State v. Brom
State v. Brom
Opinion of the Court
Eight writs of certiorari were allowed for the purpose of testing the sufficiency of a like number of indictments found in the Bergen County Oyer and Terminer against the members of the common council of the borough of Park Eidge. Seven of them are substantially alike and are governed by the same legal rules, so that the disposition of one will control the result in all. The remaining indictment contains counts not embraced in the others which require separate consideration, and will be dealt with after I have disposed of the others.
One of the seven is an indictment against David Brom and five other defendants, and it charges that the defendants, as members of the common council of the borough of Park Eidge, “'did willfully and unlawfully vote for the disbursement of public moneys in excess of the appropriation of Park Eidge in that the said defendants did vote to disburse the sum of $553.13 to. George Bennett, for which no appropriation had been made, which the said defendants then and there knew.”
This indictment is based upon section 31 of the Crimes act (Pamph.. L. 1898, p. 803), which, inter alia, makes it a misdemeanor for the common council of any borough in this state to “disburse, order or vote for the disbursement of public money's in excess of the appropriation respectively to any such board,” or to “incur obligations in excess of the appropriation and limit of expenditure provided by law” for the purposes of any such board.
The statute relied on was first adopted in this state in 1876 (Pamph. L., p. 16) in substantially the form in which it now appears in section 31 of the Crimes act. In construing the act of 1876 Mr. Justice Van Syckel, in State v. Halsted, 10 Vroom 402, 411, said that it would not suffice to allege in the general words of the statute that the defendants did incur an obligation in excess of the appropriation; the particular act which constitutes such disregard of this statutory provision must be disclosed. The present indictment, after charging that the defendants voted to disburse public moneys “in
Under the Borough act of 1897 (Pamph. L., p. 285) the common council have power to raise and appropriate money for many different purposes, and the indictment should set out some facts allowing which appropriation was exceeded, or that the payment could not properly be made because not within any of the purposes provided for.
In the present case, if the indictment be held sufficient, proof that the money had been voted to Bennett, and that no appropriation had been made to pay him, for it is not charged that no appropriation had been made to the common council, would be sufficient to convict the defendants, although the
The remaining indictment contains two counts, the first charging Bobert A Sibbald as mayor, and the other defendants as members of the common council of said borough, with unlawfully disbursing public moneys in voting to purchase certain land for which no appropriation had been made. This charges no crime, for voting to purchase is not an appropriation of the purchase price, and there is no averment that the purchase was ever carried out in any such way as to he binding on the borough. The second count charges that the defendants incurred “an obligation upon the said borough of Parle Bidge in excess oE the appropriation, by giving then and there to one Andrew Perry a note for $660 in consideration of the conveyance of certain lands,” which obligated the borough to pay that sum. This count is also defective, for it does not state any fact which constitutes a violation of the statute. Incurring an obligation “in excess of the appropriation” is not enough, it must be “in excess of the appropriation and limit of expenditure provided by law for the purposes, respectively, of any such board.” Under the act relating to boroughs and its supplements, the common council may incur obligations for certain purposes without any ap-° propriation being made, and in order to bring the defendants within the terms of the law, the indictment should show that the obligation required an expenditure in excess of that provided by law. This indictment lias not even the merit of following the words of the statute, and is entirely devoid of a statement of any particular fact or facts from-which a violation of the law can he inferred. If the borough council had no power to make the note, and therefore it had no binding force, then, under Marley v. State, 29 Vroom 207, no crime was committed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.