Armitage v. Fisher

4 Misc. 315, 24 N.Y.S. 650
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 Misc. 315 (Armitage v. Fisher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armitage v. Fisher, 4 Misc. 315, 24 N.Y.S. 650 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1893).

Opinion

Math am, J.

This is an application upon an order to show cause why a pendente lite injunction heretofore granted in ' this action should not be continued until the final hearing and determination of the same.

The action is prosecuted by the plaintiff, who is an alderman and president of the board of aldermen of the city of Albany, against the other members of the. common council of the city of Albany, to restrain and enjoin them from acting upon any report of a committee appointed to consider and report upon charges made against the plaintiff in such wise as to remove the plaintiff from his office and position, as president of the [317]*317common council, or otherwise to interfere with the plaintiff in the execution, of his duties as president of the common council, and that it may be adjudged that the rules purporting and pretending to have been adopted by said common council on the 5th day of June, 1893, are not the rules of said common council and that the said common council be enjoined and restrained from acting upon such pretended rules, or from taking any action or proceeding against the plaintiff based upon said pretended rules, or from removing the plaintiff from his office and position as president of the common council of the city of Albany upon any pretended proceeding or authority given by such pretended rules.

The complaint alleges that the plaintiff was elected president of the common council on the 3d day of May, 1892, and at the time of said election he was an alderman at large of the city of Albany.

The complaint also alleges that the plaintiff and defendants constitute the members of the common council of the city of Albany, and that the city of Albany is a municipal corporation and duly incorporated under the laws of the state of Hew York.

The complaint sets forth in Timo verba section 7 of title 3 of chapter 298 of the Laws of 1883, as amended by Laws 1886, chap. 444; Laws 1891, chap. 286, entitled “An act to provide for the government of the city of Albany.”

That section provides that the common council shall biennially elect a president from its own body, and in his absence, a president for the time being. The section also provides for a clerk, and that the common council shall hold regular meetings on the first Tuesday of May in each year. It also provides that the common council “ shall determine the rules of its own proceedings, except as herein otherwise provided; be the sole judge of the qualifications and election of its members ; keep a journal of its proceedings, and may punish or expel a member for disorderly conduct or a violation of its rules, or declare his seat vacated by reason of absence, provided such absence be continued for the space of- two months. But no [318]*318expulsion shall take place, except by the vote of two-thirds of all members elected, nor until the delinquent member shall have had an opportunity to be heard in his defense.”

The complaint also alleges that the plaintiff has, from the time of his election up to the time of the commencement of this action, acted as alderman at large and president of the common council, and is still so acting; and that ever since his election certain rules for the government of the common coun-' cil have been in force, among which there was included rule 34, as follows: “ ISTo rule of this council shall be altered, suspended or rescinded, unless by a two-thirds vote of all the members elected, and no motion to alter, suspend or rescind any such rule shall be in order without the unanimous consent of the council, unless notice thereof shall have been given at the previous regular meeting, and no motion to - suspend shall embrace more than the one specified in said motion.”

The complaint also alleges that at a meeting of the common council, held on the 3d day of June, 1893, the committee on rules of that body made a report recommending the adoption of certain rules, among others rule 34, as above recited.

The complaint also alleges that rule 33 was attempted to be amended or modified and changed so as to read as follows: When any member of the common council shall be charged (which charge shall be in writing and presented at a meeting of the common council) with any violation of law or ordinance of said city, or resolution, rule or regulation of said council, the matter shall be referred at said meeting to a committee of investigation of not less than five. In case the charge is preferred against the president of the common council, said committee shall be named and appointed by a vote of the common council; except in case the committee is named by the common council, the member shall have the right to object to not more than two members named on said committee, and the member complaining or charging shall have the same privilege, and other members shall be appointed to fill the vacancy thus created. The member charged shall be served with a copy of said charges, and notice when said committee shall hear the [319]*319same, or the time to which it shall be adjourned, to examine the same, and of whom it shall report to the council. When the report of any committee of investigation shall be considered, the council may order a secret session for that purpose.”

The complaint also alleges that a resolution was offered at said meeting by Alderman Brown that such report be accepted and the rules as reported be adopted as the rules of the council, and that the plaintiff, as president, put the motion on the adoption of the resolution, on which motion eleven of the aldermen voted in the affirmative and seven in the negative, and the president declared the resolution lost, two-thirds not having voted in its favor. That upon this announcement by the president, an appeal was taken by an alderman from the decision of the chair, whereupon the president put the question : “ Shall the decision of the chair stand as the decision of the board ? ” Hpon which question seven aldermen voted in the affirmative and eleven in the negative.

The complaint also alleges that this plaintiff, the president ■of the common council, ruled and decided, notwithstanding the appeal from his decision was sustained, that the new rules proposed by the committee had not been adopted for the reason that two-thirds of the members elected had not voted for the same.

The complaint also alleges that rule 33, before said attempted ■amendment thereof, simply provided for the hearing of charges against the members of the common council as such (and not •as president thereof), and that such rules, as well as section 7 •of the charter, required a two-thirds vote of all the members ■elected to the common council in order to expel a member, but that the present amended rules purport to authorize the making of charges against the president of the common council ■as such, as to which it is claimed that a majority vote of the members of the common council is sufficient to justify the expulsion of the president from the presidency of the said ■common council.

The complaint also alleges, that at the same meeting, charges were preferred by an alderman against the plaintiff, as alder[320]*320man at large, and as president of the common council, and such proceedings were taken under such charges preferred against this plaintiff; that a copy of the notice of hearing, a copy of the resolution of the common council, together with a copy of the charges against the plaintiff, were served upon him.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Misc. 315, 24 N.Y.S. 650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armitage-v-fisher-nysupct-1893.