Schieffelin v. Lahey

152 N.E. 690, 243 N.Y. 102, 1926 N.Y. LEXIS 729
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 8, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 152 N.E. 690 (Schieffelin v. Lahey) 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
Schieffelin v. Lahey, 152 N.E. 690, 243 N.Y. 102, 1926 N.Y. LEXIS 729 (N.Y. 1926).

Opinions

*105 Pound, J.

The plaintiff has brought a taxpayer’s action to restrain the appropriate officers of the city of New York from “ certifying any payrolls containing the name of defendant William J. Lahey as a member of the uniformed police force of the police department of the city of New York, or for the payment of any moneys to said defendant Lahey for services as a member of said uniformed police force.” Prior to January 24, 1918, the defendant Lahey was and had been for many years a member of the uniformed police force of the police department of the city of New York, and on that date held the rank or grade of captain in that force. He was granted leave of absence as a captain in such police force for six months, and on the same day he was appointed second deputy police commissioner of the city of New York and he acted as second deputy police commissioner until the 4th day of September, 1920. During this period his leave of absence was periodically extended. It was revoked on that day and on the same day he was restored to duty by the police commissioner as a captain of police and assigned and detailed to duty as chief inspector of the police department of the city of New York. Since that date *106 he has continuously acted as, and performed the duties of, such chief inspector. The plaintiff claims that under the provisions of sections 291 and 1549 of the Greater New York charter the defendant Lahey vacated his office in the uniformed police force by accepting the office of second deputy police commissioner, and that the police commissioner could not thereafter restore him to the position he had previously held. Judgment on the pleadings has been granted which sustained the plaintiff’s contention.

The defendant contends that a second deputy police commissioner, like a captain of police, holds a position in the police force or police department of the city, and that the two positions do not constitute separate offices within the meaning of the sections of the charter on which the plaintiff relies, and that in any event the defendant did not “ accept ” the office of second deputy police commissioner within the meaning of the charter provision, though he admits that he acted as second deputy police .commissioner for more than two and a half years. Upon a motion for judgment on the pleadings by the plaintiff we must give full force to all the allegations of the answer. Doubtless these allegations are sufficient to show that the defendant Lahey never sought the office of deputy police commissioner, and that he performed the functions of that office only because he believed that it was his duty to perform these functions when the police commissioner directed him to do so. We may assume that he acted under a sense of duty and in ignorance of the effect of his acceptance of a new position upon his right to continue to hold his previous position. • Doubtless both the commissioner and he believed that when he left the office as second deputy police commissioner he could be restored to duty in his former position. That neither the police commissioner nor defendant Lahey intended that by acceptance of the new office Lahey should vacate his position of police captain is conclusively shown by simultaneous grant of leave of absence to him as police captain. *107 Grant of leave of absence as captain does not, however, show that when the defendant acted for more than two years under an appointment as deputy police commissioner, he did not accept the office. On the contrary, if an inference of fact may be drawn upon a motion of this kind it would seem that since Lahey knew that he had a leave of absence as police captain he must have known that he was acting under appointment as deputy police commissioner. The statute gives to acceptance of new office the effect of vacating office previously held. Lack of intention to vacate the first office does not change the statutory effect of the acceptance of the second office, and the motive for accepting office, however laudable, and the hardship which the courts might well desire to find ground for avoiding, do not justify the creation of a judicial exception to a general statutory rule to which the Legislature has provided no exception either expressly or by reasonable implication. The pleadings show that the defendant Lahey has accepted appointment and performed his duties for over two and a half years as second deputy police commissioner. We must give to his acts the effect which the Legislature has decreed they shall have.

Technically, it may be that the office of commissioner or deputy commissioner in the police department is a different office from that held by a member of the uniformed police force. Differentiation between the offices or positions is shown in numerous sections of the Greater New York charter. The police commissioner is by section 270 made head of the police department. The police force consists of certain groups or persons provided for by section 276 of the charter, and the police commissioner is not included in such groups. The police commissioner, subject to limitations described in the charter, has power to appoint and remove members of the police force, under section 283 of the charter. No such limitations apply to his power to appoint and at *108 pleasure remove his deputies.. The method of promotion of officers and members of the police force so that it may be based on merit is carefully safeguarded in section 288. Though by section 292 of the charter it is provided that “ the police commissioner shall be the chief executive officer of the police force,” it is clear that in no other sense is he a member of the police force. Because he is head of the police department he may direct performance by members of the police force of the duties imposed upon them by law. He is not otherwise a member of the force, and in all other respects the office of police commissioner or a deputy is inconsistent with the office of a member of the police force. If doubt were otherwise at all possible, it would be removed by the language of section 291 of the charter, which provides that “any police commissioner, or any member of the police force, who shall, after qualifying in office, accept any additional place of public trust * * * shall be * * * deemed thereby to have resigned his commission and to have vacated his office * * The provisions of law expressly made applicable to a “ police commissioner or any member of the police force ” shows that the Legislature recognized that a police commissioner is not a member of the police force. It follows that either under the provisions of that section or of section 1549 of the charter, or both, the defendant Lahey vacated his office as a member of the police force when he accepted and performed the duties of a deputy police commissioner.

By force of the sections of the statute we have referred to, the defendant Lahey was for two and a half years not a member of the uniformed police force although he was holding an executive position in the police department. Under section 283 of the charter, appointment as patrolman may be made only of men under twenty-nine years of age. Such appointment may be made only in accordance with the constitutional provisions, and the Civil Service Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 7) and rules, and after a *109 preliminary period of probation.

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Bluebook (online)
152 N.E. 690, 243 N.Y. 102, 1926 N.Y. LEXIS 729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schieffelin-v-lahey-ny-1926.