Gilroy v. Smith

5 N.Y.S. 784, 23 N.Y. St. Rep. 5, 1889 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2622
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 8, 1889
StatusPublished

This text of 5 N.Y.S. 784 (Gilroy v. Smith) 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
Gilroy v. Smith, 5 N.Y.S. 784, 23 N.Y. St. Rep. 5, 1889 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2622 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1889).

Opinion

Barrett, J.

Upon the 2d day of the present month the complainant, Gilroy, was appointed by Mayor Grant to the office of commissioner of public works for the term of four years from the 1st day of May, 1889. With this appointment Mr. Gilroy comes before me, and complains that the respondent, Smith, who previously held the same office, and whose term, as it is claimed, expired on the 1st day of May, has refused to deliver over to him the books and papers appertaining to the office. Upon this complaint Mr. Gilroy, under the provisions of the Revised Statute, entitled “Proceedings to compel the delivery of books and papers by public officers to their successors,” (1 Rev. St., Bank’s 7th Ed. p. 375,) asks for a warrant to so compel such delivery. Mr. Gilroy presents a clear and perfect title under the plain letter of section 106 of the consolidation act. The relevant part of that section reads as follows: “The terms of office of all such heads of departments and persons, whensoever actually appointed, shall commence on the 1st day of May in the year in which the terms of office of their predecessors expire; but the comptroller, corporation counsel, and commissioner of public works, to be appointed on the expiration of the terms of office of the present incumbents in December, 1884, shall hold their offices until four years from the 1st day of May succeeding such month.” Under this provision a commissioner of public works was appointed in December, 1884. He was so appointed for the precise term specified in the act, namely, for four years from the 1st day of May succeeding December, 1884, that is, for four years from May 1,1885. Section 53 of the act commands that every person appointed to any office under the city shall receive a certificate of appointment designating the term for which such person has been appointed. This was complied with, and the specified term was duly embodied in the certificate. Thus the act was fully executed. The appointment was made under its express direction, and for the term explicitly designated. That term expired on the first day of the present month, and it would seem to be demonstrated that Mr. Smith’s unexpired term then ended, and Mr. Gilroy’s new term at once commenced. Mr. Smith seeks to break the force of this statutory sequence by an attack upon the law itself. He says, in effect, that the legislature erred when speaking (in section 106, supra) of the comptroller, corporation counsel, and commissioner of public works as officers “to be appointed on the expiration of the terms of office of the present incumbents in December, 1884. ” This, he contends, was a legislative mistake. The terms of office of the then incumbents were not to expire in December, 1884. There was no corporation counsel or commissioner of public works to be appointed in December, 1884. Frgo, the appointment under the act was void, the new term inaugurated by the act was void, and the line of commissioners holding since then in precise compliance with the act were simply officers defacto under color of title. Looking for commissioners de jure, he goes behind this provision of the consolidation act, (thus ignored as invalid,) and in his affidavit avers that, under the charter of 1873, the terms of office of the corporation counsel and commissioner of public works really expired on the 1st day of May, 1883; that the next term (to which no one was appointed) expired May 1,1887, and that the present term (to which no one was appointed until December 31, 1888, when he, Smith, was appointed to what was left of it) expires May 1,1891.

The question presented by this somewhat grotesque reasoning is whether [786]*786the right of the complainant is free from reasonable doubt. If it is, he is, as was said by Leonard, J., in People v. Allen, 42 Barb. 209, “absolutely entitled to the assistance which the statute contemplates. ” The same rule has been laid down in all the later eases. Re North v. Cary, 4 Thomp. & C. 358; People v. Allen, 51 How. Pr. 97. Indeed, it seems strange that this rule should ever have been questioned. For, as was said by Judge Leonard in the Allen Case: “If the justice could be excluded from taking cognizance of the right of an applicant for the possession of books and papers in every case where a plausible argument could be raised, * * * there would be few cases where relief could be afforded, and the statute would virtually become obsolete, and of no effect. ” And, as was also said by Judge Ingalls in the case of North v. Cary, above cited: “It is quite obvious that the legislature never intended that such remedy should be defeated, and an officer deprived of the possession of the books and papers of an office to which he has been regularly elected or appointed, simply because another party claims to retain the same upon grounds which are frivolous, or creating no reasonable doubt in regard to the right of such officer. Such a construction would render the statute meaningless and useless. ” What doubt, then, reasonable or otherwise, has been thrown upon Mr. Gilroy’s appointment? It is, as we have seen, in strict accordance with the express terms of the statute. If within the letter, what reason is there for supposing that it is not within the intent? Hone has been suggested by the respondent. What right have we to say—if the question were in doubt in 1882—that the legislature erred in substantially declaring that the existing, terms would expire in December, 1884? The legislature certainly had power to inaugurate a new term, to specify the date of its commencement, and to provide for its duration. The charter of a public corporation is always subject to legislative control, (Demarest v. Mayor, 74 N. Y. 161,) and the consolidation act constitutionally embraces the charter of 1873, together with such amendments or alterations as.the legislature saw fit to enact. For this purpose its title is sufficient. See People v. Coleman, (opinion of Ex-Judge Van Vorst,) affirmed by the general term on this opinion January 28, 1889, reported in 4 N. Y. Supp. 417. The consolidation act was, in fact, an original enactment, not a mere compilation; and it has been amended in essential particulars, without question, every year since its passage. Thus, year by year, it continues to “declare” the law applicable to the municipality, and it does so lawfully.

There are, it seems to me, two conclusive answers to Mr. Smith’s objection to our reading the consolidation act as it reads: First. Even if the declaration as to the time when the terms of the then present incumbents are to expire be treated as a legislative mistake, yet the enactment as to the new term is entirely valid. Leave out the words “in December, 1884, ” as controlling the expiration of the existing terms, and still what is the legislative intent? Is it not plainly in accordance with the letter of the statute, namely, that the next appointment to be made after the passage of the act should be for a term commencing in December, 1884, and ending May 1,1889? The consolidation act was passed in 1882. It went into effect April 1,1883, (Laws 1883, c. 276, § 35.) At the time it was passed, and also at the time it went into effect, Mr. Hubert 0. Thompson was the incumbent of this office under an appointment legally terminable (according to Mr. Smith’s contention) on the 1st day of May, 1883. It is conceded that if the provision under consideration had read, “the commissioner of public works to be appointed on the expiration (in May, 1883) of the term of office of the present incumbent shall hold his office until the 1st day of May, 1889,” there would have been no question here.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 N.Y.S. 784, 23 N.Y. St. Rep. 5, 1889 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilroy-v-smith-nysupct-1889.