Kip v. . City of Buffalo

25 N.E. 165, 123 N.Y. 152, 33 N.Y. St. Rep. 83, 78 Sickels 152, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1719
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 7, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 25 N.E. 165 (Kip v. . City of Buffalo) 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
Kip v. . City of Buffalo, 25 N.E. 165, 123 N.Y. 152, 33 N.Y. St. Rep. 83, 78 Sickels 152, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1719 (N.Y. 1890).

Opinion

Peckham, J.

Acting under the authority of the two statutes, of this state in regard to the appointment to civil positions in the cities thereof, passed respectively in 1883 and 1884, and known as chapter 354 of the Laws of 1883, and chapter 410' of the Laws of 1884, the mayor of the city of Buffalo prescribed certain regulations for the admission of persons into. *155 the civil service of that city. These regulations were entitled “ Buies for admission to the civil service of the City of Buffalo, in pursuance of section Y, chapter 354, Laws of 1883, of the State of New York, as amended,” and they were submitted to and approved by the civil service commission of the state. Buie three of such regulations provided, among other things, for the employment by the mayor upon the recommendation of the civil service commission of Buffalo, of a suitable person to act and to be known as secretary of such commission. In September, 188Y, the mayor, in accordance with the authority conferred upon him by the two above-mentioned acts, and by virtue of the regulations referred to, and upon the recommendation of such civil service commission of Buffalo, appointed the plaintiff as secretary of. the commission, and fixed his salary át $600 per annum, payable in monthly payments. The plaintiff served for six months under such appointment and then resigned.

In accordance with the charter, the mayor had in the meantime sent to the comptroller an estimate of the sums which he regarded as necessary for the proper conduct of his department for the ensuing year, and had included among the items the amount of $1,000 for salaries and expenses of executing the civil service law; the whole sum necessary for the estimated expenses of the department being $Y,2Y5. The comptroller sent the estimate to the common council, which reduced the mayor’s estimated sum for salaries .and expenses of executing the civil service law to $50.

The city has refused to pay the plaintiff anything for his services as secretary. The claim is made on its behalf that the acts of the legislature already referred to, gave the mayor no power to provide by any rule or regulation for the appointment of a secretary to the commission, nor did he have power in any event to make such appointment for a term which continued longer than the fiscal year of the city. It was also contended that the right to be paid depended upon the confirmation by the common council - of the estimate' made by the mayor, and that if the common council struck out the item in *156 regard to the salaries and expenses of executing the civil service law, or reduced the amount thereof, the secretary could be paid nothing, or not more than the sum to which such item had been reduced.

In regard to the claim that the mayor had no authority under the Civil Service Acts and the regulations prescribed by him and approved by the state civil service commission of the city to" appoint a secretary to the city commission, we are of the opinion that such claim is not well founded. The reasons for this construction of the statute are very clearly given by the learned court in delivering its opinion at Special Term on this branch of the case, and it is sufficent for us to say that we entirely concur in them.

We are of the opinion also that the appointment of the plaintiff was for no designated term, but lasted during the pleasure of the appointing power, and hence the 'objection that it was for a longer term than the fiscal year of the city, falls to the ground, assuming even that an objection of-that kind were a defense to an action for the salary.

But it is insisted that the contract of employment was void ■because in violation of defendant’s charter, which requires, as defendant alleges, that the estimates for each department shall be itemized, and that any debt contracted in any department in excess of the amount appropriated to that special object, or. for an object for which no appropriation had been specially made, was not binding on the city, and that money raised for one purpose could not be used for another.

The court at Special Term held that the charter intended that the total sum appropriated to each department by the tax-budget as approved by the common council, might be redistributed in such department by the proper head thereof, so that a sum which was in excess of the amount needed for one itemized purpose might be used for another itemized purpose Where the appropriation fell short of the requirements. This could be done so long as the total „sum appropriated to the department was not exceeded. It was alleged that at the time of the appointment of plaintiff, there was an excess in *157 the mayor’s department after crediting it with the total sum allotted to it, and charging it with the salaries and fixed stuns to he debited thereon, of $395.18, and there remained at the end of the fiscal year a balance of $201.38 to the credit of the department, and it was held that such last-named balance might be used for the purpose of payment upon the contract, although the sum named by the mayor for the salaries and expenses of executing this Civil Service Act was $1,000, and that sum had been reduced by the common council to $50, which was wholly insufficient.

The ground for the right of any recovery in this action is thus seen to depend upon the finding of some balance in the fund for the mayor’s department, which had been'appropriated by the common council. The court expressly repudiated the claim made on the part of the plaintiff, that the contract of employment was good beyond any balance remaining of the appropriation of the mayor’s department which might legally be applied to the payment of the plaintiff. The right to obtain payment for services legally performed would thus to some extent at least depend upon the action of the common council in appropriating monej enough to permit of such payment. The prompt execution within the city of Buffalo of a general law of the state, applicable to every city within the terms of the statute, would thus depend a great deal upon the action of the Buffalo common council, and upon the views of its different members as to the necessity or propriety of any expenditures for such purpose, and as to the proper amount of such expenditures.

The construction given by the court below to the charter of the city of Buffalo upon the right of -the different departments to re-distribute the funds appropriated to each department within certain limits, may be entirely correct. We express no opinion upon that point. .

But we prefer not to rest our decision upon that narrow basis. In such a case as this, where the common council has practically refused to place in the tax-budget any, or a merely nominal sum for carrying out the provisions of the civil serv *158 ice law, we believe the city is nevertheless liable to an officer legally appointed under the provisions of the Civil Service Acts, and the regulations properly made in pursuance of such provisions, for an amount which shall be a reasonable compensation for such services, but in no case greater than the sum which may have been fixed by the mayor, and assented to and agreed to be accepted by such appointee.

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Bluebook (online)
25 N.E. 165, 123 N.Y. 152, 33 N.Y. St. Rep. 83, 78 Sickels 152, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1719, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kip-v-city-of-buffalo-ny-1890.