Gregory v. . Mayor, Etc., of New York

21 N.E. 119, 113 N.Y. 416, 22 N.Y. St. Rep. 703, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 959
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 16, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 21 N.E. 119 (Gregory v. . Mayor, Etc., of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gregory v. . Mayor, Etc., of New York, 21 N.E. 119, 113 N.Y. 416, 22 N.Y. St. Rep. 703, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 959 (N.Y. 1889).

Opinion

Peckham, J.

The claim that the plaintiff was not an employe of the defendant does not seem to have been raised upon the'trial. It was not included as a ground in the motion for a nonsuit made by the defendant, and does not seem to have been raised by any proper exception taken in the progress of the trial. The defendant, at the end of the case, asked the court to direct the jury to find a verdict for the defendant, and never asked that any question of fact should be submitted to it. The court was, therefore, placed in the position of the jury upon any such question, and the decision thereof by the court is binding upon us if there were any evidence to sustain it.

The 'trial judge was amply justified by the evidence in holding, as a fact, that the plaintiff never received any notice of dismissal, and we are concluded by such finding. The only question that is left for discussion is, whether the resolution of *418 ■the commissioners of excise, which assumed to suspend the plaintiff indefinitely, and without pay, from the performance of his duties was authorized. It is claimed that the power of the commissioners to suspend their employes was included in the conceded power to remove them. The question has not been decided in this state, but in New Hampshire ■the Supreme Court has held that the power to remove did include the power to suspend. (Shannon v. Portsmouth, 54 N. H. 183.) In that case it was merely stated in the opinion that it did not require any argument to show that the power -to remove must include the power to suspend, and hence the learned court made use of none in deciding the question. The note to section 151 of Dillon on Municipal Corporations -was cited as authority for the proposition. I think the section (151) is the same, in substance, as section 247 of the third .edition of that work in two volumes. I have not found any-. thing in .the text of the learned author which would furnish .any reason for the decision of the New'Hampshire court. In the note to section 247 some cases are referred to, and, in one •of them, it was .assumed that what is called therein the minor power to suspend was included in the power to remove. (State v. Lingo, 26 Mo. 496.) In State v. Chamber of Commerce of Milwaukee (20 Wis. 63) the board of directors had ¡assumed to suspend a .member. The corporation was given .power to expel. The court held that the power to suspend was reposed in the corporation, and could not be delegated to •the board of directors, and hence the board had proceeded ■without authority. The ¡suspension ¿of the member, it was said, was a qualified expulsion, and, whether it was called suspension or expulsion, it disfranchised him .either temporarily or permanently ; and, as he was suspended by the board of directors without a vote of the members -of the corporation, his suspension was unauthorized. There may be some distinction between the power to expel or, in the technical language of the books, to disfranchise a member of a corporation, ..and the power to remove an employe of a city board, and it might be .argued that, in the former case,, n suspension is, „a.S the court *419 said, a temporary disfranchisement, and an act of the same nature as an expulsion, and that the power to expel in such a case would include a temporary exercise thereof by a suspension. However that may be, the court seems to have placed its decision upon the ground that the suspension was within the power of the corporation because it only accomplished a temporary deprivation of the rights of a member when the corporation had the power to make such deprivation permanent by an expulsion.

On the other hand, in State v. Jersey City (1 Dutcher, 536) the effect of the resolution passed by the common council was held by the court to work a suspension of the member if it had been valid. The council had power to expel for cause. It had once expelled the member for bribery and he had been re-elected, and the council then adopted the resolution which the court said was a virtual suspension. It was held that the council had no power to again even expel the member for the offense for which he had been once expelled and subsequent to which he had been re-elected; and, as to suspensión, the court said the charter vested no such power in the council, and that it would have been extraordinary if it did; that the power was to expel, not to suspend, because expulsion left the office vacant so that it could be supplied by a new election, while suspension from duties created no vacancy and left the constituency of the member unrepresented.

The case shows that there is nothing in the nature of the power to remove or expel which necessarily and in all cases would include a power to suspend, for, in some instances, of which the above case is a good example, the power to suspend would seem to be very different in its nature from the power to remove, and not necessarily a minor power included in the power of expulsion. The rights of a constituency might be affected most deeply by the exercise of the power to suspend, and yet would be, in truth, untouched by the expulsion of an unworthy representative. Whether the power to remove, includes the power to suspend, must, as it seems to us, depend,_ among other things, upon the question whether the suspension *420 in the particular case would be an exercise of a power of the same inherent nature as that of removal, and only a minor exercise of such power, or whether it would work such different results that no inference of its existence should be indulged in, based only upon the grant of the specific power to remove. We think it is apparent that the two powers cannot always be properly respectively described as the greater and the less, and, consequently, it cannot always be determined, simply upon that ground, that the suspension is valid because there was a power to remove. The power to remove is the power to cause a vacancy in the position held by the person removed, which may be filled at once, and if the duties are such as to demand it, it should be thus filled. The power to suspend causes no vacancy and gives no occasion for the exercise of the power to fill one. The result is that there may be an office, an officer and no vacancy, and yet none to discharges the duties of the office. By suspension the officer is prevented from discharging any duties, and fet there is no power to appoint anyone else'to the office because there is no vacancy. If it be claimed that the power to suspend also includes the power to fill the place of the officer suspended during such suspension, then there is a second presumed power which flows from the simple power to remove: There is the power to suspend and there is the further power to be implied from it, viz., the power to fill the office with another during such suspension, although there is no vacancy in the office.

We do not think either of these last-named powers should be implied in the mere grant of the power to remove. We are not inclined to go so far with the doctrine of implied 'grants of power, because we think the implication is not one / which naturally or necessarily arises out of the nature of the main power granted, and its denial in such cases as this can, as we think, work no possible mischief. We do not go to the extent of saying that in no conceivable case can the power to suspend be inferréd from a grant of the power to remove.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.E. 119, 113 N.Y. 416, 22 N.Y. St. Rep. 703, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gregory-v-mayor-etc-of-new-york-ny-1889.