
    Dennis Quinn vs. The Mayor, Aldermen and Commonalty of the City of New York.
    The plaintiff, at the charter election in December, 1869, was elected to the office of justice of the district court in the city of New York, for a term to commence on the 1st day of January, 1870; and on that day he entered upon the duties pf the office. At that time, the salary of a police justice, as fixed by a resolution of the common council, adopted December 31, 1869, under the supposed authority of law, and as paid, was #10,000 per annum; and this was the specified salary paid to a police justice when, in April, 1870, an act was passed by the legislature, providing as follows: “ The mayor and comptroller are hereby authorized to fix the salaries of the civil justices of the city of New York, or any or either of them, as they may deem the legal business of the respective districts to justify, not exceeding the 
      
      salary now paid to the police justices of said city." On the 21st of October, 1870, the mayor and comptroller, in pursuance of the authority given by this act, fixed the salary of the plaintiff, as such civil justice, at $10,000. Held that whether the ordinance of December 31, 1869, by which the salary of each of the police justices was fixed at $10,000, was legal and valid, or not, it having been adopted under-the supposed authority of law, and $10,000 being the sum paid to police justices at the time of the passage of the act of April, 1870, and the mayor and comptroller not having exceeded that limit by their action in fixing the salary of the'plaintiff, on the 21st of October, 1870, their official act was valid, and in accordance with Jaw.
    
      Held, also, that it was plain that the legislature, by the act of April, 1870, meant to grant to the mayor and comptroller a discretion to fix the salaries ' of the civil justices at any amount not exceeding the sum then paid as salary to a police justice; and that it was therefore vain to assert that the Salaries of the police justices had been unlawfully fixed at $10,000 per annum; that not being the question, but father, what were the sums then paid, as such salaries.
    
      Held, further, that the city was liable for the plaintiff’s salary, at the rate of $10,000 per year, though the board of apportionment had failed to provide for its payment, and the city corporation set up as a defence that there was no money in the treasury appropriated or applicable to the payment of such salary.
    The act of the board of apportionment, in setting apart or appropriating a certain sum for the payment of the salaries of the district court justices, for a particular year, which sum thus appropriated is less than the aggregate amount of such salaries as lawfully fixed, is not a “ regulation ” of such salaries, so as to change the amounts of the salaries as'already fixed.
    Before the board of apportionment can change the amount of a specific salary, they must act directly on the question of the amount of the salary, and explicitly make the change.
    The change or regulation of the salary to a different sum will not be inferred from the indirect action of the board in setting apart an aggregate amount to meet the payment of the same and similar salaries.
    The district court justices of the city of New York are not attached to any of the “ departments” of the city ; nor is the salary due to one of them, already fixed by competent authority according to law, before the passage of the act of 1872, (lams of 1872, eh. 9,) a liability incurred by him. In other words, the salary of a district court justice, lawfully fixed prior to 1872, which may fall due during that year, is not a liability incurred by that officer, against the prohibition of the law of 1872.
    The act of the legislature, of April 19, 1871, (Zatos of 1871, ch. 583,) which provides that “ no liability for any purpose whatever shall be hereafter incurred by any department of the city of New York, or officers of the county of New York, exceeding in amount the appropriations made for that purpose,” is not unconstitutional. The act is prospective, and its .provisions are not to have a retroactive effect. Whatever valid contracts or liabilities of the city existed at the date of its passage, continue to exist, and are not abrogated by the act.
    DEMURRER to answer. The plaintiff was elected justice of the first district court of the city of New York, and entered upon his six years term of office January 1, 1870. His salary was fixed by the mayor and comptroller at $10,000 per annum, and was paid, at that rate, up to September, 1871. Subsequent to .that date, the plaintiff’s salary was paid at the rate of $5000 per annum; and this action, was brought to recover the balance claimed to be due.
    The answer of the defendants, verified by Andrew H. Green, comptroller of the city of New York, denied that the salary of the plaiutiff' was fixed at $10,000 per annum, and alleged, as a second defence, that there was no money in the city treasury appropriated or applicable to the payment of the plaintiff’s salary at the rate of $10,000 per annum.
    The answer did not deny any of the material facts set out in the complaint. The plaintiff' demurred to the answer, on the ground that the facts stated therein were not sufficient to constitute a defence.
    The facts are fully stated in the opinion of the court.
    
