Riley v. . Mayor, Etc., of N.Y.

96 N.Y. 331, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 499
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 17, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 96 N.Y. 331 (Riley v. . Mayor, Etc., of N.Y.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Riley v. . Mayor, Etc., of N.Y., 96 N.Y. 331, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 499 (N.Y. 1884).

Opinion

Huger, Ch. J.

By section 28 of chapter 335 of the Laws of 1873, it is provided that the number and duties of the subordinates in the several departments of public service in the city of Hew York, with their respective salaries, whether now fixed by special law or otherwise, shall be such as the heads of the respective departments shall designate and approve.

It is conceded that the board of commissioners of the fire department is the head of that department and authorized as such to determine at will the compensation and duties of all persons employed therein.

*334 Among other things it is conceded that prior to the employment of the plaintiff the hoard had fixed the compensation of assistant engineers in the department at $1,250 per annum, and of machinists in the repair shop at $3 per day.

It appears by the evidence that the plaintiff was originally appointed to duty as an assistant engineer, and has been continuously employed in the fire department since the 20th day of May, 1875. It also appears in evidence that, from time to time during such employment, the plaintiff, by the order of the fire commissioners, has been alternated between the duties of an assistant engineer and those of a machinist in the repair shops, and that while employed as an assistant engineer he has been paid for his services at the rate of $1,250 per annum, and signed the monthly pay-roll, receipting for his wages in full at that rate, and while performing the duties of a machinist, receipted in full for his wages in a similar manner at the rate of $3 per day. It does not appear that he ever raised any objection to his transfer from the performance of one class of duties to another, or to the difference in wages paid to him for the respective kinds of work. Neither does it appear that he ever claimed the rate of wages provided for assistant engineers while performing the services required of him as a machinist, until about the time of the commencement of this action in N ovember, 1881.

The action was brought to recover the difference in such wages for the period of time during which he performed services as a machinist alone.

The absolute right of the commissioners of the fire department to determine the duties and compensation of all employes of that department is claimed by the appellant to be limited and controlled by section 77 of chapter 335 of the Laws of 1873, which provides “ that officers and members of the uniformed force shall be removable only after written charges shall have been preferred against them, and after the charges have been publicly examined into, and after notice to the person charged,’’ and it is contended under this section that the fire commissioners cannot, after having appointed an individual to a position *335 in the uniformed force, vary his dutiés,. although still retained in the service of the fire department so as to reduce the compensation or change the character of his duty.

Although there is no regulation of the fire department or provision of law determining the persons constituting the uniformed force, yet it is claimed that by force of usage and general reputation assistant engineers are included in such force.

While it is conceded that the plaintiff never did in fact wear a uniform until he was finally assigned to duty as an assistant engineer in 1881, it is claimed that liis original designation as an assistant engineer, ipso facto, constituted him a member of the uniformed force.

We think it unnecessary to determine whether this claim is sustainable or not, as we have arrived at the conclusion that the transfer of the plaintiff' by the fire commissioners, in the exercise of their supervisory authority over the administration of the fire department, from one class of duties to another, which he was equally capable of performing, did not constitute a removal within the meaning of the seventy-seventh section; and whether it did or not, that it was entirely competent for them, by the acquiescence or assent of the person employed, to assign him to the performance of other duties in the general course of his employment, although they might differ in some respect from those usually discharged by assistant engineers.

The duties to be performed by every employe of the department are, by the statute, left entirely to the discretion of the fire commissioners, and it would be no reason for a refusal by such employe to perform an order of the fire commissioners requiring him to work in the repair shops, to say that such an employment was not the customary service of an assistant engineer. Efficiency in the administration of the department, and a proper regard for the public interest require that the commissioners should be regarded as the exclusive judges of the propriety of the employment of the servants of the department ; and it would be an absurd construction of the act which should require the employment of an extra force at additional *336 expense to perform services in one branch of the force while in other branches men capable of performing the work were lying idle for want of sufficient employment in the particular department to which they belonged. The transfer of men from one department of the force to another to accommodate the requirements of the public service is not, either in any general or special sense, a removal of the person so transferred.

The compensation awarded for different classes of service is supposed to be graduated by the value of the services rendered, and there is no reason why a person rendering one class of service should be paid the compensation belonging to another.

It is entirely competent for the commissioners at any time to change the rate of compensation to be paid to any assistant engineer, and upon assigning him to a duty which is less profitable to the department than that which he usually discharged, to award him a compensation adapted to the duty required. The orders relieving the plaintiff from duty in one place and assigning him to duty in another do not purport on their face to be removals either from office or employment, and can only be so regarded by a strained and unnatural construction of the act.

The policy of the law prohibiting removals from the uniformed force was intended to improve the efficiency of the department by securing permanency of employment with its increased experience and skill, and prevent changes from caprice, prejudice, undue influence or other insufficient reasons, and did not include within its objects a restriction upon the power of the commissioners to so control the working force of the department as to secure economy and efficiency in its administration.

It is unnecessary to determine the question, whether, in case it should be made to appear that such a transfer was merely colorable and used as a pretext to deprive the employe of his position, he has a remedy, it is enough to say that no such case is made by the proof herein. The presumptions of the law are always in favor of the conscientious performance of duty by public officers, and in the absence of evidence to the con *337 trary their official acts are entitled to the benefit of the protection which that presumption affords.

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Bluebook (online)
96 N.Y. 331, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riley-v-mayor-etc-of-ny-ny-1884.