McMeekan v. Department of Health

157 Misc. 620, 283 N.Y.S. 358, 1935 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1553
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 25, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 157 Misc. 620 (McMeekan v. Department of Health) 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
McMeekan v. Department of Health, 157 Misc. 620, 283 N.Y.S. 358, 1935 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1553 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1935).

Opinion

McGoldrick, J.

This is the trial of an alternative order of mandamus. A jury was waived.

On July 23, 1926, the petitioner had served as a civil service employee in the health department of the city of New York for a period of twenty years. In the afternoon of August 11, 1926, he filed with the secretary of the board of health of such department an application for his retirement pursuant to section 1323-a of the Greater New York Charter, as amended by chapter 373 of the Laws of 1907, the provisions of which, so far as pertinent, are: “ Any * * * employee who has or shall have performed duty as such * * * employee in any department of health in the city of New York, for a period of twenty years, or upward, upon his own application, in writing, * * * shall be retired from active service by resolution of the board of health of the health department of the city of New York, and placed upon the health department pension roll, and thereupon shall be awarded, granted and paid from said health department pension fund by the trustees thereof, an annual sum during his lifetime not exceeding one-half the ordinary full pay of a * * * employee in the health department service, -of the rank of the * * * employee so retired.” (Italics mine.) Prior to filing such application, and about noon of the same day (August 11, 1926), the then commissioner of health, in the latter’s office, told him of information that had been received to the effect that petitioner had been paid and had accepted moneys in order improperly to influence the course of his official duties, and that he would be suspended and charges against him preferred. Immediately after filing the application, petitioner left his office; never reported for work again; never thereafter performed any of the duties incident to his position of borough chief of the division of food and drugs in the borough of Manhattan at an annual salary of $3,250; never received his regular salary for the period beginning August 1, 1926, and ending August 11, 1926; never received any pension checks or communicated with the department of health or with the board of trustees of the pension fund in connection therewith; and, up to the time of his dismissal on September 24, 1926, successfully evaded the personal service of charges. Petitioner was suspended as such employee on August 12, 1926. This proceeding was commenced in August, 1928, requesting “ a peremptory order of mandamus be issued directing the members of the Board of Trustees of the Pension Fund of the Health Department of the City of New York to declare your petitioner retired pursuant to said section, and entitled to participate in said pension fund and to pay to your petitioner herein at the rate of $1,625 per annum all past due sums to which he is entitled, with interest thereon.”

[622]*622The petition is based mainly on the contentions that: (1) Such section is self-executing; (2) at the time of filing the application for retirement (August 11, 1926) no legal charges were pending against him, but, irrespective of the existence thereof, he was entitled to be retired as of such date; (3) the dismissal was a nullity, because his application for retirement separated him from the service and he was no longer under the jurisdiction, and, furthermore, no charges looking toward such removal were personally served upon him as required by law.

Section 1323-a is not self-executing. An employee here is not retired upon filing an application therefor. An employee is “ retired from active service by resolution of the board of health of the health department of the city of New York, and placed upon the health department pension roll, and thereupon shall be awarded * * * from said health department pension fund by the trustees thereof ” a pension. This plain statutory procedure may not be disregarded.' The board of health never adopted a resolution retiring petitioner from active service and placing his name on the pension roll, and until such action has been taken there is no authority vested in the board of trustees to grant to him any pension. Otherwise, there would be nothing officially before the board of trustees upon which to found an award.

The board of trustees of the pension fund has no power “ to declare your petitioner retired pursuant to said section and entitled to participate in said pension fund,” as urged in the prayer for relief. Such power is solely within the province of the board of health. Thereupon the board of trustees shall award an annual sum during his fifetime not exceeding one-half the ordinary full pay of * * * the * * * employee so retired.”

Counsel for petitioner urge that the court here may compel the board of health to pass the requisite resolution. Has this board any discretion in the premises? Section 355 of the present charter, as amended by chapter 685 of the Laws of 1921, provides that a police officer who is an honorably discharged soldier or sailor from the army or navy of the United States in the late Civil war, who has performed duty on any such force for the period of twenty years, upon his own application in writing, provided there are no charges against him pending, must be relieved and dismissed from said force and service by the department and placed on the roll of the police pension fund and awarded and granted, to be paid from said pension fund, an annual pension.” It has been held that section 355 is self-executing in the sense that, where it was admitted in the return to the writ of certiorari (it was not as here a proceeding in mandamus) that the relator was such veteran and had served twenty years, the [623]*623retirement is accomplished by the policeman’s application, in writing, without any action upon the part of any other body. (People ex rel. Fitzpatrick v. Greene, 181 N. Y. 308, April, 1905.) In that case, however, the Court of Appeals, with telling effect on the point under discussion, was careful to add (at p. 310): “ In this respect the present provision of the law differs from that contained in the preceding charter, since the retirement of a policeman under such circumstances was then accomplished ‘ by resolution adopted by the majority vote of the full board.’ Hence the cases of People ex rel. Brady v. Martin (145 N. Y. 253), and People ex rel. Tuck v. French (108 N. Y. 105) have no application to this case.”

An examination of the cited cases discloses: In People ex rel. Brady v. Martin the court said (at p. 258): We cannot see how proper effect can be given to the language which requires a majority vote of the full board for the adoption of the resolution, unless some discretion is vested in the members of the board upon the subject. The act does not assume to dictate to the members how they shall vote upon the resolution. It does require for its adoption a majority vote of all the board.”

And at page 259: “ From the very language of the section it seems to us that some discretion is vested in the members of the board. If the legislature intended otherwise, and that the resolution should be passed at all events when the fact of the twenty years’ service was ascertained, it seems to us clear that other and different and plainer language would have been employed. The board has been invested with authority to retire the applicant by a majority vote of the full board, but as no direction has been given requiring the members to vote for the adoption of the resolution, it follows that they must be at liberty to vote in favor of or against such

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Bluebook (online)
157 Misc. 620, 283 N.Y.S. 358, 1935 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmeekan-v-department-of-health-nysupct-1935.