People ex rel. McCune v. Board of Police for the Metropolitan Police District

26 Barb. 487, 1858 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 25
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 1, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 26 Barb. 487 (People ex rel. McCune v. Board of Police for 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. McCune v. Board of Police for the Metropolitan Police District, 26 Barb. 487, 1858 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 25 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1858).

Opinion

Clerke, J.

The relator was duly appointed and sworn in, as a policeman, pursuant to the act passed April 13, 1853, entitled An act in relation to the police department in the city of New York;” thereupon he received his warrant as a member of the said police; which was in due form, and was signed by the then existing commissioners of police. In conformity with this appointment he continued to perform duty as a policeman under the said act, attached to the 14th ward patrol district, until the act passed April 15,1857, entitled “ An act to establish a metropolitan police district, and to provide for the government thereof,” went into effect. The relator acted under the orders of Daniel Kissner, who was in command of the said patrol district, from the time he begame a [497]*497member of the police until the said 15th of April, 1857, and continued to act under the same orders and in the same district, until July 3d, 1857:

The relator, following the example, and obeying the commands, of Kissner, his captain, did not recognize the metropolitan board of police, and refused to act under them, continuing to obey all general orders that issued from the commissioners under the act of 1853. Kissner and the relator, deeming the act of 1857 unconstitutional, refused to act under it, until the courts should declare it constitutional. They considered the act of 1853 still in force, and claimed to act under it, until the 3d of July, 1857.

The members of the old force, under the command of Kissner, including the relator, performed the police duty of the 14th ward until the last day of June, or 1st of July, 1857, and constituted the only police force on duty in that ward. The relator has performed no duty as a policeman since July 3d, 1857; but since that time has reported himself for duty, and has held himself in readiness for duty, as a member of the metropolitan police force. He received his pay from the comptroller of the city of Hew York to June 26th, 1857.

About said 26th of June, 1857, after the organization of the metropolitan police force, proceedings were instituted against the relator on the complaint of Sergeant Williamson, who, under the new organization, had the command of the 14th precinct, comprising, if not identical with, the district to which the relator had been assigned for duty under the late organization. He was accused in this complaint before the new board, of willful disobedience of orders, and insubordination ; and the board taking cognizance of the charge, dismissed him, together with several other patrolmen, from the service of the department, for similar alleged delinquencies. The question arising on this state of facts is, whether the relator was a member of the metropolitan police force on the 11th of December, 1857, when the writ of alternative mandamus was issued in this case; and, in order to answer this question [498]*498correctly, it will be necessary to consider in the first place, whether the police, appointed under the act of 1853, became by the mere operation of the act of 1857, members of the metropolitan police force; and secondly, if they did, do the acts of contumacy and refusal to act under the new organization until the 3d of July, 1857, amount to a resignation, on the part of the relator, of his membership in the new force; and thirdly, if they do not amount to this, but merely constitute acts of disobedience and insubordination, has he been dismissed in the proper way, and by the proper authority, from the service of the department,

I. Did the police, appointed under the act of 1853, become by the mere operation of the act of 1857, members of the metropolitan police ? The 32d section of the new act provides that “the police in the cities of New York and Brooklyn, officers and patrolmen, shall continue to do duty under existing laws at the passage of this act, and, according to the regulations of the departments of New York and Brooklyn, until after the first meeting of the board of police, under this act; when the said police shall hold office and do duty under the provisions of the act hereby enacted, and as members of the police force of ‘ the metropolitan police district’ hereby constituted.” This act contains no provision requiring any affirmative action or specific course of conduct on the part of the members of the old force, to qualify them for duty and membership under the new. They are to continue to do duty under existing laws; and after the first meeting of the new board of police, they shall hold office and do duty under the provisions of the new act. This is all. There is no inter- • ruption for an instant in their capacity to exercise duties as police. The act, as we have seen, was passed on the 15th of April, 1857; it went into effect immediately; and the police were as effectually in possession of all the powers of their office the instant of the passage of the act, as the instant before. The new act does not enumerate the specific powers and duties of patrolmen: these are contained in the act of 1853, which, [499]*499to a1 certain extent, remains in force. It is a mistake to suppose that that act is absolutely expunged from the statute book, for it is only those parts and provisions of it$ which are inconsistent with the new act that are repealed. The powers and duties, then, prescribed by the act of 1853, or any other law, are continued by the new act; and the officers and patrolmen are expressly authorized to exercise and perform them; and being thus authorized, without the intervention of any new appointment, without the requirement of ally new or additional qualification, and without any abeyance or restriction whatever, they are transferred to the new organization, and are declared to be members of it.

It is plain to my mind, from these considerations, that in changing the organization of the police in some respects, and in providing for it a new governing and superintending body, and in extending the territorial sphere of its duties, the legislature never contemplated the creation of a new force; but, on the contrary, they deliberately intended the continuation in office of the men who composed the old police. They, indeed, required by section 33 that its members should possess certain specific qualifications, recited in section 7; not absolutely declared indispensable by any previous act; but, the language of section 33, requiring the possession of these qualifications, shows, distinctly, that nothing additional to what was before required was necessary to make the members of the old force, by the operation of the statute, members of the new; for it says “the board of police shall remove from office any one of the present members of the police departments of Hew York and Brooklyn, not possessed of the qualifications set forth in section seven of this act." They certainly could not be removed from office, for the want of these qualifications, unless they continued in office, whether they possessed them or not. The new act, therefore, did not vacate or abolish the office of the existing police, but, only rendered them liable to be removed, if it should be ascertained, by the new [500]*500board, that they did not possess the qualifications prescribed in section seven.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 Barb. 487, 1858 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-mccune-v-board-of-police-for-the-metropolitan-police-nysupct-1858.