      A. R. Lawrence, for the plaintiff.
    
      D. J. Lean, for the defendants.
   Fancher, J.

The plaintiffj at the charter election in December, 1869, was elected to the office of justice of the district court in the city of New York, for the first judicial district of said city, for the term of six years from the first of January, 1870, and he entered upon the duties of the office on that day, and has since then continued to perform the same. .

This action is brought to recover for the salary of the plaintiff, as such civil justice, from the first of September, 1871, to the 31st day of May, 1872, at the rate of $10,000 per annum. The first and second demands of payment, required by law, were made upon the comptroller, and he refused to pay the claim.

The answer of the defendants, verified by the comptroller, as chief financial officer of the city, denies that the salary of the plaintiff' is at the rate of $10,000 per annum ; alleges that it is fixed by law at $5000 per annum, and offers to allow judgment at the latter rate. For a second defence the answer alleges that there is no money in the treasury of the city appropriated or applicable to the payment of the salary at the rate of $10,000 per annum ; and finally sets up that on and since the first of October, 1871, there was no money in the treasury so appropriated or applicable.

To this answer the plaintiff has demurred, and the question is whether the answer states any lawful defence to the action.

1. The first question which arises on these pleadings is, whether the salary of the plaintiff is lawfully fixed at $10,000 per annum, or at the lesser sum of $5000 per annum. Chapter 308 of the laws of 1864 provides, that the justices and clerks of the district courts shall receive an annual compensation to be fixed by the board of supervisors. The complaint sets forth this provision of law, and alleges that on the 31st day of December, 1864, an ordinance or resolution was adopted by the board of supervisors, and approved on the same day by the mayor, fixing the compensation of the said justices at $5000 per annum, payable monthly. The complaint sets forth the provisions of law, which authorize the common council or board of supervisors to increase the compensation of certain officers, including police justices; and alleges that on the 31st of December, 1869, the common council passed an ordinance fixing the compensation of each of the police justices, at $10,000 per annum ; and that compensation was thereafter paid to them at that rate, and was so paid when chapter 383 of the laws of 1870 was enacted.

The last enactment reads as follows:

“ The mayor and comptroller are hereby authorized to fix the salaries of the civil justices of the city of New York, or any or either of them, as they may deem the legal business of the respective districts to justify, not exceeding the salary now paid to the police justices of said city.''

It is conceded that the salary then paid to each police justice, under the color of the authority of law, and within the literal scope of the language of the legislature and of the common council, was $10,000 per annum; but it'is contended that the common council had no lawful authority to increase such salary to that sum.

Whether the ordinance of the common council of the 31st of December, 1869, by which the compensation of each of the police justices was fixed at $10,000 per annum, was legal and valid, or not, it is certain that it was adopted under the supposed authority .of law. Chapter 508 of the laws of 1860, contains the supposed authority, and provides that “the common council or the board of supervisors in said city and county may increase the compensation of any officer mentioned herein,” and police justices are officers mentioned in the act.

