Court Opinion

ID: 3612926
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:56:36.9245+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:01:18.992461
License: Public Domain

[EDITORS' NOTE:  THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 17 
By chapter 603 of the Laws of 1892 the legislature directed the construction of a sewer in a portion *Page 18 
of the city of Rochester and in the adjoining town of Gates, county of Monroe. By the statute commissioners to prosecute and conduct the improvement were to be appointed by the County Court of Monroe county on the application of five or more interested freeholders. The necessary funds were to be obtained in the first instance by the issue of certificates of indebtedness bearing interest at the rate of six per cent, and an assessment for the cost of the improvement was directed to be levied upon the property benefited thereby, and in case the first assessment was insufficient to meet such cost a further assessment was to be imposed. The assessments when collected were to be paid to the treasurer of the commission. There is no express direction in the statute for the payment of the certificates of indebtedness out of the moneys collected on the assessments, but this is the plain scheme and intent of the act. The credit of no municipality was pledged for the payment of the bonds and the sole reliance of the creditor was necessarily limited to the assessment fund. The work was done under this statute. The cost was paid by the issue of certificates of indebtedness, of which the relator holds $38,000 in amount, which certificates, by their terms, matured on February 1st, 1904. By an amendatory act (Laws 1895, ch. 438) the details of the scheme for prosecuting the improvement were modified in many respects, but one of which is material here. By section 20 it was provided that on the completion of the sewer the commission should turn over to the treasurer of the city of Rochester all their books of accounts, records of proceedings and contracts, all moneys on hand, the assessment roll and all uncollected assessments and papers connected therewith, which city treasurer was thereafter to have all the powers vested by the original act in the treasurer of the commission. By chapter 315 of the Laws of 1898, the statute was further amended and the treasurer of the city of Rochester was empowered to issue assessment bonds of an amount not exceeding $400,000, and out of the proceeds thereof redeem and cancel the certificates of indebtedness issued by the commissioners. Nothing *Page 19 
seems to have been done under this last statute, and in 1904, by another act of the legislature (Ch. 620) provision was made for the appointment of special collectors to be appointed by the County Court for the purpose of collecting the assessment for said sewer. The moneys so collected were to be paid over to the county treasurer of Monroe county and were to be "deemed as to the custody of the same, as funds of the county of Monroe," and to "be known as the west side sewer fund." The statute further provided that the treasurer should, at least once in six months, file a statement of said funds with the Monroe County Court, which accounts should be audited, and any person interested in the funds should have a right to appear in reference thereto. The relator on affidavits reciting the general history of the legislation as heretofore set forth, its ownership of $38,000 in amount of the bonds, the fact that the county treasurer had in his possession as the proceeds of said sewer assessments the sum of $89,271.19 and that the total amount of the outstanding certificates was the sum of $281,000, applied for a mandamus directed to the county treasurer to pay to it a pro rata share of the moneys in his possession. The affidavits in opposition to the application do not put in issue any of the allegations of the relator except that the outstanding certificates are stated to be somewhat less in amount than that charged in the relator's papers. The treasurer, in justification of his refusal to pay the relator, states that the collectors are still engaged in the enforcement of the assessment and that it would be unwise to enforce any payment on the certificates until the labors of the collectors are concluded. He also pleads the lack of statutory authority to make payments out of the fund in hand. The Special Term granted the writ; that action has been reversed by the Appellate Division.
We are of opinion that the relator was entitled to the relief sought. It had the corporate or personal obligation of no municipality, and, therefore, could maintain no action at law on their certificates of indebtedness. The sole security for the payment of the certificates held by it was the proceeds of *Page 20 
the assessment levied for the improvement. But to such proceeds it, with the other certificate holders, had an absolute contract right of which it could not be deprived either by subsequent legislation or any failure to enact appropriate legislation. Though the statute of 1905 does not in terms direct that the county treasurer shall apply the fund when collected to the payment of the outstanding certificates of indebtedness, we think that such direction is necessarily implied, for, as already said, the legislature could not divert those funds to any other purpose. Having thus the right to compel the application of the funds in hand towards the satisfaction of the claim held by it, we do not see that it has any other remedy to enforce that right than by mandamus. The decision of the learned Appellate Division apparently proceeds on the ground that the relator's application for relief should be made to the County Court. We find, however, in the statute no authority granted to that court to direct any distribution of the fund among the certificate holders, and the relator is, therefore, confined to common-law remedies. Nor can the relator be compelled to wait indefinitely the termination of all proceedings by the collectors to enforce the assessment before obtaining any part of the fund on hand. The certificates of indebtedness held by it matured February 1st, 1904. This application was made in March, 1907, more than three years after that time. It may be years before the matter of the collection of the assessments is finally terminated by the collection of all those which are collectible and the abandonment of those which cannot practically be enforced. Meanwhile the relator is deprived of the possession of money that justly belongs to it. We do not mean to assert that every time a small sum is collected the county treasurer should be compelled to distribute it. The sum collected is not insignificant, but substantial, approximating thirty per cent of the outstanding indebtedness, and the relator has waited for three years before seeking to enforce its claim. Whatever discretion there might be vested in the Supreme Court to grant or refuse a partial distribution while the fund *Page 21 
was in course of collection was exercised by the Special Term when it granted the application and that discretion has not been disturbed by the decision of the Appellate Division, for the order of reversal by that court states that it was not made in the exercise of its discretion.
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed and that of the Special Term affirmed, with costs and ten dollars costs of motion.
GRAY, VANN, WILLARD BARTLETT, HISCOCK and CHASE, JJ., concur; WERNER, J., not sitting.
Ordered accordingly.