People ex rel. Fallon v. Board of Police Commissioners

38 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 209
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1883
StatusPublished

This text of 38 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 209 (People ex rel. Fallon v. Board of Police Commissioners) 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. Fallon v. Board of Police Commissioners, 38 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 209 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1883).

Opinion

Davis, P. J.:

These cases come before us upon an order for their reargument. The first of them was argued at the March Term of 1882 ; the second; at the May Term of the same year. The order of the Special Term in the second case was affirmed in June, 1882. The order in the first case was reversed in October, 1882, upon the authority of the People ex rel. Gilhooly v. The Police Commissioners (decided by this court in December, 1880, and reported in 23 Hun, 351). That decision had the concurrence of all the judges of this court then sitting, as also had the decision of the People ex rel. Gilhooly, above cited. In deciding the case of the People ex rel. Mohr v. The Police Commissioners, it appears by the opinion of the court (27 Hun, 162) that the court overlooked the same question in Gilhooly's case, for it is there said in substance that the question had not been passed upon. So also in the decision rendered in the People ex rel. Fallon, in October, 1882, the intermediate decision of the People ex rel. Mohr, which had not then been reported, was not considered. This arose, perhaps, from the fact that the justice who wrote the opinion in the Fallon case was not present at the argument and did not participate in the decision of the Mohr case. The result is that the court has decided the same question twice, to [211]*211wit: in the Gilliooly and the Fallon cases in one way, and once, in tbe Mohr case, in another way, the decisions being in direct conflict. There can be no question but that if the attention of thé court in the Mohr case had been called to the previous decision of the Gilhooly case, it would undoubtedly have followed that decision, leaving the error, if one was committed in that case, to be corrected by the court of last resort. Under these circumstances a reargument was ordered in the last two cases for the purpose of producing uniformity of decision and enabling the question in the cases, if the parties shall be so advised, to be finally disposed of by the Court of Appeals.

The principal question in the cases was simply whether, upon the investigation of charges against a police oflicer for improper conduct, where the testimony has been taken by a stenographer before one member of such board, and by him reported to the board for its action, the subsequent termination of the office of the commissioner who took the testimony deprives the board of jurisdiction to proceed to hear and decide the case; or, in other words, whether it is necessary, where testimony has been taken before one commissioner, that he should continue in office and participate in its final consideration, to render the action of the board legal.

It has in several cases been decided by this court that the taking of such testimony before one commissioner is a procedure authorized by the rules of the board and by the statute. But that question is now finally settled by the decision of the Court of Appeals in the People ex rel. Flannagan v. The Board of Police Commissioners (93 N. Y., 91), in which the decision of this court on that question is affirmed. In that case the Court of Appeals held that in the disposition of such cases by the commissioners the rights of the relator were governed and controlled by statutory provisions, and the rules and regulations of the police department made in pursuance thereof, and that the commissioners “in the exercise of their functions, are, to some extent, vested with a discretionary power which authorizes them, within established rules, to take action without restricting their proceedings to strict technical rules. They are a subordinate and an administrative tribunal vested with disciplinary powers, and not a court limited in its functions within the provisions of the Constitution. (See State Const., art. 1, § 6.) Their action [212]*212must be considered, having in view the special powers conferred,' and the purposes for which their organization was intended, and not confined by the application of strict legal rules, which prevail in reference to trials and proceedings in courts of law.”

And again, in the course of its opinion the court says: “ As the boai’d of commissioners do not constitute a court, its proceedings should not be controlled or decided by the same degree of formality that would be required upon a charge of a criminal offense before ordinary tribunals of justice.” And in considering the rules of the boárd which permitted the testimony to be taken before one commissioner the court proceeds to say: This rule contemplates that the accused may be taken before one of the commissioners and examined, and that the testimony shall be laid before and examined by the several commissioners before judgment thereon. ¥e think that the rule was fully authorized under section 41 of chapter 335 of the Laws of 1873, and was not in conflict with the provisions of section 55 of the same act. Nor are we able to see that the rule referred to was not fully complied with; the board met and acted together, and a conviction was had before it as a united body after full examination and due deliberation. It was not essential that a majority of the board should be present upon the taking of the testimony. The statute, by clothing them with power, under their own by-laws, intended to relieve the board from the necessity of all or a majority of its members being present when testimony, in a case like this, was being taken.”

The Flannagan case does not decide the precise point presented in this case, but it establishes rules from which we think it must necessarily follow that the board of commissioners is not ousted of jurisdiction, where testimony is taken by one of their number -for the purpose of being laid before the whole board for its examination and decision, by the accident of his death or the intermediate determination of his office. His duties in taking the testimony are administrative and clerical in their nature, for he has no power to do anything more than to hear and take down the evidence in the case as offered by the complainant and the respondent, and transmit the same to the board itself for its examination and decision.

In this regard the proceeding is analogous to that which often takes place in the trial of special proceedings in comfs where the [213]*213testimony is taken before or under the direction of a judge or referee, and the case is brought to a hearing upon such testimony •before some other judge or tribunal. To hold that the proceedings already had are defeated by death, or the termination of an office in such a case, would go beyond any rule laid down for the conduct of strictly judicial proceedings. It certainly would be going much too far to say that such an accident, in the progress of proceedings administrative rather than judicial, would of necessity defeat all further steps. The eases before us illustrate how wholly unreasonable such a rule would be. Here the testimony was taken before a single commissioner by a stenographer in the form of question and answer, everything being taken down precisely as said by the witnesses or by the commissioner. In reading it over, both on this return and by the board of commissioners on the hearing, all that transpired is completely before us, as it was before them, and the presence of the commissioner before whom it was taken could neither add nor detract from its significance. On its examination by the board, the relator had the right to be present if he wished, and to be heard ; and, as we have lately decided in the case of the People ex rel. Swift v. The Police Commissioners (MS. opinion Davis, P.

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Bluebook (online)
38 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-fallon-v-board-of-police-commissioners-nysupct-1883.