When this plaintiff entered upon the duties of his office, the salary of a police justice, as fixed by resolution of the common council, and as paid, was $10,000 per annum, and this was the specified salary paid to a police justice when, in April following, chapter 383 of the laws of 1870 was passed. Now when the legislature by that act declared that the mayor and comptroller are thereby authorized to fix the salaries of the civil justices of the city of New York, or any or either of them, as they may deem the legal business of the respective districts to justify, not exceeding the salary then paid to the police justices of said city, what did the legislature mean ? It is plain they meant to grant to the mayor and comptroller a discretion to fix such salary at any sum not exceeding the sum then paid as salary to a police justice. It is in vain to assert that the salary of the police justice had been unlawfully fixed at $10,000 per annum. That is not the question; but rather what was the sum then paid as such salary ? Unquestionably the sum was $10,000 per annum, and, right or wrong, it was being paid under color of the authority of law. The act of 1870 does not refer to any law fixing the salary of a police justice, nor does it contain any language by which the act can be construed to mean the lawfully fixed salary of the police justice. On the contrary, the expression of the statute is, “ not exceeding the salary now paid to the police justices of said city.’ ”

On the 21st of October, 1870, the mayor and comptroller of the city, in pursuance of the authority of chapter 383 of the laws of 1870, fixed the salary of the plaintiff, as such civil justice at $10,000 per annum, and signed a certificate to authenticate such action. ■ They must, at that time, have supposed that their official act was valid and in accordance with law, and I can see no reason to suppose that it was not legal and valid.

It is said that when the common council, on the 31st of December, 1869, increased the salary of a police justice from $5000 to $10,000, they acted in violation of law, because chapter 876 of the laws of 1869, which was then in force prohibited the common council from creating any new office or department, or increasing the salaries of officials then in office.

Suppose this objection as to the want of power of the common council to increase the salary of a police justice to be well taken. Does it overthrow the fact that the common council did pass an ordinance to increase such salary to $10,000 per annum, under which it was paid at that rate ? The fact is, such an ordinance was passed, and from that time to the passage of the act of 1870, and the granting of the certificate of the mayor and comptroller above mentioned, the sum then paid as salary to the police justice was $10,000.

Whether the police justice got his salary lawfully "or unlawfully, the amount then paid him therefor, under color of lawful authority, was $10,000 per annum. This sum, then, is the standard up to which the mayor and comptroller had a right, under the act of 1870, to go, when they fixed the salary to be paid to the civil justices of the city. This standard was the limit beyond which they had no discretion, and since they have not exceeded it, I think their action was legal. When courts are construing a statute with a view to its proper interpretation, the chief thing sought for is the thought expressed by the language of the statute. (Newell v. The People, 7 N. Y. 97.) It is clear that the thought expressed by the language of the act of 1870 is a graduation of the salaries of the civil justices according to the discretion of the mayor and the comptroller, up to, but not above, the standard which was marked by the' sum then paid for salary to a police ' justice. The idea that such sum was illegally fixed, could not, when the act of 1870 was passed, have entered the mind of the legislature, for the point had not been raised. If the salary of a civil justice in Hew York is not fixed at the proper amount, the remedy must be sought in the proper place, and not in the court, which cannot make law, but is only authorized to interpret and administer it.

2. The. second defence set up by the answer is that there is no money in the treasury of the city appropriated or applicable to the plaintiff’s claim at the rate of $10,000 -per annum.

Chapter 583 of the laws of 1871, p. 1268, is relied upon as supporting this defence. It is claimed that this act, commonly called the “two per cent” act limits the amount to be raised by the board of supervisors, by taxation, for the year 1871, and that the board of apportionment, after providing for the principal and interest of certain bonds, and the city’s proportion of the State tax, shall apportion the remainder of such aggregate amount “to the various departments and purposes of the city and county governments and that from the sum so raised “all the expenses of the city and county for all their departments and purposes shall be paid, and no liabilities shall be incurred for any purpose in excess of such amount.” (§§ 1-3.)

It is further claimed that by said act the board of apportionment has power “ to regulate the salaries of officers and. employees of the city and county governments.” (§ 3.)

The 5th section of the same act is relied on, which provides that “ no liability for any purpose whatsoever shall thereafter be incurred by any department of the city of Hew York, or officers of the county of New Yorh, exceeding in amount the appropriations made for such purpose ; nor shall the city or county of New York be held liable for - any indebtedness so incurred.”

