People ex rel. O'Loughlin v. Board of Estimate & Apportionment

87 Misc. 601, 150 N.Y.S. 12
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 87 Misc. 601 (People ex rel. O'Loughlin v. Board of Estimate & Apportionment) 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. O'Loughlin v. Board of Estimate & Apportionment, 87 Misc. 601, 150 N.Y.S. 12 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1914).

Opinion

Benedict, J.

The time at my disposal will not admit of anything more than a brief statement of my conclusions as to the questions presented by this application and which are discussed in the briefs of the learned counsel for the respective parties. There is no dispute as to the facts.

The office of register of the county of Kings is a constitutional county office (Const., art. X, § 1), and under article XII, section 1 of the Constitution, the legislature may “ regulate and fix the wages or salaries * * * of persons employed by * * * any county * * * of the State. ’ ’

The legislature in the exercise of this authority enacted laws regulating the wages and salaries of employees in the register’s office. See Laws of 1901, chap. 706, § 2, as amd. by Laws of 1904, chap. 699, Laws of 1906, chap. 496, and Laws of 1913, chap. 776. As amended in 1906 and 1913 the register was authorized under certain conditions to employ temporary copyists in addition to the thirty-five salaried copyists provided for by these acts. This authority was conferred in the following terms: ‘ ‘ The register shall from time to time in his discretion employ temporary copyists in addition to the permanent force herein provided for. The temporary copyists shall, however, be employed only at times when there has been in the register’s office such an accumulation of deeds, mortgages and other papers that the register is unable to have them actually copied until more than one month later than the time when they have been left at his office for recording, and at no time shall their employ[604]*604ment continue longer than is necessary for bringing the copying up to within one month of the date of recording. The temporary copyist shall be paid at the rate of five cents per folio.-”

By section 5 of chapter 706, Laws of 1901, it is provided that: On and after the first day of January, 1902, the expenses of conducting the office of register of the county of Kings shall be a charge upon the said city of New York and the said expenses shall be deemed a city and county expense.”

Section 230 and its subdivision sixth of the Charter provide as follows: The Board of Estimate and Apportionment shall * * * annually include in its final estimate the following sums which shall annually be raised and appropriated. * * * Sixth.— Such sum as may be necessary to pay the salaries of county officers within the counties of * * * Kings * * * and likewise all other expenses within said counties and each of them which are county as distinguished from city charges and expenses.”

Prom the year 1908 to the year 1913, inclusive, the yearly cost of the work done by temporary copyists varied from $44,000 to $88,000. In the year 1913 the register presented to the board of estimate-, as his estimate of the cost of such work for the year 1914, the sum of $50,000 and requested the board to make an appropriation of that sum. The board of estimate, however, allowed for the purpose mentioned only the sum of $26,000. When this allowance had been or was about to be exhausted in or about the middle of the year, the register applied to the board for the difference of $24,000 to carry the work through for the balance of the present fiscal year. This request was denied. The register then requested the board to exercise the power conferred upon it by section 237 of the charter of the city of New York by transferring an [605]*605unused fund of $18,000 appropriated by the board of estimate for the register’s office for additional clerks to the use for which he certified that it was needed. The board declined to grant the request giving its reasons for such declination. Thereupon the present application for a peremptory writ of mandamus requiring the board of estimate and apportionment and the individual defendants as the members of such board to transfer the said sum of $18,000 so appropriated for the payment of fifteen clerks in the office of the register to the use or purpose of providing a fund for the payment of temporary copyists at the rate of five cents per folio; and also requiring the said board and its members to take such other or further action as might be necessary to provide a fund for the payment of 'Copyists at the rate of five cents per folio to the extent of $18,000 in all. I am unable to perceive the basis upon which the appropriation of the sum of $18,000 for fifteen additional clerks at the yearly salary of $1,200 each rested. The act of the legislature of 1913 specified by office designation and salary all the regular assistants and clerks whom the register of Kings county was entitled to appoint in his office. How then could the board of estimate authorize the appointment of more regular clerks by providing for the salaries of such clerks'? It seems to me that the board’s action in this regard had no warrant in law. This, however, is not important in the present matter since, as I shall show, the board cannot 'be compelled to transfer such fund to the use or purpose of supplying deficiencies in the salaries of temporary copyists. As I intimated on the argument, it seems clear that a mandamus will not lie to compel the board of estimate to make the transfer of funds which is authorized by section 237 of the charter in the contingency there mentioned. And this is so because the power is [606]*606a discretionary one and is not ministerial or mandatory simply. The court will not substitute its own judgment for that of the board of estimate in matters resting entirely in the discretion of the board. It may be remarked, however, in passing that the reason assigned by the board for its refusal to make the transfer mentioned, viz.: that to do so would contravene a resolution of the board in respect of such transfers, was wholly without merit, since the board could not by resolution in advance deprive itself of the discretionary powers with which the legislature has seen fit to clothe it.

All that remains for consideration, therefore, is confined to the question whether the register has the right, in the absence of an appropriation for the express purpose, to employ temporary copyists in his office, if the conditions mentioned in the statute above quoted exist, and thereupon to require the board of estimate to raise the funds necessary for the payment for their work at the statutory rate of five cents for each hundred words copied. I have reached the conclusion that he may do this. The legislature has seen fit to entrust to the register the discretionary power to employ such temporary copyists and has directed that such copyists be paid at the rate of five cents per folio for copying records for which, by other provisions of law, the city has already been paid at the rate of ten cents per folio. The legislature has hedged the exercise of this discretion about with conditions which it doubtless believed would prevent any abuse of the power. It might have limited the employment to such and so many temporary copyists as the board of estimate should deem requisite or should provide funds for the employment of; but it did not see fit so to provide. I think that, having in mind the importance to the public of the prompt copying of the papers required by law to be [607]*607recorded in the office, the legislative intention was to confer a somewhat elastic power upon the register in this respect, to be used only when the exigencies of the business of his office required and to cease when the occasion which called it into exercise had passed.

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169 A.D. 423 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1915)

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Bluebook (online)
87 Misc. 601, 150 N.Y.S. 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-oloughlin-v-board-of-estimate-apportionment-nysupct-1914.