Spring Valley Water Works v. Ashbury

No ordinance or resolution was ever duly passed by the Board of Supervisors for the payment of the $92,000, to compel the auditing whereof this application was made, as the resolutions were not published. (Stats. 1856, p. 164, sec. 68.)

By neither of the resolutions did the Board appropriate any definite sum. The resolution numbered 1132 does not attempt to authorize an expenditure; and by whom the expenditure is to be made, or by what process the exact amount within the sum of $92,000 is tci be ascertained, the resolution fails to show.

The authority could not be to the Board of Supervisors itself, because that Board derives its authority alone from the statutes of our State. Any attempt on the part of that Board to confer a power upon itself to appro]Driate indefinite sums of money above $500, without taking all of the proceedings to that end required by sec. 68 of the Consolidation Act, and fixing the amount definitely by such proceedings, would be nugatory.

The provisions of the Consolidation Act, enacted for the pur ■ pose of guarding the public treasury, are not to be evaded by indirection by means of an appeal. The Board must first have acquired jurisdiction to pass upon and allow the original demand, or it will not have jurisdiction to hear the appeal.

*129Gharles N. Fox, Lloyd & Newlands, and J. P. Hoge, for Respondent.

The defense that the resolution of authorization was not published for five days, by order of the Board of Supervisors, is not one which the defendant can now make. If the law required that the Board should specially order its publication, and designate the paper in which it was to be published, the action of the Board of Supervisors upon the claim when it came up on appeal from the refusal of the Auditor to audit the same was a ratification of the act of its ministerial officer in making such publication, as well as of all the preceding steps taken in the original passage of the bill, under the authorities before cited.

By the Court, McKinstry, J.:

If the amount claimed by plaintiff was never appropriated or allowed by the Board of Supervisors, in the manner according to which the Board is alone authorized to appropriate more than $500 of the public moneys, the Auditor will not be compelled, by mandamus, to enter in his book the demand and claim No. 895.

I understand this not to be seriously contested, and shall, therefore, proceed to inquire whether $92,000 was ever legally appropriated or allowed to plaintiff.

If the Consolidation Act had provided for the allowance, by a Committee of the Board of Supervisors, of a sum less than a larger sum set apart by ordinance, to be applied to the extent to which such Committee might deem proper to satisfy claims for water, or if the act had provided that some officer should have power thus to allow claims, the “ Authorization ” 1132 might, perhaps, be held to be valid.

The authorization or order is in the following words and figures :

Resolved, That an expenditure, not to exceed ninety-two ($92,000) thousand dollars, be and the same is hereby authorized to be made out of the General Fund, for the purpose of *130paying the Spring Valley Water Works> for water used for municipal purposes,” etc.

We have not been referred to any provision of the Consolidation Act which empowers the Board to make other than specific appropriations for such purposes as water, or which seems to recognize such power by providing a committee or officer to determine a less sum to be paid a claimant than the sum named in an attempted appropriation as “ not to be exceeded.”

The Auditor is not vested with such discretion in respect to claims for water furnished. It is claimed, and apparently justly, by plaintiff, that the Auditor’s function in these matters is always ministerial simply. At all events, sec. 85 of the Consolidation Act, after treating of certain demands, of which a demand for water is not one, provides : “All other lawful demands payable out of the Treasury, or any public funds of said city and county, must, before they can be allowed by the Auditor, or in any manner be recognized or paid, be first approved by the Board of Supervisors,” etc. This certainly requires that the precise amount of the demand shall be first fixed and approved by the Board. The whole scope of the act, so far as it relates to this subject, indicates an intention that every appropriation by ordinance of a sum of five hundred dollars, or more should be of a definite amount. This appears not only from the clause of the eighty-fifth section of the act, but also from the language of the sixty-eighth section, and in a less degree from other provisions which breathe a spirit of extreme caution and want of confidence, characteristic of an author determined by all practicable means to prevent any extravagant expenditure of the moneys of the municipality.

The sixty-eighth section provides: “ Every ordinance or resolution of the Board of Supervisors, providing for any specific improvement, the granting of any privilege, or involving the lease or other appropriation of public property, or the expenditure of public moneys, (except for sums less than five hundred dollars) or laying tax or assessment, and every ordinance or resolution imposing a new duty or penalty shall, after its introduction in the Board, be published, with the ayes and nays, in some city daily newspaper at least, five successive days before final action of the Board upon the same.”

*131It was evidently intended that the public should have notice of each specific appropriation, the object for which, and the person to whom it was to be paid, and of votes cast by members of the Board.

There seems to be no authority in the Board to provide for unliquidated amounts; they are in respect to such demands as these the auditing officers, whose duty is to pass upon demands presented against the city government, and (if they are just in themselves, and such as the law authorizes the Board to allow) to allow them in full, of in some less, but exact, amount. They do not pass general appropriation laws; the law requires them to establish certain funds, and determines what claims may be made payable out of each. In their capacity as auditors they pass on each claim presented, and determine in what precise amount it shall be paid out of a fund.

To declare by ordinance that an amount shall be set aside, out of which any less sum may be paid, implies that a less sum may in fact be paid out of the treasury. Such an ordinance is invalid, because its publication does not convey to the citizens the information which, by the- Consolidation Act, they are entitled to receive, and because it is not an allowance or appropriation of a specific sum to a particular person, and for a named purpose.

Inasmuch as the original ordinance or “ authorization ” was void, the plaintiff can claim nothing from the subsequent action of the Board allowing the claim for $92,000, nor from the action of the Board on appeal from the Auditor, because neither the resolution allowing the demand, nor that passed on such appeal, was published at all.

Judgment reversed.