Hulbert v. Craig

124 Misc. 273, 207 N.Y.S. 710, 1925 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 625
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 124 Misc. 273 (Hulbert v. Craig) 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
Hulbert v. Craig, 124 Misc. 273, 207 N.Y.S. 710, 1925 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 625 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1925).

Opinion

Proskauer, J.:

The petitioner, duly elected president of the board of aldermen of the city of New York, seeks mandamus against the comptroller to compel payment of salary. The comptroller sets up that the petitioner, after appointment by the Governor, with the advice and consent of the Senate, on April 9, 1924, filed his oath of office as a member of Finger Lakes State Parks Commission and that thereby, under the Greater New York charter (§ 1549), he instantly vacated his city office. Section 1549 provides that any city official who shall during his term of office accept “ any other civil office of honor, trust or emolument under the government of the United States (except commissioners for the taking of bail, or register of any court), or of the state * * * shall be deemed thereby to have vacated any office held by him under the city government.”

The petitioner concedes that he accepted a civil office under the government of the State, but contends that in section 1549 the words “ or of the State ” relate back to the words “ civil office of honor, trust or emolument,” so that the statute in effect reads, “ any other civil office of honor, trust or emolument of the State; ” that the prohibition is thus restricted to a “ State ” as distinguished from a “ local office; ” that the office which he accepted was “ local ” and that, therefore, he did not transgress the statute. The comma after the parenthesis containing the words “ except commissioners for the taking of bail,” etc., is the chief reliance of petitioner’s counsel in this contention. I cannot impute to the Legislature an intention so to refine. The presence of a comma after a long parenthesis, where more exact usage would justify its absence, is not infrequent. The two phrases beginning with “ of ” clearly modify the phrase “ under the government.” The prohibition is against holding office under the government of the United States or under the government of the State of New York.

Even if the statute is read, however, as though it prohibited the holding of an “ office of the State,” there is nothing to support the petitioner's contention that such phrase means a “ State office as distinguished from a “local office.” If" the Legislature had [275]*275intended to restrict the prohibition to the holding of what is technically a “ State office ” under section 2 of the Public Officers Law, it would have used language more appropriate to that end. An office of the State may be a “ State office ” or a “ local office.” The Commissioners are officers of the State ” under fair interpretation of those words. They are appointed by the Governor with the advice and consent of the Senate. Their powers are restricted to no “ political subdivision or municipal corporation of the State.” (Pub. Off. Law, § 2.) There is no erection of a political subdivision such as “ The Metropolitan Police District,” considered in N. Y. & Harlem R. R. Co. v. Mayor (1 Hilt. 562) and People v. Pratt (50 Hun, 454), cited by petitioner. The Commission has power to acquire parks in a geographical, not a political section, known as the Finger Lakes region. It has the right under section 115 (Laws of 1924, chap. 88) to maintain and control real and personal property without restriction to place and to devote the net income thereof to its park purposes. It is required by section 116 to make an annual report to the Legislature with a detailed fiscal statement and to make verified report to the State Comptroller quarterly of its receipts and expenditures. It has control of State appropriations; it is given the power of eminent domain through the conferring upon it of the powers vested in the State Conservation Commission by section 4 of chapter 693 of the Laws of 1923. These attributes of office and the fact that the statute itself (Laws of 1924, chap. 88) is made article 10 of the Public Lands Law indicate the intent of the Legislature to regard the Commissioners as “ officers of the State.”

Moreover, these Commissioners meet the requirements of the technical definition of a “ State officer.” By section 2 of the Public Officers Law, a State officer (in so far as here material) is one authorized to exercise his official functions throughout the entire State, or without limitation to any political subdivision of the state; ” a local officer■ is “ every officer of a political subdivision * * * of the state, and every officer limited in the execution of his official functions to a portion only of the state.” As above stated, the jurisdiction of the Commission to manage lands is confined to no political or even geographical section of the State. The only limitation upon the locality of the exercise of its powers is that the parks it maintains are to be generally in what is known as the Finger Lakes region. Its functions as to other property which it may control and maintain may be exercised throughout the State. The oath of office of petitioner and other such Commissioners was filed in the office of the Secretary of State, as required by section 10 of the Public Officers Law for State officers,” and not in a county [276]*276clerk’s office, as required therein for local officers.” Further, by-section 3 of the Public Officers Law, the incumbent of a local office must be a resident “ of the political subdivision or municipal corporation of the State for which he shall be chosen.” The statute provides that one Commissioner must be a member of the then Board of Commissioners of the Watkins Glen Reservation, resident in the county of Schuyler, and one a member of the then Board of the Enfield Falls Reservation, resident in the county of Tompkins (§ 111). There is no requirement that any Commissioner should reside within the reservation itself or the vaguely described “ Finger Lakes region.”

The Public Lands Law by article 12 creates a similar board for the Mohansic Lake Reservation and by article 9 for the State Reservation at Niagara. Membership on these and similar boards has never been confined to residents of the areas directly affected. The Legislative Manual for 1924 shows that on the Finger Lakes State Parks Commission, the Long Island State Park Commission, the Niagara Reservation Commission and the New York section of the Board of Commissioners of the Palisades Interstate Park, were many members residing outside of the locality directly affected. The practical difficulties of restricting membership on a commission to administer a park, located in a sparsely settled region, to residents of such locality are almost insurmountable and the public records disclose that over a long period of years the Governors of New York have not regarded themselves as bound by any such limitation. Judge His cock, in People ex rel. Werner v. Prendergast (206 N. Y. 405, 411), quotes with approval that “ ‘ the practical construction of a statute by those for whom the law was enacted, or by public officers whose duty it is to enforce it, acquiesced in by all for a long period of time, is of great importance in its interpretation in a case of serious ambiguity.’ ”

This practical construction supports the plain meaning of the statute itself that such commissioners are not required to reside in the local area and are not “ local officers.” They are technically “State officers; ” they are certainly “officers of the State” and “ officers under the government of the State.” I

On any construction of section 1549 of the Greater New York charter the petitioner, therefore, has vacated the office of president of the board of aldermen. I

I am keenly aware of the hardship worked by this conclusion.

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Bluebook (online)
124 Misc. 273, 207 N.Y.S. 710, 1925 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hulbert-v-craig-nysupct-1925.