
    Bowes v. City of Brooklyn.
    
      (Supreme Court, General Term, Second Department.
    
    July 2, 1889.)
    Municipal Corporations—Officers—Board of Estimate.
    The hoard of estimate of the city of Brooklyn, which is authorized to fix the salaries of patrolmen, may, after passing on the other expenditures to he made, and before taking final action on the entire budget, rescind a former resolution fixing such salaries, and reduce them.
    Appeal from special term, Kings county.
    Action by Patrick H. Bowes against the city of Brooklyn, for a balance alleged to be due him on his salary as patrolman, which salary the board of estimate had reduced in amount from that first fixed by its resolution. A demurrer to the complaint was sustained, and plaintiff appeals.
    Argued before Barnard, P. J., and Dykman and Pratt, JJ.
    
      Roger A. Pryor, Jr., for appellant. Almet P. Jenhs, for respondent.
   Pratt, J.

The board of estimate of the city of Brooklyn is unlike the ordinary branches of administrative, legislative, or executive service in a municipality. Its duty is to allow and fix the amounts to be expended in the discharge of the multitude of duties devolved upon municipal officers in relation to state or local affairs. It is obvious that the primary action of such a body on any particular subject is necessarily tentative and contingent. While considered by itself it might be willing to make a liberal appropriation for any given object, the relation of that object to other subjects of expenditure, anil to the supreme question of the aggregate to be raised by tax during the pending year, might lead to much greater moderation and economy. In fixing in detail and in aggregate the sums to be expended over so large a field, the judgment of the members of the board as to any particular object, as expressed in the first instance, should not be held so absolute as to govern and subvert their later conclusions upon other objects and upon the sum total of the annual tax. That the action of the board of estimate was intended to be thus subject to revision may be further seen from the fact that, as a general rule, its determinations are in all respects open to review by the legislative body of the city government. It is true that in the matter brought up by the appellánt the legislature has vested the power of fixing the salaries in question in the board of estimate alone. But it is easy to see how the members of the board, having fixed the salaries in the first instance at a liberal figure, should, after passing upon all the other expenditures to be made, and being brought to the determination of the larger question of the aggregate of the budget, have felt constrained to revise their initiative action, and reduce the amount to a consistency with greater general economy. And we think the legislature must be deemed to have reposed the power in question in the board of estimate in full view of its general character as described, and with the intent that it should be exercised in the mode and subject to the revisory discretion inherent in that board until its final action on the entire budget. For these reasons the authorities and arguments presented by the learned counsel for the appellant we think are inapplicable, and the judgment must be affirmed.  