People ex rel. Wheeler v. Cooper

57 How. Pr. 416
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 57 How. Pr. 416 (People ex rel. Wheeler v. Cooper) 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. Wheeler v. Cooper, 57 How. Pr. 416 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1879).

Opinion

Van Brunt, J.

In considering the questions arising upon this motion, I shall follow the order marked out by the counsel in their arguments. These questions are: First. Do the charges preferred by the respondent against the relator form, if true, a sufficient cause for the removal by the respondent of the relator from office ? Second. Is the relator subject to removal by the respondent, his term of office having expired, and a vacancy existing in said office by reason of such expiration of term, which can only be filled by the respondent, by and with the consent of the board of aldermen ? Third. If the respondent had no power to remove the relator, will a writ of prohibition lie to prevent the respondent from attempting such removal ?

It does not seem at all necessary to discuss the first point at-length. It is true that the charges preferred by the mayor “ against Hr. Wheeler are not drawn with that technical accuracy which we have a right to expect in an indictment or-pleading. The drawer of the charges does not seem to have known exactly how the alleged offenses ought to be stated; biit they sufficiently show what is the dereliction of duty complained of. It may be very true that the acts charged did not come immediately within the sphere of the duties of Hr. Wheeler as police commissioner; but the fact that he occupied the position of police commissioner, enabled him to perpetrate the wrongs alleged against him, and he could have had no possible connection therewith if he had not filled that office. If an incumbent of an office uses the office as a means of doing wrong, this fact forms certainly a good cause for action by the proper authorities. In the cases cited by the learned counsel for the relator, no other or different rule is laid down, it being simply held in those cases that an official cannot be removed from an office because of previous derelictions of duty in another office. The charges, therefore, if true (and for the purposes of this motion they must be assumed to be true), seem to me to be sufficent to justify the action of the mayor.

[422]*422This brings me to the second point involved, which is as follows: “ Is the relator subject to removal by the respondent, his term of office having expired, and a vacancy existing in said office by reason of such expiration of term, which can only be filled by the respondent, by and with the consent of' the board of aldermen ? ” The solution of this question depends entirely upon the construction which is given to the twenty-fifth section of the charter.

A very brief examination of the wording of this section, chaotic as it is in its construction, taken in connection with the composition of the police board, seems to leave but little doubt' as to what the intention of the legislature was.

The board of police was to consist of four members, and the legislature seems to have been studiously anxious to avoid the possibility of the happening of any contingency by which the number of persons authorized to act as police commissioners should be reduced. It was the intention that the board should be evenly balanced, and that the affirmative vote of three-fourths of the board should be required before action could be taken by it.

This solicitude is plainly marked by the act of 1873, which provides that in each case the person whose term of office has expired shall hold his office after the expiration of his term until a person is duly appointed in his place fa provision entirely unnecessary, as, under the Revised Statutes, he could have held over), and is emphasized by the act of 1874, which provides that the mayor shall hereafter “'appoint, without confirmation of the board of aldermen, a person or persons to fill any vacancy or vacancies which now exist or may hereafter occur, from death, resignation or cause, other than the expiration of the full term in any office to which he is empowered to appoint by and with the consent of the board of aldermen.” By the charter of 1873 the mayor only had power to fill a vacancy, arising from any cause, by and with the consent of the board of aldermen. By the act of 1874 the mayor, without the consent of the board of aldermen, [423]*423may fill a vacancy arising from any cause other than the expiration of the full term. In the case of a vacancy arising from any cause other than the expiration of the full term the statute gives the mayor the power to fill for the residue of the term; but where a vacancy arises by the expiration of a full term the mayor has no power to appoint, and he was not given that power because the statute had designated who was to hold the office until a person to fill the office should be nominated by the mayor and confirmed by the board of aider-men, and this provision having been inade there was no danger of there being in existence a person authorized to act, although a vacancy existed by the expiration of term of office.

The legislature having been so careful to provide for the equilibrium of the board never could have intended to have put it in the power of the mayor and the governor to destroy that which, with so much care, had been created by it. A very brief examination of one or two points in the statute seems to place this interpretation beyond question. In directing the manner in which vacancies shall be filled the charter provides that any nomination to fill any vacancy which shall hereafter occur by reason of the expiration of the term of office of any officer shall be made, &c.; thus treating every office as vacant after the expiration of a full term of office, although the person whose term of office has expired may still be performing the duties of the office.

The provisions of the charter in respect to removals must be read so as to give the mayor power to remove from office for cause, for the purpose of creating a vacancy which may be filled by a person proper to perform the duties. Under the charter of 1878, as the mayor had no authority to fill any vacancy without the consent of the board of aldermen, there was no necessity of giving any power to the mayor to remove an officer whose term of office had expired, as the filling of the vacancy existing by the expiration of the term itself effected the removal of the incumbent, and no interpretation [424]*424of the act of 1874 can extend the power of removal as given by the charter of 1873. Furthermore, we have already seen that the legislature has endeavored to guard in every way against the possibility of the even balance of the board being destroyed for a moment; yet, if the mayor may remove an officer who is holding over after expiration of term, such balance must be destroyed, temporarily, at least, because the mayor has no power to appoint without the consent of the board of aldermen, except for an unexpired term, and consequently, the office, if the mayor has power of removal, must remain vacant until a nomination by the mayor is confirmed by the board of aldermen, which nomination and confirmation, without any act of removal, would of itself have ousted the incumbent.

Numerous cases have been cited by the learned counsel to the corporation to show that an office is not vacant, although the term of office of the incumbent has expired, if the incumbent continues to discharge the duties of the office under the provisions of law. These authorities, however, do not affect the construction of a statute which expressly treats in such a case the office as vacant. The last clause of section 25 seems to be conclusive. It provides that no officer so removed shall be again appointed to the same office during the same term of office.

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Bluebook (online)
57 How. Pr. 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-wheeler-v-cooper-nysupct-1879.