People ex rel. Hoffman v. Rupp

35 N.Y.S. 749, 70 N.Y. St. Rep. 519, 90 Hun 145
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 35 N.Y.S. 749 (People ex rel. Hoffman v. Rupp) 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. Hoffman v. Rupp, 35 N.Y.S. 749, 70 N.Y. St. Rep. 519, 90 Hun 145 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

WARD, J.

(dissenting). It became the duty of the respondents, the board of police of the city of Buffalo, to appoint an assistant sealer of weights and measures for said city. The salary of an assistant is $1,000 a year. The duties of such officer are to test all scales and measures used for the sale or weighing of commodities within the city, and to collect fees therefor, and to report all violations of the ordinances on the subject to the law department of the city for prosecution. While a vacancy existed in that office, the relator, Charles Hoffman, a resident of said city, presented a written application to the police board for the position of assistant sealer, stating that he was 51 years of age, a resident of the city, by occupation a grocer, and that he served in the war of the Rebellion from August 26,1864, until the close of the war, and for which service he held an honorable discharge; that he made his application under chapter 717, Laws N. Y. 1894. The board of police considered this application with others, took proof upon the subject and as to the duties of these officers, and the proof discloses that the application of the relator was true in fact, and no substantial objection appeared as to his competency and ability to discharge the duties of the office. On the 12th of December, 1894, the respondents appointed Adolph Karl and Charles Hennafelt assistant sealers to fill said vacancies, and refused to appoint the relator, and on the 31st of December this court, upon the petition of the relator, granted an alternative mandamus requiring the board to appoint the relator to the office of assistant sealer, or show cause to the contrary at a special term of the court on the 21st of January, 1895. The board made return to this writ, and the court, at special term, made findings of fact establishing such vacancies in the office of assistant sealer, the appointment of the persons named above, and proceeds as follows:

“That the relator, Charles Hoffman, was a volunteer soldier in the army of the United States of America in the war for the suppression of the Rebellion, and was honorably discharged therefrom. That said relator applied’ for appointment to the office of assistant sealer, and his application, setting [750]*750forth his military service and honorable discharge therefrom, was duly presented to said board of police. That said relator was competent to fill the duties of said office of assistant sealer, and he was the only honorably discharged soldier who applied for either of such vacancies. That said appointees (Karl and Hennafelt) each possessed qualifications for the fulfillment of the duties of such office superior to those possessed by said relator, and each was better fitted to discharge the duties thereof than said relator; and such superior fitness was the impelling motive and inducement for their selection by said defendant board in preference to appointment of relator.”

The court found as a conclusion of law that the alternative writ of mandamus was not the proper remedy to test the disputed right of relator. He therefore dismissed the proceedings, and judgment was entered accordingly, and the exception to this conclusion brings the matter before us.

The learned judge at special term has favored us with an opinion which indicates that in dismissing the writ he relied upon People v. Goetting, 133 N. Y. 509, 30 N. E. 968, and cases there cited, which seemed to hold that the proper remedy in testing the right to an office was quo warranta. In the case cited the relator had been appointed clerk of the police court in the Third judicial district of Brooklyn, and, after serving some years, was removed in 1889. The clerk was an honorably discharged soldier, and complained that he had been removed without cause, and took a writ of mandamus to be reinstated. The trial court rightly held that the provision of law under which the clerk claimed the preference as a soldier did not apply to a clerkship in a police court in Brooklyn, and dismissed the writ. The clerk appealed to the court of appeals, and that court disposed of the case upon the ground that the mandamus would not lie. That decision was made in April, 1892. An important change in the law governing this case was made in 1894, two years after the decision referred to. That decision was made under chapter 312, Laws 1884, as amended by chapter 464, Laws 1887. By those acts, in every public department of the state and of the cities, towns, and villages, and in noncompetitive examinations under the civil service laws, honorably discharged soldiers and sailors should be preferred for appointment and employment. And the statute of 1884, § 4, premises this preference to the soldier with the statement that it is done “in grateful recognition of the services, sacrifices, and sufferings of persons who served in the army or navy of the United States in the late war, and have been honorably discharged therefrom.” Ho remedy for any violation of this right of the soldiers is given by either of the acts in force in 1892, but by chapter 716, Laws 1894, which took effect May 19th of that year, the legislature amended chapter 312, Laws 1884, as amended by chapter 464, Laws 1887, as follows:

“Section 1. In every public department, and upon all public works of the state of New York, and of the cities, towns and villages thereof, and also in non-competitive examinations under the civil service roles, laws, or regulations of the same, wherever they apply, honorably discharged Union soldiers and sailors shall be preferred for appointment and employment; age, loss of limb or other physical impairment which does not, in fact, incapacitate, shall not be deemed to disqualify them, provided they possess the business capacity necessary to discharge the duties involved. And in all cases of such [751]*751* * * refusal to allow the preference provided for in this act of and for any honorably discharged Union soldier or sailor, or marine, for partisan, political, personal or other cause, except incompetency and conduct inconsistent with the position so held, such soldier, sailor or marine, so wrongfully * * * refused such preference shall have a right of action in any court of competent jurisdiction for the damages as for an act wrongfully done, in addition to the existing right of mandamus; the burden of proving such incompetency and inconsistent conduct, as a question of fact shall be upon the defendant.”

The clear intent of the statute last quoted was to confer upon the soldier the right to resort to the remedy by mandamus to correct immediately the wrong of refusing him the office which the statute gave him, with the right also to proceed by the more deliberate course of action in the proper court for such damages as he had sustained by the wrongful act. While it would have been better to have said that the soldier should have the right to the remedy by mandamus instead of “in addition to the existing right,” yet when we consider the purposes of the statute, and the condition that created it, the legislative intent becomes clearly indicated, though awkwardly expressed. The statement of the existing right of mandamus is equivalent to a declaration conferring such right.. If this is not the true construction, the statement as to the remedy by mandamus is senseless. Effect will be given to every part of a statute except such parts as are utterly repugnant to the other portions of the statute and to the purpose of it. The legislature undoubtedly had in view People v. Goetting, supra, and gave the soldier this remedy by mandamus to do away with the effect of that decision, and not require him to resort to the long and expensive action of quo warranta.

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Related

People ex rel. Hoffman v. Rupp
35 N.Y.S. 349 (New York Supreme Court, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 N.Y.S. 749, 70 N.Y. St. Rep. 519, 90 Hun 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-hoffman-v-rupp-nysupct-1895.