not repealed.”
It will be'observed by an examination of these two statutes that there is a broad distinction between the general • repealing act of 1828 and the Statutory Construction Law of 1892, chapter 677. The last-named act, by its terms, applies to all future statutes. The remarks of the learned judge in Mongeon v. People, supra, that the legislature could not declare in advancé the intent of subsequent legislatures, was merely obiter. It is true that the saving clause in the Statutory Construction Law could not control or bind ■subsequent legislatures, but subsequent legislatures could pass laws having in view the saving clause in that statute, and it must be ' presumed that when the legislature passed the amended act in question and omitted a saving clause, that it had in viéw the saving clause in the Statutory Construction Law of 1892. I am not aware that the legislature is prohibited by the Constitution or any rule of law from passing such a statute. Many of the states have enacted saving clauses similar to that' contained in the Statutory Construction Law of our own state, which áre intended, as some of the courts have held, to preserve all rights and remedies in- cases where the legislature should repeal or subsequently change a statute and neglect to put in a saving clause in the new enactment, and in all of them the saving clauses have been upheld when they have come before the courts for construction. The ' courts have uniformly held that the legislature has power to' pass a general saving clause in a statute-which shall save all rights and remedies1 that have accrued under the act that .has been repealed, except when the repealing statute itself shows that it was not the intention of the legislature that such rights and remedies should be saved. Gilleland v. Schuyler, 9 Kans. 569; Kleckner v. Turk, 45 Neb. 194;
Sutherland, in his excellent work on Statutory Construction, section 226, lays down the rule clearly and broadly as follows: “ The legislature has power to pass a general saving statute which shall have the force and effect to save rights and remedies, except where the repealing statute itself shows that it was not the intention of the legislature that such rights and remedies should be saved. Though one legislature cannot bind future legislatures, and each can make its laws prevail against any that exist, and its intention in that regard will be law, yet, as all legislatures are presumed to proceed with a knowledge of existing laws, they may properly be deemed to legislate with general provisions of such a nature in view. ' When a repeal is enacted, accompanied by no provisions, specially for existing rights which would be affected by it, it should be assumed that they are to have and were intended to have such protection as other statutes’will give them. In such cases the repealing act is to be considered as limited in its effect and operation in the same manner and to the same effect as if it contained the saving clause provided by the general law.”
In People v. Maxwell, 83 Hun, 157, Cullen, J., says: “We have no doubt as to the constitutionality and efficacy, of the saving clause. It is in no sense an ex post facto law. The defendant is not punished under the saving clause of the act of 1892, but under the law as it existed at the time he committed the offense.” Christie v. Bowne, 83 Hun, 108.
In People v. England, 91 Hun, 152, the court held in reference to section 31 of the Statutory Construction Law, that “ the act did not attempt to interfere in any manner with future legislation, but simply prescribed a rule of construction applicable when not inconsistent with the general object of the subsequent statute, or the context of the language construed or other provision of the repealing law indicating a different intent.” Matter of Howe, 48 Hun, 235; State v. Boyle, 10 Kans. 113; People v. McNulty, 93 Cal. 437.
It seems to me that the saving clause in. the Statutory Construction Law and the aménded statute in question are in no respect repugnant to each other, and when construed together, there is no-ambiguity. The amendment applies to subsequent transactions, and the saving clause protects past transactions. The amended act releases the counties throughout the state from aiding towns
It is also urged by the learned counsel for the plaintiff that the case of Town of Wirt v. Supervisors,. 90 Hun, 205, is controlling in-this case. If the facts were the same in both cases, I should feel bound to follow the decision of the General Term, but they differ very materially. Ward, J., in his able and interesting opinion, says: “ At the time of the submission of the questions in dispute, pursuant to section 1219 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the law, upon which the claims of the plaintiff were presented had no existence, but was repealed, and, therefore,, the Statutory Construction Law did not aid the plaintiff.” ' ,
In this case all the claims of the towns had been presented to the board of supervisors before the repeal of the act of 1892, and the board, by resolution, expressly agreed to pay them in case the Court of Appeals should hold in the mandamus proceedings then pending that the county was liable: This was a valid contract between the county and the towns, based upon a good consideration. The county agreed to pay the towns the amounts that it was then legally obligated to pay under the statute if the towns would not' sue or institute mandamus proceedings. No such agreement was made or entered into on the part of the board of supervisors in the case of Town of Wirt v. Supervisors, supra. '
There is another point raised and urged by the defendants against the plaintiff’s right to maintain this action, and that is, that the county of- Steuben is a necessary party. If this, point had been raised by demurrer or answer, it would undoubtedly havg been sustained. Code of Civil Procedure, § 499. It is evident that the action should have been brought against the county of Steuben instead of the board of supervisors.. The law was formerly that an action against a county should be brought against the board of supervisors, but that law was repealed by chapter 686 of the Laws of 1892. Section 3 of said act-provides that “an action or special proceeding. for or against a county, or for its benefit and upon a contract lawfully made with it or with any of its officers or agents authorized to- contract in its behalf, or to enforce any liability created or duty enjoined upon it or upon any of its officers or agents for which it is liable, or to recover damages for an in
The complaint, therefore, must be dismissed, with costs against the plaintiff.