People ex rel. Beck v. Board of Aldermen

18 Misc. 533, 42 N.Y.S. 545
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 18 Misc. 533 (People ex rel. Beck v. Board of Aldermen) 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
People ex rel. Beck v. Board of Aldermen, 18 Misc. 533, 42 N.Y.S. 545 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

White, J.

This is an application by the relator for a writ of peremptory mandamus under section 2070 of the Code of Civil Procedure, commanding the said board of aldermen to direct a Warrant to be drawn in favor of the relator for the sum of $41.96, in payment for services rendered by him to the city of Buffalo as an inspector of buildings for the latter half of the month of September last.

[534]*534The undisputed facts, as disclosed by the papers presented; are in substance as follows:

.On or about July 15, 1896, the relator was examined by the civil service commission of Buffalo as a candidate for the position of .building inspector.' He passed the examination to the satisfaction of the commission, which certified him to the board of public works as a practical building mechanic, fit and qualified to perform the duties of a building inspector.

Thereafter, and on or about August 1, 1896, the said board of public works appointed the relator an inspector of buildings, under and by virtue of subdivision 4 of section SYS of the city charter. The relator thereupon entered upon, and has ever since continued in, the discharge of-his duties as such inspector. His actual qualifications and fitness, for the- position are not questioned. - •

On September 21, 1.896, the board of ..public works certified to the board of - aldermen that there was due to the relator $41166 for services- as such inspector of buildings for the last half of that month, and recommended that a warrant be drawn therefor.

Instead of ordering the warrant drawn as recommended, the board of aldermen has from that time to - this refused and still refuses to order the warrant drawn, on the -sole ground that the! relator was not, when appointed, and is not now, legally qualified for appointment/to the position to which he was appointed, and the duties of which he is discharging. The board of aldermen has referred the claim of this relator for his half month’s salary to its committee on claims, .as an equitable claim, and said committee now has' the claim under consideration. But the board of aider-men has already made an investigation as to the legality of the appointment of the relator and has' determined that it was illegal. This investigation was made without any power to make a binding decision concerning the subject-matter in the board of aldermen.

For more than five-years prior to his appointment as a building inspector, the relator has been a- student of architecture and-building construction, theoretical and practical, in the office of well-known architects, and had worked upon buildings of different kinds, had made plans for, and superintended the construction of, such: buildings, and had inspected the work of their construction in all ■; its branches; he is. thoroughly familiar, both theoretically and"> practically, with all the details of the mechanism and.,construction ;■ of the buildings and also with the quality and uses of all the mate^, rials required in buildings, as well as with the proportionate [535]*535strength of walls, timbers, columns and supports and the strain and pressure to which they may be subjected.

For many years- in this country and elsewhere the superintending and inspection of public buildings by persons other than the laborers occupied thereon has been, and is, an occupation by itself.

Such are the substantial facts upon which the relator bases his demand for- the writ.

Under the charter of the city of Buffalo there is a department of public works, within which there is a bureau of building. The head of the department of public works is the board of public works, composed of three commissioners. The bureau of building, under the board, of public works, has charge of the construction, alterations and repair of all buildings in the city.

The charter provides that the board of public works shall appoint inspectors of .buildings, who shall be under the control of the head of the bureau of building, and that such inspectors shall be practical building mechanics of not less than five years’ experience in their trade.

As has been stated, the board of aldermen,base their refusal to order a warrant drawn. in favor of the relator upon the sole ground that the relator at the time of his appointment was not, and is not now, legally qualified to fill the position of building inspector, because, as they allege, he was not then, and is not now, a “ practical building mechanic of not less than five years’ experience in his trade.”

In my opinion, the attitude of the board of aldermen is not justified for two reasons, either of which is conclusive against them. The first reason is, that, as matter of fact, the relator is, according to the papers presented, a practical building mechanic of not less than five years’ experience in his trade; and the second is, that, as a matter of law, ineligibility for the position cannot now be established in the way the board seeks to accomplish that end.

The words of the charter prescribing the qualification of an inspector of buildings should receive such reasonable interpretation as will make them effective for the accomplishment of the ends sought, and that is, among other things, to exclude from the position in question inexperienced, unskilled, unfit and incompetent persons, and to secure the services of persons having a practical knowledge of the construction of buildings; and it would seem that the qualifications of the relator, as disclosed in Ms own affidavit, which is conceded to be true by not being denied, are of [536]*536a high order, and that he is fully competent to pass upon the character and quality of all the material and workmanship which enter into the construction, alteration and repairing of buildings of all kinds. . -

It seems to me that his description of himself and of his qualifications pictures to the mind a practical mechanic, who: is especially' skilled in the art of building, and acquainted -With the rules and methods observed and pursued by those engaged in constructing, altering and repairing buildings of all kinds, and possessing the skill to apply those rules and to adopt and follow those methods. He is,' according to the record, skilled in all the trades which have to do with the construction of buildings, and. such a person, according to the Century Dictionary, is an artisan, a handicrafts-man and a mechanic within the meaning of the charter.

The relator is clearly a “ practical ” mechanic, because he has devoted himself for several years to the actual drawing of plans for, and the construction of, buildings of various kinds.- I am of the opinion that it is possible for a person without legs or arms to become a practical building mechanic; that is to say, it is' not necessary for a person to perform manual labor with the tools of any special trade or occupation to become such a mechanic. If such a person is competent to devise, direct and supervise the' construction of all kinds of buildings in all their parts, he is at once an artisan, a handicraftsman and a .mechanic. If he does all' those things, he is a “practical mechanic,” whether lie has ever touched a tool of any particular trade or handicraft or not. The expression “trade” applied to the calling of a stationary engineer, in rule XXX of the civil service rules of this city is certainly not more accurate than the use of the word “ trade ”• as describing the calling of a “ building mechanic.”

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Bluebook (online)
18 Misc. 533, 42 N.Y.S. 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-beck-v-board-of-aldermen-nysupct-1896.