People ex rel. Webb v. Milliken

66 Misc. 192, 122 N.Y.S. 793
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 66 Misc. 192 (People ex rel. Webb v. Milliken) 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. Webb v. Milliken, 66 Misc. 192, 122 N.Y.S. 793 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

LeBoeuf, J.

The relator, in February, 1907, passed an open competitive examination for the position of court stenographer. The results of this examination entitled him to a place upon an eligible list prepared by the State Civil Service Commission for appointment as court stenographer, either to the Supreme Court or to the County Court. To be appointed to the position of stenographer to the Supreme Court, residence in the judicial district was required. To be appointed to the position of stenographer to the County Court, residence in that county was required. The examination, however, is admitted by both parties to be one examination for eligibility to appointment'to either county or State service. The relator passed the examination and, on July 1, 1907, was fifth on the eligible list of the State Civil Service Commission.

The relator removed from Kings county, where he resided at the time of taking the examination, to Queens county, and thereby became, on July 1, 1907, first on what appears tobé merely a.division of the eligible list, and became entitled'to original certification and appointment as County Court sténographer for that county. He was duly appointed such stenographer. There has been no new list of eligible's prepared, [194]*194and no new examination has been held from which a new list of eligibles for appointment as Supreme Court stenographer in the second judicial district could be made up.

The county judge of Queens county and Mr. Justice Garretson, a justice of the Supreme Court for the second judicial district, have taken the requisite proceedings, so far as they are concerned, for the transfer of the relator from the position of stenographer to the County Court of Queens county to that of stenographer to the Supreme Court of the second judicial district outside of Kings county. The position is one to which Mr. Justice Garret-son, as a justice of the Supreme Court for the second judicial district, has the power under the Judiciary Law to appoint the relator by appropriate designation. It is assumed by both parties that this position is subject to civil service certification, as the duties are those of an official stenographer to the trial and other terms in the various counties within the district, other than Kings county, and to the County Courts themselves, as specified in section 309 of the Judiciary Law, when the stenographer to the Supreme Court is not engaged in the performance of his duties in that court.

The qualifications for the two positions are exactly the same. The salary of the position to which transfer has been asked is less than that of the position which relator has held; in the original appointment it was $3,000; in the new position it is $2,750.

Ro question is raised of a promotion.

It is not. denied that the relator has rendered faithful and satisfactory service to the County Court.

This case is not properly before me except upon the stipu- • lation of the parties, as the venue is laid in Queens county.

In an exceedingly able manner the president of the Civil Sendee Commission presents the reasons for the refusal of that Commission to certify the relator for appointment. Those reasons briefly are: First, that because of relator’s appointment as County Court stenographer his name was properly stricken from the list of eligibles, and, therefore, he was “ not eligible for certification and appointment” within the Commission’s Rule XV, relating to transfers. Second, that, ag[195]*195suming he is still entitled to remain on the eligible list, he is not, within the Commission’s Rule VIII, eligible to transfer, because not one"of the first three on the list; and, as part of the same objection, by reason of the provisions of subdivision 4 of Rule XV, “ if his name were to be considered as on the eligible list at the present time he would not be eligible for transfer under the aforesaid rule because his name would not be one of the first three that the Commission would be required to certify under the Civil Service rules for appointment to the position.”

The answer of the State Civil Service Commission presents the view of a department of the government, which department is endeavoring without doubt to enforce to the best advantage the provisions of the State Civil Service Law. If both the questions presented were original propositions, I should give great weight to some of the arguments presented by the Commission.

In Matter of Peters v. Adam, 50 Misc. Rep. 29, this court has determined the second objection; and that case was affirmed by the Appellate Division, fourth department, in 122 App. Div. 898. It was there distinctly held: “It is

reasonably clear that, under the Civil Service Law "and rules, persons in office who attain any place on an eligible list have a prior right to transfer to those seeking original appointment, although the latter may stand higher on the list, and that it is the intent and policy of the law to permit transfers, .especially when not amounting to promotion, from noncompetitive to competitive positions, at all events where the person so transferred passes the competitive examination and attains any place on the eligible list for the new position. Collier Civil Service, 72, 73, footnote; 101, note; Civil Service Law, §§ 13, 15; Rule 26, Buffalo Civil Service Commission.”

That case and its citations, to my mind, absolutely settle the question that a person who is upon an eligible list, though he be not one of the first three, may be transferred regardless of his position.

Xor is the situation changed by subdivision 4 of Rule XV, which provides as follows: “ 4. The foregoing sections of [196]*196this rule shall apply to transfers between the state service and the service of the counties to which the state civil service rules have been extended, provided that in‘transfers from state to county service only legal residents of the county affected may be transferred, and provided that no person may be transferred from county to state service under the provi-, sions of sections 1 and 2 of this rule unless such person was, at the time of original appointment, in the county service or,' at. the time of the request for transfer, eligible for certification and appointment to the position to which transfer is sought in the state service. Ho transfer shall be allowed from the service of one county to that of another county.”

Regardless of his position on the list at the time of original appointment to the county service, the rule itself gives an alternative — eligibility at the time of the transfer. Inasmuch as the case last cited has determined that in cases of transfer the position of the relator on the list is unimportant — that he is not required to be one of the first three—that authority must be applied as the test of eligibility under this particular section of the rule.

Controlled as I am by this decision, I do not feel called upon to consider the effect of the alleged declinations.

The first objection raised, therefore, becomes important.

It is held by the Commission that the-relator is not on any list; that the fact of his appointment as stenographer of the County Court of Queens county authorizes them to remove his name from the general list, which they did. The relator insists that he is entitled to remain upon the list, regardless of his appointment.

The relator went upon this general eligible list as a result of fitness proven under the law.

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Related

Luria v. Marsh
178 Misc. 595 (New York Supreme Court, 1942)
People ex rel. Kelly v. Milliken
68 Misc. 101 (New York Supreme Court, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 Misc. 192, 122 N.Y.S. 793, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-webb-v-milliken-nysupct-1910.