The civil justices are not attached to any of the “ departments” of the city government; nor are they officers or employees of any of those “ departments.” This will" be evident by a reference to the charter of 1870, (1 Laws of 1870, chap. 137, p. 366,) which defines what are the coordinate departments of the city government, and how they are constituted. The civil justices are elected by the electors of the district in the manner prescribed by law. (Laws of 1857, chap. 344, p. 707, § 5. Laws of 1865, chap. 688, p. 1398, § 8.) But although not attached to any of the “ departments” of the city government, still the justices of the district courts in the city of Hew York are entitled, by law, to have their salaries paid by the city. This is not disputed. When, therefore, the board of apportionment met'to dispose of the moneys raised under the “ two per cent” act, they well knew that the salaries of the district court justices were to be provided for. Those salaries were then legally fixed at $10,000 each; at least the salary of the plaintiff was fixed at that sum. It is not asserted that out of the sum capable of being apportioned, provision could not have been made for the payment of these salaries and for all other purposes of the city and county government, by the board of apportionment, nor that to have done so would have required the board of apportionment to exceed the expenditure allowed by law. It is only asserted that the board of apportionment did not, under the act of 1871, appropriate or make applicable to the payment of the p.laintiff’s salary any sum above $5000 per annum. If this be so, the board has provided for half of the salary of the plaintiff accruing during 1871, and left the other half unprovided for. What are the plaintiff’s rights under that state of facts ?

It is contended for the defendants, that by virtue of the statute, (Laws of 1871, chap. 583, § 5.) no expense can be incurred for 1871 in excess of the appropriations made by the board of apportionment; that neither the city nor county of Hew York can be held liable for any such excess of indebtedness so incurred; that no legal claim, therefore, can exist for salary or other expenses incurred in excess of the appropriation ; (Donovan v. The Mayor &c., 33 N. Y. 291 ;) and that no judgment can be recovered in such case unless it appears that there is money in the treasury applicable to the payment of the claim. (Laws of 1867, chap. 586, § 6. Tribune Association v. The Mayor, 48 Barb. 240.)

If, as we have seen is the case, when chapter 583 of the laws of 1871, was passed, the salaries of the justices of the district courts of the city were fixed at $10,000 each per annum, and, if when the board of apportionment had made the appropriations thereunder for 1871, whether they exhausted all the fund at their disposal, or not, they had allowed to the district'court justices, for their sala ries, but one half of what they were entitled to receive, then it is clear that one half the sums due the justices, for their salaries would still be due to them above such appropriations. Can the city escape liability therefor, under shelter of the act of 1871 ? Was that act intended to abrogate existing lawful contracts or liabilities of the city? It should not be construed to have such an effect unless it be necessary ; and I think no such necessity exists. Suppose that in January, 1871, prior to 'the act, a contract had been duly made by the city with a timber dealer for supplying, during that year, a specified amount of certain timber, for repairing docks, or other lawful use, and that the contractor, faithful to the contract, had delivered all the timber, during the year, and thus performed the contract on his part, but from some omission or design the board of apportionment had not appropriated sufficient moneys, according to the “two per cent” act, to pay for the timber, though the city received arid used it all. Can it be pretended that the effect of the act is to deprive the contractor of his due, and that no “ legal claim” could exist against the city therefor? If such is the effect of a proper interpretation of the act, it does not require argument to show that it is unconstitutional and void. I think the act is not obnoxious to such an interpretation. A more reasonable construction is possible. The act is prospective, and its provisions are not to have a retroactive effect. ‘ Whatever valid contracts or liabilities-of the city existed at the date of its passage, continue to exist, and are not abrogated by the act. The language of the act of 1871, § 5, is “ n.o liability for any purpose whatever shall be hereafter incurred by any department of the city of Hew York, or officers of the county of Hew York exceeding in amount the appropriations made for such purpose.” The plaintiff’s claim is not a liability incurred by any “ department”'of the city, nor by anv officer of the county, nor was it incurred after the act. On the eontraiy, it is a liability imposed on the city by the people in their sovereign capacity through the act of the legislature which requires the city to pay the salaries of the district court justices, and the liability was incurred before the act of 1871, and when the plaintiff assumed his office.

