McDermott v. Board of Police for Metropolitan Police District

5 Abb. Pr. 422, 25 Barb. 635
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 5 Abb. Pr. 422 (McDermott v. Board of Police for Metropolitan Police District) 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
McDermott v. Board of Police for Metropolitan Police District, 5 Abb. Pr. 422, 25 Barb. 635 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1857).

Opinion

Davies, J.

—By chapter 302 of the Laws of 1846, the watch department of the city of New York and various other offices were abolished, and a police force for said city organized. By this act, as amended by chapter 436 of the Laws of 1849, the officers and policemen were to be appointed by the mayor, on the nomination of the alderman and assistant of each ward in the city, and to hold office for the term of four years, unless sooner removed. By section 4 of that act as thus amended, the mayor was to receive complaints for cause against any member of the police force, and he was to cause notice thereof to be given to the accused, “ to afford him an opportunity to be heard in his defence.”

It cannot have been forgotten that frequent and loud complaints were made against this system. It was alleged that the captains of police and policemen, deriving, as they did in fact, their offices from the aldermen and assistants of the various wards, partook of their political affinities, and necessarily felt called upon to sustain them, and promote the political aspiration of those to whom they were indebted for their places. It is unnecessary to inquire whether there was or not any truth in these charges, but it may be safely assumed, from the character of a large number of the police, that in truth there was no foundation for them. Nevertheless, they did not fail to make an impression upon the public mind, and materially tended to weaken confidence in the police, and deprive them of that independent position so essential to their own self-respect and usefulness in the discharge of their important duties. This and other considerations which might be adverted to, led to the passage of the act of April 13, 1853 (Laws of 1853, ch. 228).

That act provided for a radical change in the organization of the police. By section 1 of article 3, it was provided that the [431]*431mayor, recorder, and city judge should constitute a hoard of commissioners for the trial and appointment of all members of the police, and that they should have the general regulation and control of the department. It also provided that members of the police force, appointed after that act went into operation, “ should hold their offices during good behavior, and should only be removed for cause, as thereinafter provided.” Section 4 of that article provided that the mayor might receive from any person complaints for cause against any member of the department, “ and in each case notice to the accused shall be given to afford him an opportunity to be heard in his defence.” It was also provided that the accused party might in all cases appear by counsel, and might compel the attendance of witnesses in his behalf. The testimony in each case was to be reduced to writing, with the decision of the board thereon, and was to be filed with the clerk of the Common Council.

It is thus seen that the Legislature threw every guard around the policemen necessary to insure to them a fair trial on all charges preferred, full opportunity of making their defence, and a public record of their conviction or acquittal. And all these precautions were manifestly wise and necessary. It was the great object of this law to place the police force entirely above and beyond all partisan or other illegitimate influence. They were assured that if they devoted themselves faithfully to their duty, they should hold their offices so long as they thus well conducted; that no arbitrary or partisan influences should interfere with them ; but that the tenure of their office was made as secure and permanent as that of the judges in the highest courts of this and other countries. The Legislature declared that if they took office under this act, they should only be deprived of it for cause, and after a full, fair, and public trial.

While this law thus existed, and with their rights thus secured and guarded, the Legislature of this State at its late session passed the act organizing the Metropolitan Police District and the police therein. The counties of New York, Kings, Westchester, and Richmond were constituted the district, and the police thereof were placed under the control of a board of five commissioners, together with the mayors of the cities of ¡New York and Brooklyn.

I cannot be mistaken, I think, in assuming that it was the [432]*432avowed intent of the framers and promoters of this act, and of the Legislature who passed it, more effectually to carry out the benign and wise purposes intended to be secured by the act of 1853, namely, to secure to the metropolis of the State, and the surrounding neighborhood, an efficient, able, and independent police, subject to no undue influence, and intent only on the discharge of the onerous, delicate, and important duties resting on them. I think this intent is fairly deducible from the tenor of the act, even if we made no reference to the reports in favor of this law, or the debates had on its passage. Such reference fully sustains these views. It is quite clear to my mind that the Legislature did not intend by the passage of this act to introduce any violent changes, or deprive those then in office of the rights secured to them by the act of 1853, so long as they faithfully discharged their duties. This is apparent from the absorption into the Metropolitan Police of the police force then existing in the cities of New York and Brooklyn. By section 32 of this act it is declared that “ the police in the cities of New York and Brooklyn, officers and patrolmen, shall continue to do duty under existing laws at the passage of this act, and according to the regulations of the departments of New York and Brooklyn, until after the first meeting of the Board of Police under this act (this was held on April 22, 1857), when the said police shall hold office and do duty under the provisions of the act hereby enacted, mid as members of the police force of the Metropolitan Police District hereby constituted.” Mothing could be more plain, therefore, than that the 1,270 policemen in office in the city of New York on 'the 22d of April last became the policemen under the Metropolitan Police Act, and held office and were bound to do duty as such.

Section 6 of said act declares that the Board of Supervisors of the county of Mew York were to determine the number of patrolmen for said county, and that said board might “ from time to time increase or diminish the number of patrolmen.” And until otherwise provided, that is, until some other or further action of the said Board of Supervisors, the quota of patrol force for the city and county of Mew York shall be the number now existing by law in said city. That number we have seen was 1,270, and on the 18th of May last the Board of Supervisors of the county of Mew York authorized the Board of Police to. [433]*433appoint five policemen. This must be taken as an authority to appoint that number in addition to the quota then authorized by law. It cannot be assumed that the supervisors, in the absence of plain language to that effect, intended to reduce the number of the whole police force for this city to five. It was conceded by counsel on both sides, on the arguments, that this resolution authorized the appointment of five additional policemen, making the whole number of the police force for this county, therefore, 1,275.

It seems to me that it is undeniable that the Legislature intended, as to the police force then existing and made part of the force organized by this act, to preserve the same inviolability as to the tenure of their office as was secured to them by the act of 1853.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Abb. Pr. 422, 25 Barb. 635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdermott-v-board-of-police-for-metropolitan-police-district-nysupct-1857.