People ex rel. Gorman v. Board of Police of the Metropolitan Police District

35 Barb. 527, 1861 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 179
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 18, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 35 Barb. 527 (People ex rel. Gorman v. Board of Police of the 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
People ex rel. Gorman v. Board of Police of the Metropolitan Police District, 35 Barb. 527, 1861 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 179 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1861).

Opinions

Leonard, J.

The relator was a member of the police force of the city of Hew York on the 15th of April, 1857, when the act of the legislature was passed to establish the metropolitan police district, &c.

The 32d section of that act continued the then existing [528]*528officers and patrolmen in the performance of police duty under the new hoard thereby created. The duties and purposes of the new force were precisely the same as those of the old. Ho oath or acceptance of office were required, on the part of the old force, to constitute them members of the new. The old officers continued or remained in office, under the new law and under the new board, by virtue of the act of the legislature. (The People ex rel. McCune v. The Board of Police, &c., 19 N. Y. Rep. 188.)

The seventh section of the act of 1857 directs, that no member of the force shall be removed except upon, written charges, after an opportunity of being heard in his defense before the board of police. This provision applies to those officers who were continued in office from the old force, as well as to those subsequently appointed.

It is not claimed or alleged, on the part of the defendants, that the relator was ever removed from office. The board of police resist the application for the writ of mandamus to compel the restoration of the relator to office, of which he alleges that he has by them been unlawfully deprived, on several grounds which have been set forth in the answer or plea interposed by the board of police, and have been submitted to a jury, in the very language of the pleading, as questions for them to answer.

These grounds, so far as it is now necessary to refer to them, are substantially the following: 1st. That the relator refused to take or hold office, and never has taken or held office under the new police law or under the board thereby created. 2d. That on the 23d of April, 1857, the relator withdrew from the force established under that law, and disclaimed holding any office or doing any duty as a member of the new police force. 3d. That since the passage of the new police law on the 15th April, 1857, the relator has, for his private gain, entered into other employments, in nowise connected with, but inconsistent with his duties as a member of the new police force, and has received large profits therefor.

[529]*529The answers or pleas were tried before a circuit court, and the jury found thereon, not the facts which were in evidence before them, but, as it seems, the legal conclusions to which they came from those facts, in the language almost of the pleadings interposed by the defendants.

As to the first answer or plea above referred to, the jury say that the relator refused to take or hold office, and never has taken or held office under the new act or under the board thereby created.

As to the second answer or plea, the jury say that the relator never having been a member of, did not withdraw from, the police force organized under the new act, as he could not withdraw from an office never accepted.

As to the third answer or plea, the jury say that since the passage of the act of April 15th, 1857, the relator has, for his private gain, entered into other employments, in nowise connected with, and not as a member of the police force, and has received large profits therefor.

These are the grounds upon which the board of police now insist that the relator is not unlawfully deprived of his office as a .member of the police force under them.

If the relator had been appointed by the new board, and upon being notified, or having learned of his appointment, had refused to take or hold office, such refusal would be conclusive against his right to the writ of mandamus here demanded.

But he was not appointed by the defendants, the new board of police. He was continued in the performance of his duty as a policeman under the new act and under the new board, by a higher power than themselves, the legislature of the state, from which authority the new board alone derive the power they possess. It stands undisputed that the relator was in office lawfully on the 15th of April, 1857, when the new law was passed, and also on the 23d of April, 1857, when the new board were organized and held their first meeting.

The court of appeals has long ago decided, in the case of [530]*530McCune, that no act of acceptance or induction was necessary to a complete title to office on the part of the old force, under the board of police newly organized. The new board conferred no office on the relator, nor did he accept any from them. The legislature of the state had already settled the rights of the relator. It is wholly inapplicable' to the case to allege as a defense, that the relator refused to take or hold that which he had before taken, and then held, at the time the new board was organized.

The court of appeals, in the case of McCune, also held that it was no evidence of a resignation or abdication of office for a member of the old police force to refuse to recognize the validity of the new act, or the board of police constituted thereby, prior to the 3d day of July, 1857, or up to the time when that tribunal pronounced the new law to be valid, in the case of The People v. Draper and others, (reported 15 N. Y. Rep. 532.) Up to that time the old police force, or the principal part of them, continued to perform police duty under their old officers, and refused to acknowledge the authority of the new board of police, constituted under the act of 15th April, 1857. Those persons holding office April 15th, 1857, were set in authority over the old police force by virtue of the police act of 1853, and held the police stations, and all the muniments of their positions as a board of commissioners, chief of police, captains, &c. and the power of discipline held the men in the force occupying subordinate stations, to the performance of police duty under them, until the court of appeals had pronounced .upon the validity of the new act. The most eminent legal authority in the state differed as to the validity of that act. The members of the court of last resort divided in pronouncing judgment on that question. The subordinates of the old police force were not required to be wiser than those great luminaries of the law. Their refusal to acknowledge the new board of police was not ascribed to them by the court of appeals as their own act, but as the act of those who held [531]*531authority over them; and for these reasons, among others, the court of appeals held the conduct of the old force, up to the 3d of July, 1857, as not constituting any resignation or abdication of office.

The very terms of the answer now under consideration imply that the new board were understood to confer office on the relator, or to offer to do so, and that it was incumbent upon him to accept or refuse. Such a view is a mistaken one. If the relator was in office for a single moment under the new board, the term or expression “that he refused to take or hold office,” as used in the answer, is wholly inconsistent with the fact that he was in office by virtue of the new law. If, after that, the office of the relator became vacant by his own act, it must have arisen from his resignation or abdication, or from some other act rendering his title to the office void.

Every construction and intendment in regard to a pleading is to be taken most strongly against the pleader.

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Bluebook (online)
35 Barb. 527, 1861 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-gorman-v-board-of-police-of-the-metropolitan-police-nysupct-1861.