It may be true, that in respect of expenses for purposes of city or couuty government incurred after the passage of the act, no liability therefor could be incurred by the city in excess of the amounts appropriated by the board of apportionment. After the act was passed, parties contracting with the city were advised of the provisions of the act and could refrain from contracting, so as to protect their rights, but parties who had become bound by contract, or by election and oath of office, prior to that time, could have no such advice or opportunity, and they would be 'entrapped and defrauded if the act be held to be retrospective and applicable to them. The plaintiff entered upon his office prior to the passage of the “two per cent” act; he took his oath of office prior to that time, and when the act was enacted, he was bound, in law and conscience, to continue to perform the duties of his office for the term for which he was elected, and he could not withdraw from the obligation. Neither law nor justice will, I thiuk, permit the city to withdraw from its correlative obligation imposed upon it by law. It is liable for the plaintiff’s salary at the rate of $10,000 per year, though the board of apportionment has failed to provide for its payment.

The case of Donovan v. Mayor of New York, (33 N. Y. 291,) cited by the defendants’ counsel, holds that where municipal officers act without authority in making a contract, the city will not be liable. Of course, if a party act in contravention of the policy and terms of a statute, he cannot invoke the aid of the courts to enforce an unlawful agreement. But, what has this plaintiff done in contravention of any law, or what illegal duty has he undertaken. His office and duty as district justice are precisely within the express terms of law, and the principle of the 'case in 33 N. Y. does not seem to me to be applicable to him. He would have been guilty of violation of both law and duty, had he refrained from exercising the functions of his office. Nor does the case of the Tribune Association v. The Mayor &c.,of New York, (48 Barb. 240,) affect the right of this plaintiff" to recover for his salary. Under the statute of 1866, (vol. 2, p. 2070, § 10,) the general term of the first department, held that no judgment in actions upon contract could be entered by default or otherwise against the "corporation of New York, except upon proof in open court, that the amount sought to be recovered remained unexpended in the city treasury, to the credit of the appropriations to the specific object or purpose upon which the claim sued for is founded, and that the statute-affected the remedy, and not the contract, forasmuch as it prohibitéd the entry of a judgment until the appropriation was made. The court said the act “is not applicable to actions, but to judgments.”

An examination of the provisions cited from the 10th section of the act of 1866, with the entire context of the section, and with the other sections of that act,-will show that the restriction as to the entry of judgments against the city, contained therein, is applicable only to the liabilities of 1866, and respects only the appropriations made under that act, for the liabilities of that year. The consequences of holding that all of the liabilities for all time, against the city, shall not exceed the sum appropriated by that act for the purpose, would be so absurd that no one will be found to contend that the restriction against rendering judgments applies to any claims or liabilities except those of the year 1866. This construction is favored by the express language of the similar act of the succeeding year, (2 Laws of 1867, p. 1606, § 6,) which, in express terms, limits the restriction as to the entry of judgments by default or otherwise against the corporation of Hew York to that particular year, and it is not extended to judgments generally.

But it is argued that chap. 583, of the act of 1871, § 3, authorized the board of apportionment to regulate all salaries of officers and employees of the city and county governments, and forasmuch as the board have only appropriated money to pay the salaries of the district court justices for 1871, at the rate of $5000 per annum, therefore those salaries are thus lawfully regulated. It may be questioned whether the officers thus referred to include judicial officers. The term certainly does not include State officers who derive their office from the general laws of the State, and whose duties are not by law limited to the city and county of Hew York. Yet, assuming that the language just quoted is broad enough to embrace district court justices, whose salaries are paid by the city, there is this sufficient answer to the argument that the salaries have been changed by the board of apportionment. The act of the board of apportionment in setting apart or appropriating a certain sum for the payment of the salaries of the district court justices for 1871, which sum thus appropriated is less than the aggregate amount of such salaries as lawfully fixed, is not a regulation of such salaries so as to change the amounts of the salaries as already fixed. Before the board of apportionment can change the amount of a specific salary, they must act directly on the question of the amount of the salary, and explicitly make the change.

