Citation Numbers: 57 Misc. 366, 109 N.Y.S. 625
Judges: Mills
Filed Date: 1/15/1908
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 1/13/2023
This is a taxpayer’s action brought to enjoin the authorities of the city of-Yonkers and the Yonkers Gas Light Company and its successor The Westchester Lighting Company from carrying out a contract made by the common council of said city with the Yonkers Lighting Company to provide for the public lighting of such city. The action has been pending for more than six years. A motion is now made, by and in behalf of Bertram Ball, at present a taxpayer of said city, for leave to intervene as a plaintiff, and also0 that the parties to the action he enjoined.from in anywise settling or discontinuing the same.
The following is a statement of the leading material facts * as they appear before the court upon the motion.
The resolution of the common council of the city of Yonkers, accepting the proposal of the Yonkers Gas Light Company to provide the public lighting of thé city for a period of ten years, was passed on the 25th of June, 1900.
Separate briefs have been submitted by the counsel for the applicant Ball, the counsel for the plaintiff, the counsel for the defendant lighting company, and also by counsel for • several taxpayers in the seventh ward of the city of Yonkers, who are desirous of having gas mains extended into their locality and are apprehensive that the continuance of this action may prevent such improvement. Apparently no effort has ever been made by any party to bring the action to trial during the more than six years of its existence, and no at
The counsel for the applicant, upon his argument and in his brief, contends that such an action as this comes within subdivision 2 of section 382 of the .Code of Civil Procedure, and therefore that its bringing was barred by the lapse of six years after the making of the contract, that is on the first day of July, 1906, the contract having been made as of the date of July 1, 1900. Such contention seems to be acquiesced in by the other counsel before the court upon the motion. If it he correct, then it is plain that the applicant, who seeks to intervene cannot now bring such an action originally in his name and behalf. Therefore, I do not think he should be permitted to intervene in this action and become a plaintiff therein and compel its continuance against the will of the original plaintiff. MacArdell v. Olcott, 62 App. Div. 127, 129, 130.
On the other hand, if the bringing of an original action be not barred, that is, if the ten years’ Statute of Limitations is applicable, then the applicant may at once or at least forthwith after the-discontinuance of this action, bring such an action in his own name and right as a present taxpayer of the city. In this view of the matter, it seems that, after permitting the plaintiff so long to conduct this action, the. applicant should not be permitted to intervene when he can, by bringing suit himself, maintain the rights which he wishes to assert and secure the remedies he seeks.
Intervention should not be granted except in favor of an applicant who, at the beginning of the action, was competent to be a party thereto. The applicant here appears to have been a taxpayer of the city of Yonkers for only a period of' one year last past. The moving papers upon this point allege merely that he has been such taxpayer for upwards of one year last past; but it was stated upon the oral argument and not controverted that he had been such for only that period. Therefore, when this action was commenced in 1901, and for
Fo valid reason appears why the existing plaintiff should not he permitted to discontinue the action as it is charged he intends to do. The practice of bringing a taxpayer’s action and holding it untried for years as a menace over the heads of public, authorities, an open unproved charge against their integrity, is little short of a public scandal and ought not to be encouraged. Before all others such an action, if based upon any substantial merit, should be brought to a speedy trial and determination; and, if not based upon such merit, it should not be brought at all. It is plain that there is no present disposition upon the part of any party to the action; either plaintiff or defendant, to bring the same to trial. Therefore it ought to be terminated at once by discontinuance.
I am the more ready to take this view because, from an examination of the complaint, the action appears to me to have been originally of doubtful merit. It is not competent for the court, in such, an action, to substitute its judgment as to the wisdom of a given proposed municipal action in place of the judgment of the common council of the city acting within the limits of their authority. Such an action can be maintained only upon both or either of two grounds, viz.: (1) Illegality of the questioned municipal action, and (2) Fraud and had faith on the part of the municipal officials in taking such action. From the mass of verbiage contained in the complaint, which by itself aggregates thirty-nine printed pages and with the exhibits annexed thereto one hundred additional pages, it is not easy to spell out sufficient grounds for the maintenance of the action. The claim that the common council had not the power to make a contract for so long a term of years has now, with the lapse of seven of the ten years of such term, lost much if not all of its original force. The allegations of bad faith, collusion and fraud on the part of the aldermen, are made in general terms and are wanting in precise and definite statement of pertinent facts. It may well be surmised that, if sufficient evidence to establish them had ever been at hand, the action would long since have .been brought to trial or at least a temporary injunction applied for
The motion of the defendant Ball, for leave to intervene, and that the parties be restrained from discontinuing, is therefore denied.
Motion denied.