It is objected by the plaintiffs in error, 1. That the plaintiffs below were not a corporation : and could not sue, or be sued.
It is now too late to discuss that question. In Pittstown v. Plattsburgh, (18 John. 418,) it is said “ they (overseers of the poor) are the public agents and trustees of the towns in respect to their poor; and must necessarily, without express authority from the legislature, possess a capacity to sue commensurate with their public trusts and duties.” And the general proposition is laid down, that “ where a public office is instituted by the legislature, an implied authority is conferred on the officer to bring all suits as incident to his office, which the proper and faithful discharge of the duties of his office require.”
2. It is objected, that if the plaintiffs below possessed a capacity to sue, they could not sue for acts done in the time of their predecessors.
This point has been also settled by an express adjudication. In the case of Jansen v. Ostrander, (1 Cowen, 670,) the supervisor of a town was allowed to prosecute in his own name on a bond given to his predecessor in office. In this case as well as in Pittstown v. Plattsburgh, the town officers are considered as quasi corporations, so far as is necessary for each to perform their several trusts imposed upon them by their several offices.
3. It is said, if the defendants are to be sued as a corporation, they should not be sued as late overseers.
How far the successors in office are liable for the acts of their predecessors in office, it is not necessary now to decide. In the case of Todd v. Birdsall, (1 Cowen, 260,) the latter sued Todd & M’Cord, overseers of Cortland, before a jus*312tice for goods delivered to a person who kept a pauper of the town, for the use of the pauper, upon the written request of one of the overseers of the poor the preceding year; and recovered: and this Court affirmed the judgment. The Court say, “ In the present case, the question is, whether the action can be sustained against the defendants, who now represent the interests of the town in relation to the poor; and for whose benefit the advance was made. It seems highly expedient that legal liabilities, incurred by their predecessors in office for the support of the poor, ought upon a sound construction of their duties and powers, to devolve upon them. It is incident to their office, which, in this respect, may be viewed'in the nature of a corporation.”
In these cases, strictly speaking, it is not the officers of the town ; but the town itself, which is the corporation The officers represent the various interests of the town; and the only difficulty that exists is, that the officer becomes personally liable, and has no certain remedy against the town for indemnity. It is much to be regretted, that the legislature have not made some proper provision on the subject.
In King v. Butler, (15 John. 281,) the overseer made himself personally responsible by an absolute promise ; and a recovery was had against him. But in Olney v. Wickes, (18 John. 125,) the overseer was not held responsible in his private character, because he contracted expressly in his official capacity. Unless, therefore, the successors were liable, there would be no remedy.
These cases do not decide the case now before the court; but they seem to settle this principle: that when an overseer acts officially, the liability incurred devolves uopn his successor, in matters of contract, when his acts are dearly within the scope of his authority; but when he exceeds his authority, he is personally responsible.
The defendants in the court below, if liable at all, were so, not on any express contract; but for an omission of duty. It is contended, that it was incumbent on them, as the representatives of their town, to have taken back the pauper which they had improperly and illegally imposed upon Patterson. If this liability be admitted, it seems to me to raise *313an implied assumpsit only on the part of the town offending. There seems to me nothing like a tort, in this omission of duty, admitting it to have been so, any more than there is in the non-performance of any duty imposed by law, or the non-payment of any contract implied by law. There surely is nothing like a personal assumption of a liability, which is, in its nature, merely official.
In the case of express contracts, when they appear to be made by officers acting in an official capacity, there is no personal liability, as in Olney v. Wickes ; but it devolves upon the incumbents of the office, as in Todd v. Birdsall. The .case is not stronger against the defendants below, than if they had expressly agreed, in their official character, to pay to Patterson the expenses of the pauper; and, in such case, the two authorities last referred to, show that the action should have been brought, not against the late, but the present overseers.
If I am correct in this position, the judgment must be reversed ; and the discussion oí the other questions becomes unnecessary. I may be permitted to remark, however, that perhaps the question, whether an action lies at all in the case presented by the declaration, is not perfectly settled, though that is not here made a point. When the case of Pittstown v. Plattsburgh first came before the Court, (15 John. 440,) it presented just such a case on the part of the plaintiffs ; and the court expressed a strong opinion that the action was maintainable, as the pauper had been thrown upon Pittstown by the procurement of Plattsburgh ; and as the pauper, having no settlement in the state, Pittstown was not bound to procure an original order to send him back; and their power to do so was questionable. When that case came again before the court, (18 John. 418,) it was after a trial, when the fact was shown that the pauper had a settlement within the state. The court then decided, that Pittstown was bound to send the pauper to the place of his settlement; and, therefore, could not sustain the action. They again say, that if the averment had been proved that the pauper had no settlement within the state, the action would have been maintainable. It is, however, sub*314sequently intimated, upon the strength of Chalbury and Chipping Farringdon, (2 Salk. 488,) that Pittstov/n might have sent the pauper back to Plattsburgh, after the reversal of the order; and that is assigned as one of the grounds upon which judgment was given for the defendants. If Patterson could have sent back the pauper in question to Pawlings, there is no ground for this action, in any shape.
I am of opinion that the defendants below were not liable ; and the judgment must he reversed.
Judgment reversed.