Luria v. Marsh

178 Misc. 595, 34 N.Y.S.2d 798, 1942 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1570
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1942
StatusPublished

This text of 178 Misc. 595 (Luria v. Marsh) 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
Luria v. Marsh, 178 Misc. 595, 34 N.Y.S.2d 798, 1942 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1570 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1942).

Opinion

Shientag, J.

This is a proceeding under article 78 of the Civil Practice Act by seven petitioners to compel the municipal civil service commission to restore their names to the policewoman eligible list. The petitioners passed the examination for the position of policewoman and were placed upon the eligible list promulgated by the respondents on February 15, 1939.

The notice of examination for this position provided that “ This list will also be certified as appropriate for other positions requiring women of a high degree of physical ability and mental alertness. Persons receiving permanent positions as a result of such certifications will be removed from the eligible list of Policewoman.” I

Acting in accordance with this notice the commission certified the policewoman list as appropriate for the position of correction officer and the petitioners accepted appointments as correction officers between March 16, 1939, and August 22, 1940. There is no question that petitioners had notice that their names would be removed from the policewoman list upon appointment as correction officers and five of the seven petitioners were given additional explicit warning of this consequence.

In seeking to be restored to the policewoman list, which is still in existence and has about another year to run, petitioners argue that the civil service commission' had no power to remove them from such list upon appointment as correction officers, and that even if such power existed its exercise in this case was arbitrary and unreasonable.

There is no specific provision in the Civil Service Law or in the rules of the civil service commission covering the removal of eligibles from an open competitive list upon their appointment to an appropriate position.

Section 14 of the Civil Service Law reads in part: “ Appoint-¡ ments shall be made from the eligible list most nearly appropriate [597]*597for the group in which the position to be filled is classified, and a new list shall be created for a stated position or group of positions only where there is no appropriate list existing from which, appointment may be made.”

This wording clearly envisages permanent appointments from existing lists to appropriate positions. Any interpretation which would require that a person appointed to an appropriate position must remain on the original eligible list would do violence to the intent of this provision. It would mean that whenever an appointee’s name was reached upon the original eligible list he might leave the “ appropriate ” position. This would often result in a complete waste of special training and require retraining for appointees who elected to change their positions. There would be no such thing as permanent appointments.

The intent of the statute seems plain and the removal of a name from the original list with proper notice is a ministerial act requiring no express rule of the commission. Sections 31 and 31-a of the Civil Service Law lend support to this interpretation of the statute. Section 31 provides for the entry of displaced competitive employees upon preferred lists, and their appointment from such lists to similar or appropriate positions. There is no provision in section 31 for the removal of names from the preferred list upon appointment to similar or appropriate positions. Fifteen years after the enactment of section 31, section 31-a was added and provides that “ Any person whose name was placed on a preferred list on or after January first, nineteen hundred thirty-two, who has accepted reinstatement to a position lower in rank or grade than the position from which he was suspended shall, notwithstanding such employment, retain his place upon said preferred list.”

This indicates the Legislature’s belief that a person could be removed from the preferred list upon appointment to a similar or appropriate position both before and after the amendment without any specific authorizing provision. The interpretation problem in this case is parallel to that presented by section 31 before the addition of section 31-a.

Sections 31 and 31-a were treated with in Matter of Imundo (N. Y. L. J. Jan. 18, 1940, p. 280, McLaughlin, J.), where the court stated: “No one should be in a permanent position and also be on a preferred list for that position. * * * Apparently Milbert was not reinstated to a position lower in rank or grade than the position from which he was suspended, but rather to one of equivalent rank or grade, although not exactly the same.”

Matter of Suchman v. Kern (170 Misc. 586), cited by the petitioners, is not determinative of this question. The court’s [598]*598statement that “ His service in the position of investigator in the sanitation department did not remove him from the patrolmen’s eligible list, although he had been appointed therefrom to another appropriate position,” was a statement of an existing fact situation and did not purport to be a ruling on the commission’s power to remove from an eligible list upon appointment to an appropriate position. The case of People ex rel. Webb v. Milliken (66 Misc. 192) involved a question different from the one now being considered. The court ruled in that case that a person who had passed an examination for court stenographer either to the County Court or the Supreme Court was eligible for transfer to the Supreme Court after he was appointed as stenographer to the County Court. The rules of the civil service commission relating to transfers were the basis for that decision.

The petitioners cite Matter of Aliotta v. Finegan (N. Y. L. J. July 13, 1937, p. 118, Hammer, J.; affd., 252 App. Div. 855) as authority for the proposition that “ the right to remain on an eligible list is absolute and continues until the expiration of the list notwithstanding appointment to an appropriate position.” There was no opinion in either court in the Aliotta case, but after an examination of the record and briefs in that case I am convinced that it contains no authority for the proposition urged. That case will presently be discussed more fully.

Petitioners argue that the respondents’ uniform policy has been to permit eligibles to remain on lists for which they have qualified despite appointment to “ appropriate ” positions, and that, therefore, the respondents’ action in this case is arbitrary and discriminatory. The petitioners are mistaken on the facts. In the recent case of Matter of Hecht v. Kern (178 Misc. 571), the civil service commission removed the names of the petitioners from the list of clerk, grade 2, upon their appointment as railroad clerks. But even if the uniform practice had been otherwise, the action of the commission in this case would be proper if it was pursuant to law and in the exercise of reasonable discretion. The petitioners have no vested right in an existing rule or practice of the commission. (Matter of Kornbluth v. Reavy, 261 App. Div. 60, 63.)

This brings us to the question of whether the respondents acted reasonably and whether their action conflicts in any way with the Aliotta decision (supra). In the Aliotta case the petitioners were on the patrolman, police department eligible list, which the commission ruled appropriate for the positions of special patrolman (railroad) and toll collector. Before certifying any eligibles from the patrolman list for such appropriate positions, respondents obtained from each one a waiver in writing of his right to a position [599]

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Related

Matter of Paul v. Foley
14 N.E.2d 181 (New York Court of Appeals, 1938)
People Ex Rel. Schau v. . McWilliams
77 N.E. 785 (New York Court of Appeals, 1906)
Weeks v. Kraft
147 A.D. 403 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1911)
Aliotta v. Finegan
252 A.D. 855 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1937)
Paul v. Foley
252 A.D. 873 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1937)
Kornbluth v. Reavy
261 A.D. 60 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1941)
People ex rel. Webb v. Milliken
66 Misc. 192 (New York Supreme Court, 1910)
DeLack v. Greene
170 Misc. 309 (New York Supreme Court, 1939)
Suchman v. Kern
170 Misc. 586 (New York Supreme Court, 1939)
Hecht v. Kern
178 Misc. 571 (New York Supreme Court, 1942)

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Bluebook (online)
178 Misc. 595, 34 N.Y.S.2d 798, 1942 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luria-v-marsh-nysupct-1942.