People ex rel. Percival v. Cram

29 Misc. 359, 61 N.Y.S. 858
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 29 Misc. 359 (People ex rel. Percival v. Cram) 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. Percival v. Cram, 29 Misc. 359, 61 N.Y.S. 858 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

Dickey, J.

The determination of this application for preemptory writs of mandamus requiring the commissioners of docks of the city of New York to reinstate and assign permanently to districts in the borough of Brooklyn, the relators,, and to put their names upon the pay rolls of the department of docks as dockmasters, and to audit and pay or cause to be paid to them the salaries of said positions at the rate of $1,500' each per year, from September 1, 1899, resolves itself purely into' a question of law, as the parties have agreed upon the following state of facts: ,

1. That each of the relators, except the relator Thomas J.. Percival, was a dockmaster in the department of finance in the-city of Brooklyn prior to the going into effect' of the present Greater New York charter, and the said Percival was a dock-master assigned to act as superintendent of docks at the same salary as that paid to other dockmasters.

2. That prior to the 31st day of December, 1897, pursuant to-the provisions of section 1536 of the said charter, the officers-therein named, including the mayor of the city of Brooklyn,, adopted and filed a plan for the transfer of these relators to perform as nearly as might be the same services in the same part of the city and to hold the same relative rank and position in the said city as constituted by the Greater New York charter as they held and performed at the time the various municipalities were consolidated into one by said act and the plan -of apportionment determined upon.

[361]*3613. That through error these relators were assigned to the department of finance of the city of Yew York instead of the department of docks and ferries, as contemplated by said act or said plan of transfer.

4. That each of the relators continued to act in the same position and to discharge the same duties as he had performed and discharged prior to the 1st day of January, 1898, until, at various dates between the 8th and 28th days of January, 1898, the above relators were discharged, removed and dismissed from the service of the city of Yew York by the comptroller of the said city.

5. Subsequently, in obedience to a writ of mandamus issued out of the Supreme Court, the mayors and other officers of said board of transfer, as aforesaid, corrected the error made as aforesaid and transferred each of the relators to the department of docks and ferries of the city of Yew York, such correction and transfer to date and take effect as provided in said order from the day and date on which said plan of transfer and assignment was determined upon.

6. That thereafter and about August Y, 1899, the defendants above named, as commissioners of the department of docks and ferries of the city of Yew York reinstated each of the said relators as dockmasters in the department of docks and ferries of the city of Yew York, such reinstatement to take effect from July first, and each of the said relators was thereafter directed to report for duty, but none of them had been assigned to active duty in the borough of Brooklyn, or at any place within the city of Yew York.

Y. That under the provisions of section 1536 of the Greater Yew York charter it was, among other things, provided that the incumbents of positions abolished or made unnecessary by said act should be preferred for appointment to positions demanding their services, and that for that purpose the civil service commission was directed, so far as practicable, to place the names of such persons upon the proper eligible list and to give them on such list the preference after veterans.

8. That on or about the 5th of March, 1898, the municipal civil service commissioners of the city of Yew York made certain rules and regulations, which were approved by the mayor of the city, under which the positions of the relators were classified in the schedule of positions subject to competitive examinations, [362]*362and subsequent thereto, and on or about the 11th day of July, 1899, in pursuance of the provisions of law, certain other municipal civil service rules for the city of Yew York were approved by the said civil service commissioners, and in and by the said rules and regulations the positions of relators were also classified in the schedule of positions subject to competitive examinations; and among other rules and regulations adopted as aforesaid was rule known as 42, which, among other things, provided as follows: To secure compliance with the provisions of the Civil Service Law prohibiting removals because of political opinions or affiliations, no removal of any person in the classified civil service of the city of Yew York shall be valid unless and until a statement of the causes of such removal shall be filed with the municipal commission, and a copy of the same furnished to the person so to be removed, and until said person has been afforded an opportunity to present an explanation in writing.”

9. That subsequently to the 9th day of January, 1898, and prior to the 17th day of June; 1899, the names of the relators, who were former doekmasters of the city of Brooklyn, were placed upon the list in the office of the municipal civil service commission of those persons eligible to appointments as doekmasters.

10. That on June 17, 1899, the defendants and respondents appointed to service as doekmasters William Capéis and eight other persons, and fixed the pay or compensation of each at $1,500 a year; that neither of the said persons appointed as aforesaid were doekmasters at the time of the going into effect of the Greater Yew York charter. The relators were properly in the service of the city of Yew York as doekmasters.

11. That on September 1, 1899, each of the relators received from the defendants and respondents a letter of discharge and dismissal as follows:

“ The City oe Yew Yobk,

“ Department oe Docks and Febbies,

“ Pibe A, Y. R., Batteby Place.

Yew Yobk, September 1, .1899.

“ George K. Copelan, Esq., 233 Frost street, Brooklyn, Y. Y.:

“ Sib—At a meeting of the board of docks held this day, the following preambles and resolutions were adopted:

Whebeas, at a meeting of the board of docks, held August [363]*3637, 1899, in accordance with the opinion of the corporation counsel, ■dated August 4, 1899, Charles E. Alsberge, Leonard Becker, William J. Cox, George K. Copelan, Abraham Miller, Henry Nahe, Jr., Thomas J. Percival, Edward A. Stauffer and John Wallace, were reinstated as dockmasters as of July 1, 1899, and

Whebeas, the dock superintendent, under date of August 81, 1899, reports that the effect of such reinstatement is to increase the force of dockmasters beyond the necessities of this department;

Resolved, that Chas. E. Alsberge, Leonard Becker, William J. Cox, George K. Copelan, Abraham Miller, Henry Nahe, Jr., Thomas J. Percival, Edward A. Stauffer and John Wallace be, and they are hereby discharged from the service of this department, in accordance with said opinion of the corporation counsel, ■dated August 4, 1899, as their services are superfluous and unnecessary, to take effect at once.

Resolved, that the secretary be, and he hereby is directed to file in the records of this department the reason for such discharge, and to give notice thereof to the persons holding the positions so abolished. Tours respectfully,

“ Wh. H. Bubke, Secretary.”-

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Related

People Ex Rel. Somerville v. . Williams
111 N.E. 252 (New York Court of Appeals, 1916)

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Bluebook (online)
29 Misc. 359, 61 N.Y.S. 858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-percival-v-cram-nysupct-1899.