Burhans v. Union Free School District No. 1

Adams, J.:

This action was brought by the plaintiffs as assignees of Braithwaite & Kelley to recover the amount which they claimed was due to that firm by reason of the resolution adopted at the special meeting in January, 1885, and in connection therewith they also sought by mandamus proceedings to compel the defendant’s board of education to raise the tax voted at that meeting in the manner directed by the statute. This latter proceeding, which was tried at the same time with the action, and before the same referee, was dismissed upon the ground that the relators therein had an adequate remedy at law, and judgment was rendered in the action in favor of the plaintiffs for the amount of their claim against Braithwaite & Kelley, less the sum of $226.67, which had theretofore been paid thereon.

There seems to be little or no controversy respecting the facts of the case, and, as we understand them, it appears that the defendant authorized and directed certain alterations to be made in its new school building in order that the same might be the better adapted to a particular system of heating which had been decided upon. This being the case, it was undoubtedly within the province of the taxpayers of the district, at a special meeting duly called, to vote such taxes as they deemed expedient and necessary to defray the expense of the alterations so made. (Laws of 1864, chap. 555, tit. 9, § 10; Laws of 1894, chap. 556, tit. 8, art. 2, § 10.)

It follows, therefore, that if the action taken at the meeting of January 20, 1885, can be regarded simply as an expression of the will of a majority of the taxpayers present, that a tax should be levied upon the taxable property in the district to defray the cost of certain necessary alterations which had theretofore been made in its school house, the learned referee was entirely correct in his conclusions, and the judgment appealed from should be affirmed.

This proposition makes it quite plain that the primary and all-important question to be decided upon this review is, was the action of the meeting of January 20, 1885, a valid exercise of the authority conferred by statute, in view of all the facts and circumstances existing at that time ? And it is equally clear that before this question can be intelligently and satisfactorily answered, it will be necessary to determine what effect shall be given to the arbitration entered into between the plaintiffs’ assignors and the defendant.

*432It appears that Mr. Braithwaite, a member of the firm of Braithwaite & Kelley, was present at the meeting of the defendant’s board of education at which it was decided to make a change in the system of heating the new school building, and that both he and the members of the board then and there agreed to abide by the decision of Mr. Johnson, who was the architect of the building, in respect of the sum to be allowed for such alterations as were ren-dered necessary by reason of the change ; and consequently when a dispute subsequently arose between the parties as to the proper cost of the alterations, it was agreed in writing to submit the matter in controversy to Mr. Johnson and two other persons who were named in the submission, and that their award should be final and conclusive between the parties, provided the same should be made in writing, signed by all three arbitrators and ready for delivery on or before November 25, 1884.

In pursuance of this submission a hearing was had and an award was made within the time named, which was in writing and signed by all the arbitrators. We do not understand it to be claimed that this arbitration was one which fully complied with the requirements of the statute (Code Civ. Proc. §§ 2366-2372), for the method of procedure adopted was quite informal, and the award which followed was never confirmed, nor was any judgment entered thereon. Nevertheless the submission was doubtless good at common law (2 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law [2d ed.] 539 ; N. Y., L. & W. W. Co. v. Schnieder, 119 N. Y. 475); and if so, the award, as between the parties, possessed the same force and effect as a final judgment in regard to all matters within the scope of the submission. (Wheeler v. Van Houten, 12 Johns. 311; Coleman v. Wade, 6 N. Y. 44; N. Y., L. & W. W. Co. v. Schnieder, supra.)

We have then the case of an adjudication of the matters in controversy between the parties which the plaintiffs claim should be disregarded simply because the amount awarded was deemed unsatisfactory and insufficient by their assignors. It is to be observed that no attempt was made to vacate the award of the arbitrators; and, so far as this record discloses, no reason other than the one just mentioned is suggested why it should have been vacated. But, in the emergency thus arising, recourse was had to the taxpayers of the district, and a meeting having been duly convened to consider the *433subject, a resolution was adopted by a small majority of those present and voting, to “ compensate Braithwaite & Kelley for extra labor in addition to amount heretofore awarded.”

At the date of this meeting the district was under no legal obligation to the plaintiffs or their assignors; for it appears that whatever claim they or either of them had against the district had been fully and finally adjudicated, and that the last installment of the amount awarded was thereafter actually paid by a check for §220.27, dated the 8th day of December, 1884, which contained the statement that it was in payment of the “ balance due B. & K. for extra work on school building.” It would seem therefore, that not only were the plaintiffs’ assignors concluded as to the validity of their claim by the arbitration which they had entered into (N. Y., L. & W. W. Co. v. Schnieder, 119 N. Y. 475), but that, by accepting the fruits thereof, they were also estopped from questioning the sufficiency of the award. (Lowenstein v. McIntosh, 37 Barb. 251.)

This being the situation, we think it cannot properly be said that the object of the meeting was to vote a tax to defray the expense of alterations made in the school building ; nor was it to provide by tax for the settlement of a disputed claim; but, on the contrary, it was simply to vote something in the nature of a gratuity which a majority of the taxpayers seemed to think they in justice ought to pay the plaintiffs’ assignors; and in these circumstances it seems hardly necessary to suggest that the action taken by the taxpayers was wholly unauthorized and illegal; for if, after submitting their claim to arbitrators and accepting the amount awarded, the plaintiffs or their assignors were entitled to appeal to the taxpayers of the district foi' additional compensation, and if it can be said that in these circumstances a majority of the taxpayers had the power to tax their unwilling neighbors as well as themselves, in order to gratify their sense of propriety and justice, why might not the proceeding have been repeated, if. perchance upon further reflection the contractors and their sympathizers should have concluded that the sum voted at the first meeting did not adequately represent the amount which the former ought to receive ?

It would have been altogether praiseworthy in those who believed that Braithwaite & Kelley had received scant justice at the hands of *434the arbitrators, to have contributed from their individual resources to make good the deficit in the award; but when they attempted to force the district to pay a claim which it was under no legal obligation to pay, we are quite clear that their proceeding was so far ultra vires as to furnish no basis for such an action as the one at bar. It follows, therefore, that the judgment appealed from should be reversed.

All concurred.

Judgment reversed, and a new trial ordered before another referee, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.