By section 15 of chapter 127 of the laws of 1877, it is provided, viz : “All claims against the city for damage or injury alleged to have arisen from the defective, unsafe or dangerous or obstructed condition of any street, crosswalk, sidewalk, culvert or bridge of the city, or' from negligence of the city authorities in respect to any such street, crosswalk, sidewalk, culvert or bridge shall, within three months after the happening of' such damage or injury be *306presented to tbe common council by a writing signed by tbe claimant and properly verified describing tbe time, place, cause and extent of tbe damage or injury. Tbe omission to present sucb claim as aforesaid within said three months shall be a bar to any action or proceeding therefor against the city.”
Under that section it was a condition precedent to tbe right of recovery, that the claim snould be presented to tbe common council. Nothing is found in tbe section relating in terms to costs of any sucb action. Tbe section does not, therefore, relate to tbe same subject-matter as that embraced in section 3245 of tbe Code of Civil Procedure. That section provides, viz: “ Costs cannot be awarded to the plaintiff in an action against a municipal corporation, in which the complaint demands a judgment for a sum of money only unless tbe claim upon which the action is founded was, before the commencement of the action, presented for payment to the chief fiscal officer of the corporation.”
By chapter 463 of the Laws of 1860, relating to the city of Oswego, the powers and duties of the treasurer of the city of Oswego are defined, and the provisions relating thereto are very similar to those found in chapter 406 of the laws of 1864, relating to the pillage of Cortland. In Fisher v. The Village of Cortland (42 Hun, 173), we held that the treasurer of that village is “ the chief fiscal officer of the corporation,” within the meaning of the words as used in section 3245, of the Code of Civil Procedure. Following our decision there made we must hold that the plaintiff, in the case in hand, failed to comply with the requirements of section 3245, of the Code of Civil Procedure, and that that section relates to actions ex delicto. In accordance with our opinion in the case last referred to we must hold that the treasurer is the chief fiscal officer, and that that section of the Code applies to actions of the character of the one now before us, until the contrary shall be declared by the Court of Appeals.
Since the argument of the case now before us, our attention has been directed to Taylor v. The City of Cohoes (35 Alb. Law Jour., 354), decided March 8, 1887. By an inspection of the opinion delivered in that case, it appears the decision was rested upon chapter 262 of the Laws of 1859, and the opinion states, among other things, viz.: “ It has not yet been decided that under the *307section of the Code (3245), in an action of this nature, a presentation of the claim must be made in accordance with its provisions before the commencement of the action, on pain of being deprived of costs, if the plaintiff be successful.”. W e must, therefore, adhere to the conclusion reached in Fisher v. The Village of Cortland (supra).
The order of the Special Term should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granted, with ten dollars costs.
Boardman and Follett, JJ., concurred.Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granted, with ten dollars costs.