Court Opinion

ID: 3620390
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 00:02:19.968182+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:46:14.225958
License: Public Domain

The referee has found that during the years in question there has been an account on the county treasurer's books called a general fund, for which money is raised by general tax from time to time by the direction of the board of supervisors of the county, and into which are carried items of money not otherwise especially appropriated, and from which are paid miscellaneous accounts and matters not otherwise generally mentioned in the annual tax levy, and that there has been in such fund at all times since any of the taxes upon the property of the railroad company in Lockport have been paid to the county treasurer, a greater sum than the total amount of such taxes so paid to the county treasurer, and that the money in that general fund amounted on the 1st day of July, 1888, to $9,985.19, and that amount was then held for and subject to the payment of miscellaneous demands and expenditures of the county not especially provided for by the board of supervisors.
From and inclusive of the year 1878 to and including the year 1886, taxes have been annually paid to the county treasurer *Page 197 
by the railroad company upon the assessed valuation of its railroad in the city of Lockport, and there is no proof that any part of the sums of money so paid has ever been used for any purpose whatever. The law (Chap. 907, § 4 of the Laws 1869, as amended by chap. 283 of 1871) appropriates all such moneys to a specific purpose, and it is the duty of the county treasurer to set them apart for the purchase of bonds or for the sinking fund provided for in the statute. (Matter of Clark v. Sheldon,106 N.Y. 104.)
Although appropriated by law to such purpose, the moneys have never in fact been used as the statute requires, and as there is no proof of their ever having been paid out, the presumption is that they are still in the hands of the county treasurer. Certainly we never should indulge in the presumption, without proof, that the moneys have in fact been used for some purpose other than that commanded by the statute. To use the moneys for any other purpose would be to misappropriate them, and proof of such misappropriation would have to be made before the fact could be found.
In this case we have a general fund into which the moneys have probably gone. When received by the different county treasurers they should have used the moneys as directed by the statute. This they have not done. The other demands upon the treasury have been met, and at all times there has been money in the general fund largely in excess of these moneys in question.
We think, as the evidence stands, it is entirely proper to assume that the general fund contains these moneys. If not, they have been misappropriated, and there is, as I have said, no evidence of that fact.
It is true it is stated that since 1877 the board of supervisors has made no provision in raising taxes for money to buy bonds or create a sinking fund under this statute. Hence a witness testified that the county treasurer had not, to his knowledge during that time, had in his hands any money or funds applicable to purchase bonds of the city, or to create a sinking fund. But it is plain this is simply a conclusion of *Page 198 
the witness based upon the claim that in raising the taxes for each year since 1877 no provision was made to raise enough so that the treasurer might set off the tax collected of the railroad company to purchase bonds or to create a sinking fund. As the law appropriated the money collected of the railroad company to such purchase, the failure to otherwise raise enough to provide for such payment would be wholly immaterial. The railroad company provided such a fund by paying the tax, and the money thus paid was ipso facto appropriated to the purchase of the bonds or the creation of the sinking fund. But the large excess at all times in the general fund above described, beyond the amount of the taxes paid by the railroad company to the treasurer shows that even if the amount paid by the company had been used by the treasurer for its proper purpose, there would still have been money in the treasury during all these times unappropriated to any special purpose and subject to be drawn upon for the payment of the debts of the county.
The fact that the objects in each year for which the taxes of the year were raised did not include the purchase of the bonds of the city, nor the creation of a sinking fund, is answered by the statute which itself appropriated specifically the tax paid by the railroad company to the purpose therein mentioned, and if enough was not raised beside, the only result might be that a deficiency of funds required for other purposes might arise. The excess, however, shows that even this fear would have been unfounded.
The funds thus paid into the county treasury having remained therein from the time of such payments up to the present moment, there has been a continuing duty resting upon the county treasurer to make the application provided for by the statute, and this duty continues up to the moment he discharges it by making the application which the statute commands. In such case the Statute of Limitations does not apply. Herein lies the clear distinction between this case and that of Strough v. Board ofSupervisors (119 N.Y. 212). The county of Jefferson, through its county treasurer in that *Page 199 
case, instead of applying the moneys to the purchase of bonds or the creation of the sinking fund, misappropriated them to the payment of county and state taxes. From that moment of misappropriation a cause of action arose in favor of the town, and the Statute of Limitations commenced to run. Here there has been no misappropriation. The fund still remains in the hands of the county treasurer, and his duty to invest it as the statute requires is still as imperative as it was the first moment the fund came into his hands. It is not necessary that the particular moneys paid by the railroad company should be identified. It is not a case of pursuing trust funds in the ordinary acceptation of the term. The case bears more resemblance to that of Van Alen
v. American National Bank (52 N.Y. 1), where the moneys had been deposited in the bank and had been mingled with other moneys of the depositor and of the bank, and of course the particular moneys could not be identified. This court held it was a question of title, and the funds being still in the defendant's hands it was held liable to pay them over to the plaintiff.
Here the county treasurer has been paid certain sums of money which he has not used, and which are still subject to his disposal in a legal and proper manner. The court, under the statute, may make an order that he shall dispose of the money in the manner therein prescribed, and an action is not, under these facts, the proper means of redress.
Neither is it important that the present defendant did not receive all the moneys directly from the railroad company. The other county treasurers, his predecessors in office, received the moneys ex officio, and, failing to do with them as the statute required, they paid them over to their successors in office at the expiration of their respective terms, and the defendant now holds them by virtue of his position as county treasurer.
We think the order of the court below was right, and it should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur.
Order affirmed. *Page 200