People ex rel. Brymer v. Gray

32 A.D. 458, 53 N.Y.S. 274, 1898 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1781
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 32 A.D. 458 (People ex rel. Brymer v. Gray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Brymer v. Gray, 32 A.D. 458, 53 N.Y.S. 274, 1898 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1781 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Hatch, J.:

Upon the adoption of the charter of the Greater New York (Chap. 378, Laws of 1897), the relator held the office of fire marshal in and for. the city of Brooklyn. This office was created by chapter 373 of the Laws of 1889, which was an amendment to the charter of the city of Brooklyn (Chap. 583, Laws of 1888). The relator was appointed by the fire commissioner, and held office during his pleasure. The duties attached to said office were, among other things, the investigation of fires and their origin, and to report to the commissioner his. opinion and conclusion of the matter investigated. By an amendment, adopted in 1892, this law was amended (Laws of 1892, chap. 445), wherein it was provided that such fire marshal “ shall rank as a member of the uniformed fire force of the department of fire, and shall be-entitled to all the privileges and immunities thereof,” except that he should not be placed upon the pension roll of the firemen’s insurance fund. The power of removal by the commissioner at pleasure was omit-ted. The amendment, therefore, accomplished two things affecting the status of the relator to the office; it prevented his removal from the office at the pleasure of the commissioner, and it made him a member of the force with such privileges and immunities as were enjoyed by the uniformed fire force of the "department of fire of such city. By section 9 of title 13 of the charter of the city of Brooklyn, the fire commissioner was required to make suitable regulations, under which the officers and men of the department were required to wear an appropriate uniform and badges, and this seems to have embraced, pursuant to sections 5, 6 and 7 of the same title of such charter, all of the officers and members of the fire department. For by the provisions-of section 8 the names of all members of the fire department were required to be enrolled, under the direction of the fire.commissioners. It seems clear from the provisions of these sections that the purpose was to have all of the officers and employees constituting the fire department uniformed, and as by the provisions of the act, the fire marshal was appointed by the fire commissioner,-and subject by its terms to his direction and control, and required to report to him, such commissioner was undoubtedly authorized to require the fire marshal [460]*460to wear a uniform and badge. The object to be accomplished was precisely the same in the one cáse as in the other. The force was required to be uniformed, as recited in section 9,.for the reason that in case of fire the authority and relations of the officers and men ■might be known. • It was quite as much.within the line of the fire ■ marshal’s duty to attend fires as to investigate after. He might as well be enabled to determine the cause and origin of a fire at the time when it was occurring as at any time after. Indeed, his •observation might resolve both questions at once, or enable him the. more intelligently to pursue his subsequent investigation. He also possessed authority to enter and investigate buildings, and for.such purpose needed a badge of authority, and being uniformed, was enabled the more readily to compel recognition of his authority. It is true that the authority vested in the commissioner to remove without a trial did not embrace those members employed upon the force for extinguishing fires. But those persons so entitled to a public trial, and who could only he removed after such trial and for ' cause, were a part of the uniformed foros.

The relator was subject to this rule with all its privileges and immunities. The language of the act, “ he shall rank as a member,” in view of the duties he was to perform, and his relation to the. department and its commissioner, seems to make it the intention of the Legislature that lie-should so rank within the force as a member; not that he should be considered outside of the force entitled to certain privileges and immunities measured by what certain persons therein enjoyed, but that he was within the force a member with his rights and privileges like the other members of the uniformed force. Such we believe to have been the intention to be gathered from the entire scheme,, and, therefore, we are led to hold that he was a part of the uniformed fire department of the city. Such being the status of the relator in the fire department of the city of Brooklyn, we proceed to examine what his status was under the 'Greater Hew York charter. . Section 722 of such charter provides: The officers and members of the uniformed force and legally appointed firemen in the corporation formerly known as the mayor, aldermen and commonalty of the city of Hew York, and in the city of Brooklyn and in the city of Long Island City are hereby made members of the fire department óf the city of Hew York, as

[461]*461hereby constituted, and shall be assigned to duty therein by the fire-commissioner, with the rank and grade now held by them respectively, as nearly as may be practicable.”

Section 779 provides: “ The fire commissioner is hereby authorized to appoint and remove a fire marshal for the boroughs of Manhattan, The Bronx and Richmond, and a fire marshal to be seated, in Brooklyn and to exercise his powers within the boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens.”

By the express provisions of the charter the uniformed fire force of the city of Brooklyn was continued as constituted when consolidation took effect, and its members became entitled to hold their respective-positions and rank as nearly as the same was practicable under the new conditions. This depended upon the question whether the position •held by any such member or a similar one existed under the consolidated governments. By the terms of the second section, which we-have cited, provision is made for a fire marshal to be seated in the borough of Brooklyn, with authority to exercise power in such borough and in the borough of Queens. The question does not, therefore, permit of argument, as it rests upon clear legislative enactment, and, as so expressed, the uniformed fire force, officers and men of the city of Brooklyn were made members of the fire department off the city of Hew York, with the rank and grade held by them at. the-time when they were so ma.de a part. This was something more than a transference of the person, with mere right of appointment, which might or might, not be exercised, dependent upon the volition of the-, appointing power. The transfer was a transfer of the force as it. was, with rank and grade as existing at such time, subject only to-the qualification that in the Hew York fire department the same or similar positions were in existence and Were continued. The provision, therefore, which authorized the office of fire marshal to be seated in the boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens was precisely similar in character to the position which the relator held under the charter of the city of Brooklyn, the only change being in the extent of jurisdiction over which his authority was extended and the somewhat enlarged character of his duties. An examination, however, of sections 779 to 783 inclusive, of the charter, shows that the duties devolved upon the fire marshal by the Hew York charter are the same in character as existed under the Brooklyn city charter, sped[462]*462jied in greater detail, enlarged to some extent and exercised in connection with the commissioner or alone. In' the essential duties to be performed by him there has been little change.

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Bluebook (online)
32 A.D. 458, 53 N.Y.S. 274, 1898 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1781, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-brymer-v-gray-nyappdiv-1898.