Court Opinion

ID: 6603239
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:09:42.095093+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:58:05.627606
License: Public Domain

Cole, J.
We are clear in the opinion that the common council, at its meeting on the 28 th of March, 1876, fixed the salary of the treasurer to be elected at the next ensuing election at $1,000, and that he can claim no more than that sum. Section 12, ch. 179, Laws of 1876, gave the common council ample authority thus to fix the salary. But some objections are taken by the learned counsel for the defendants to the validity of this action of the common council. He claims that, under the provisions of the city charter (chapter 262, Laws of 1875), the common council could only fix the salary of the treasurer by *207an ordinance, by-law or resolution in writing, legally passed or adopted at its last regular meeting in March, 1876. The question therefore is, Do not the proceedings of the common council, which were offered in evidence, show that the Balary was in fact fixed at such a meeting by a proper resolution? Among the proceedings of the meeting, held on the 28th of March, we find this entry: “A motion that the salary of the city treasurer be $1,000 for the coming year was carried by the following vote: Ayes — Aldermen Hoffman, Holmes, Har-teau, Meister, Miller, Martin, and "Weise.” The action of the common council fixing the salary of the treasurer clearly appears from this entry. But it is said the entry shows that the salary was not fixed by written resolution, by-law or ordinance, as it should have been, but by an oral motion. We suppose, however, when this oral motion was adopted by the common council it became a resolution or order of that body, expressive of its decision in regard to the treasurer’s salary. This is the common-sense view of the matter, which is fully borne out by the authorities to which we were referred by the learned attorney for the city. Besides, it might be added, that the law conferring authority upon the common council to fix the salary does not require that body to act upon the subject in any particular manner. It simply provides that the common council shall, at its last regular meeting in March, fix the salary of the treasurer to be elected; and we fully agree with the attorney for the city in the view that any form or mode of procedure which the common council might resort to, for expressing its decision or determination as to what the salary should be, would comply with the charter, providing such action were made to appear in the record of its proceedings in some written, permanent form.
But it is further objected that the meeting of the common council on the 28th of March was irregular, or not held pursuant to a lawful adjournment. The record of the proceedings shows a meeting of the common council on the 17th of March, *208which was adjourned to the 23d; and that a meeting was held oil the 23d, which was again adjourned to the 28th. The record does not show how the vote on these adjournments was taken. It is insisted that the charter required that the vote on each adjournment should be taken by ayes and noes, and entered at length upon the journal. It is true that there is a provision in the city charter (sec. 2, subch. IY, ch. 262) to the effect that the sessions of the common council shall be open and public; that the proceedings shall be recorded in full; that the vote in all cases shall be taken by ayes and noes, and every vote shall be entered at large upon the journal. Without attempting now to decide the question so fully discussed upon the argument, whether this provision was directory or mandatory upon the common council when acting upon particular subjects, we think it was not intended to apply to a vote upon a motion to adjourn. It doubtless relates to business matters which might come before the council for its action, such as the allowance of claims and demands against the city, the management of its finances, the levy of taxes, laying out and improving streets, and matters of that kind, in which the citizens and public had an interest and might desire to know how members of the common council acted and voted in respect to them. But we can see no reason for saying the provision requires a vote on an adjournment to be taken by ayes .and noes, and entered at length upon the journal, whether the members desire the vote to be taken in that manner or not. The provision was not intended to prescribe an iron rule for taking the vote on a motion to adjourn, and it would be most unreasonable to give it that construction. We therefore think the proceedings adjourning the meeting of the common council from the 17th to the 23d, and'from the latter day to the 28 th of March, were regular and valid.
It appears, furthermore, that at the meeting on the 17th the common council attempted to fix the salary of the treasurer at $1,500. This action was clearly unauthorized, as chapter 179 *209had not then taken effect. Section 30, ch. 10 of the charter was in force, which regulated the treasurer’s salary, and fixed it not to exceed $1,000. The objection that the resolution adopted on the 17th should properly have been reconsidered and rescinded at the subsequent meeting on the 28th, cannot, under the circumstances, have any weight given it; for the resolution of the 17th was inoperative and void.
It appears that at the end of the treasurer’s term of office a settlement was made with him. It is said that in this settlement he was allowed $1,500 salary. No such fact, however, appears- from the settlement, nor can the inference be drawn from the action of the common council in the matter, that he was to be allowed $1,500 as his ■ salary. The proceedings show merely that a special committee was appointed by the common council to make a final settlement with the treasure!’, and that such committee examined his accounts, and made a report of the moneys received and paid out by him; but there is nothing in the report showing that the treasurer had retained and been allowed $1,500 as his salary. The report of the committee was adopted by the common council, and this is all that was done in regard to the settlement. There is, therefore, no ground for saying that the treasurer was allowed more than $1,000 salary on a final settlement of his accounts.
It follows, from these views, that the judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.