In Wells v. Town of Salina, 119 N. Y. 280, 23 N. E. 870, it was said that:
“Towns and other municipal corporations are organized for governmental purposes, and their powers are limited and defined by the statutes under which they are constituted. They possess only such powers as are expressly conferred or necessarily implied.”
Appellant’s learned counsel seeks to support the claim of the relator by referring to the several statutes relating to the bonding acts and provisions therein in relation to refunding at a lesser rate of interest. Chapter 75 of the Laws of 1878 provided for the issuance of new bonds in place of existing bonds, and in the second section of the act it was provided that the exchange of existing bonds was to be done under the supervision of “the constituted and statutory authorities of any such village, city, town or county”; and in the fifth section it was provided that “nothing in this act contained shall be so construed as to permit any village, city, town, or county in this state to increase its present bonded indebtedness”; and in chapter 317 of the Laws of 1878 section 2 was amended, and power was given “the said officers or boards of any such village, city, town or county” to make such exchange, etc.; and in chapter 522 of the Laws of 1881. further provision was made in respect to indebtedness of towns being paid by the issue of new bonds; and in section 4 it is provided, viz.:
“It shall be the duty of the railroad commissioners, supervisors and fianancial officers of towns, villages, cities and counties, having in charge the moneys received and collected and responsible for the payment of the interest and principal due on bonds under this act, and they are hereby required to report annually to the board of supervisors of counties, the trustees of villages and the mayor and board of aldermen or common council of cities as the case may be.”
And in chapter 316 of the Laws of 1886, further provision was made for the issuing of new bonds “by the board of trustees, mayor *670or common council, town board, board of supervisors or supervisor, or railroad commissioners or officer or officers now having in charge according to law the payment of interest or principal on bonds,” etc.; and in section 4 it was made the duty of “the railroad commissioners, supervisors and financial officers of towns, villages, cities and counties, having in charge the moneys received and collected, and responsible for the payment of the interest and principal due on bonds issued under this act” to report annually to the board of supervisors of the counties, trustees of villages and mayor and board of aldermen and common council of cities, the sum due and payable the succeeding year; and in the sixth section of that act the commissioners were required to execute official bonds before entering upon the discharge of their duties under the act. We find no provision in any of the statutes to which reference has been made expressly authorizing the appointment of agents or attorneys to discharge the duties that are imposed upon the several governmental officers mentioned in the several statutes to which we have referred. By chapter 122 of the Laws of 1883, it was provided, viz.: “All votes in town meetings authorizing the raising of money or incurring any town liability exceeding five hundred dollars shall be by ballot;” and the second section of that act provided that the town clerk shall give 20 days’ notice, posted in five conspicuous places, of any proposed appropriation or tax for the raising or borrowing of money, etc. The second section was amended by chapter 82 of the Laws of 1885, providing that the notice to be given by the town clerk shall be for five days only. It is contended that the resolution of the town passed in 1888 is invalid, because the votes thereon were not taken, as prescribed in section 1 of the statute of 1883, by ballot. If force is to be given to that vote, or the action of that town meeting, establishing a liability on the part of the town to pay the relator, then it seems that it falls within the direct language of section 1, as it is there provided that all votes “incurring any town liability exceeding five hundred dollars shall be by ballot.” Such seems to have b'een the construction put upon the provisions of the section by the relator as well as by the board of audit, for thereafter an application was made to the board of supervisors of the county to legalize or confirm the action of the town board in 1888 under the provisions of chapter 326 of the Laws of 1885. In the last-mentioned act'power was given to the board of supervisors, “by a two-thirds vote of all the members elected thereo, to legalize the informal acts of any town meeting in raising money for any purpose for which such money is authorized to be raised by law, and by like vote to legalize the irregular acts of any town officer,” etc. Upon a full hearing before the board of supervisors of the application to legalize the action of the town board, and to place the claim presented by the relator upon the schedule of the town, after a full consideration of the whole matter relating to the merits of the relator’s claim, as well as to the sufficiency of the resolutions, and authority claimed to have been conferred, the board of supervisors refused to legalize the action of the town board by sanctioning the resolution of 1888, and refused to audit and allow the claim *671of the relator. It seems to follow, therefore, from the foregoing state of facts, that the town board has rejected the claim of the relator as well as the board of supervisors, and that there is found no authority warranting the town board in auditing and allowing the claim of the relator.
In People v. Barnes, 114 N. Y. 317, 20 N. E. 609, and 21 N. E. 739, it was said “the term ‘audit/ as applied to the action of a board of town auditors, means to hear and examine; it includes both the adjustment or allowance and the disallowance and rejection of an account”; and in that case it is said that the jurisdiction of the board of town auditors over claims “is not only original, but its decision is conclusive until reversed or modified by another court in the manner prescribed by law,—i. e. in proceedings by certiorari”; and near the close of the opinion in that case it was said, “the relator has failed to establish by the evidence contained in the record the absolute liability of the town for the whole or part of any one of the claims,” and for that reason the case did not fall within that class of cases where there is a statutory liability creating legal charges against a town, as in the cases of People v. Board of Sup’rs of Delaware Co., 45 N. Y. 196, and People v. Town Auditors of Elmira, 82 N. Y. 80. In People v. Jeroloman, 139 N. Y. 17, 34 N. E. 726, it was said that a mandamus is only granted in the sound discretion of the court. See, also, People v. Chapin, 104 N. Y. 96, 10 N. E. 141. Nothing is found in the case of Wells v. Town of Salina (Sup.) 25 N. Y. Supp. 134, inconsistent with the views already expressed, as in that case “the town board did not act upon the claim,” and it was therefore said that what took place before the board was not an adjudication that formed a bar to any further proceedings on the part of the plaintiff. We think the action of the special term denying the writ should be sustained. Order affirmed, with $10 costs and disbursements. All concur.