The change or regulation of the salary to a different sum, will not be inferred from the indirect action of the board in setting apart an aggregate amount to meet the payment of the same and similar salaries. „ It does not appear but that other moneys were at the command of the board, which could be appropriated to the purpose, nor that the board intended to make no further appropriations for this purpose.

They have the express power by the 3d section of chapter 583, of the act of 1871, (as the comptroller has by chapter 9, of laws of 1872,) to “ transfer appropriations which are found to be in excess of the amount required or deemed to he necessary, to such other purposes as they shall find to require the same.” This language implies that some of the appropriations made would be insufficient for the purposes for which they were made, and is potential in argument to show that an appropriation unequal to the purpose of paying certain fixed salaries, was not a regulation or reduction of the salaries to the standard of the first appropriation. If there is not money in the city treasury sufficient to meet the payment of these salaries, it is not the fault of the law. There is sufficient lawful authority to raise the amount necessary, under chapter 583 of the laws of 1871, and chapters 9, 29 and 444 of the laws of 1872. The board of apportionment and audit can provide for the claims, and until the revenues from taxation are received, the comptroller can issue bonds to cover all the deficiencies in respect of these salaries and the salaries of any judicial officers. It is not competent for the financial department of the city to say, “ there is no money in the treasury to meet the claim,” when the financial department and the board of apportionment and audit themselves, might supply the deficiency. The claim is lawful and honest; there is abundant lawful power to raise the money to provide for it, and if the board of apportionment and audit and the comptroller refuse or neglect to take the proper action to make such provision, then the remedy of the plaintiff is to establish his claim by a judgment, and to collect it by an execution.

It is contended that because the legislature by chapter 9 of the laws of 1872, provided for a board of apportionment and audit, and gave to the board, power to make an estimate of the amounts required to defray the expenses of conducting the public business of the city and county of Few York, for 1872, the plaintiff should file his claim with such board. When that board made their estimate for the year 1872, they should have included the plaintiff’s salary with the amount required to pay the salaries of other judicial officers. Under chapters 29 and 444 of the. laws of 1872, they could have made new estimates." It appears from-the answer that the board has failed of its duty in this particular. The answer makes out that an amount is in the treasury sufficient to pay the plaintiff’s salary at the rate of $5000 per. annum, and not more. Is the city to escape its liability, or the plaintiff to lose his salary, because of this failure of the board of apportionment and audit ? Fo such consequences should follow. If the board will not do what justice and law require, and what it might do to pay- the just claims against the city, then the city must not only respond to its just liability, but be subjected to the. costs of a litigation it should have avoided.

Chapter 9 of the laws of 1872, declares that “it shall be the duty of such departments and officers (that is the departments of the city and the officers of the county of Few York) to regulate expenditures so that they shall not exceed the appropriations made by said board for the period aforesaid, and no liability for any purpose whatever, shall, during the period aforesaid, be incurred by any officer or department within said city and county beyond the appropriation so made.”

As already remarked, the district court justices of the city are not attached to any of the “ departments” of the city; nor is the salary due to one of them, already fixed by competent authority according to law, before the passage of the act, a liability incurred! by him. In other words, the salary of a district court justice, lawfully fixed before 1872, which may fall due for and during that year, is not a liability incurred by that officer against the prohibition of the law of 1872.

[New York Special Term,

December 2, 1872.

I do not think any lawful - defence to the plaintiff’s claim is set forth in the answer in this action; and judgment should be ordered against the defendants for the amount of his claim, with costs, and five per cent allowance.

Júdgment is ordered accordingly.

Pancher, Justice.]  