The People Ex Rel. the Mayor v. . Nichols

79 N.Y. 582, 58 How. Pr. 200, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 36
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 27, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by128 cases

This text of 79 N.Y. 582 (The People Ex Rel. the Mayor v. . Nichols) 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
The People Ex Rel. the Mayor v. . Nichols, 79 N.Y. 582, 58 How. Pr. 200, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 36 (N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

Danforth, J.

This is an appeal from an order of the General Term of the Supreme Court, in the first judicial department, directing that a writ of prohibition should be issued to prohibit the Special Terms of the Supreme Court appointed to bo held in the city of New York for non-enumerated motions and chamber business, and the justices presiding thereat from proceeding to entertain any application for any judgment or order in any manner affecting the proceedings of the mayor of the city of New. York in the removal of Sidney P. Nichols from the office of commissioner of police in pursuance of a writ óf certiorari theretofore issued out of the Supreme Court to said mayor, and the return thereto, or either of them, and to prohibit the said Nichols from applying to any such Special Term for any judg *588 ment or order upon said writ. Tho order .implies that the proceedings of the mayor in the matter referred to were subject to review in some one of the divisions of the Supreme Court, and that the writ of certiorari furnished the proper means to bring those proceedings before it. It, therefore, seems that the defendant had mistaken neither. his remedy nor his forum, but erred only in respect to the time and place of his application for relief: but, upon this appeal, the respondent contends that the court had no jurisdiction to issue the writ of certiorari, and therefore that question is first to be considered.

The record shows that in May, 1876, the defendant, Nichols, was appointed commissioner of police. Ho accepted the appointment and entered upon the duties of tho office. Its term was six years, and the annual salary $6,000. It was thus an office of honor and profit, to the enjoyment of which he was entitled for the full term, unless removed for misbehavior or unfitness to discharge its duties. The relator was the mayor of the city, and its charter conferred upon him power to remove the defendant, but only “for cause and after opportunity tv be heard.” (Session Laws of 1873, chap. 335, § 25.) The power is not an- arbitrary one, to be exercised at pleasure, but only upon just and reasonable grounds, and then not until after notice to tho person charged, for in no other way could ho have “an opportunity to he heard.” The proceeding, therefore, must be instituted upon specific charges, sufficient in their nature to warrant the removal, and then, unless admitted, bo proven to he true. Defendant might also cross-examine the witnesses produced to support the charges, call others in his defense, and in these and other steps in the proceeding he represented by counsel. In no other way could the person sought to be removed have a due hearing or “an opportunity to he heard,” and this condition must be complied with before the power of removal is exercised. (Reg. v. Smith, 5 Q. B., 614; Osgood v. Nelson, 5 House of Lords, 636 ; People ex rel. Munday v. Bd. Fire Com’rs, infra.) It follows, therefore, that the proceeding is *589 judicial in its character, and, as a necessary consequence, is subject to review by a writ of certiorari issued by the Supreme Court in the exercise of its superintending power over inferior tribunals and persons exorcising j udicial functions. (Leroy v. The Mayor, 20 J. R., 429 ; People v. Board of Police, 39 N. Y., 506 ; People ex rel. Folk v. Board of Police of the City of Brooklyn, 69 id., 468 ; People ex rel. Clapp v. Board of Police of the City of New York, 72 id., 415 ; People ex rel. Munday v. Board of Fire Commissioners of the City of New York, 72 id., 445.)

Various other questions have been argued with great ability by the learned counsel for the respondent relating to the form of the writ of cortioraii and tho effect of the order made by the mayor, whether it is interlocutory or final, but these need not be considered. They relate to the procedure under the writ and must be disposed of when that writ and the return thereto come before the court. They have no relation to the order before us ; that, as its language shows, is quite narrow. The writ granted by it is to prohibit- not all tho Special Terms of tho Supreme Court, but only particular Special Terms of that court, from entertaining further proceedings under the writ of certiorari, and the opinion of the learned court places the order upon distinct grounds, viz : First, that a Special Term for non-enumerated motions and chamber business has no jurisdiction to hear and decide the certiorari proceeding; and, second, that such proceedings could only ho brought on for hearing upon a notice of not less than eight days, and declares that the relator therein at other Special Terms and upon such notice may bring them to a determination. It is therefore true, as the learned counsel for the respondent urges, that the exact “ grievance of the appellant is, not that he is wholly prevented from prosecuting the writ of certiorari and the proceedings under it, but it is that in prosecuting it he is restricted to particular branches of the Supreme Court.”

Can this distinction be maintained ? It is provided by the constitution that the court itself shall have general jurisdic *590 tian in law and equity. It follows that its jurisdiction can be limited neither by the Legislature nor by any power conferred by it upon the court itself. (Hart v. Hatch, 3 Hun, 375.) Its functions are to be exercised by its judges, sitting in General Terms, or at the Circuit, or Oyer and Terminer, or Special Terms, The constitution also provides that each judge may hold Special Terms in any county (art. 6, § 7), and neither in that instrument nor in any statute do we find that one Special Term or one judge at Special Term has or can have more authority or power than another. The Code (§ 232) authorizes the justices of the Supreme Court for each judicial department to appoint the times and places for holding the Special Terms. This authority was exercised in the first district. Some of the terms thus appointed are designated by the justices as “ Special Terms for equity cases and enumerated motions,” and others as “ Special Terms for noilenumerated motions and chamber business,” and, while it cannot be doubted that for the due and orderly conduct of litigation and causes, certain steps and proceedings therein may, under the direction of the judges, be required to be taken at specified terms, yet any such regulation must be subject to the control of the justice who is assigned to hold them. If otherwise the power of the judge would be limited, public interests sometimes put in jeopardy and the rights of citizens infringed. The case before us illustrates this position.

The writ of certiorari was, on the application of the relator Nichols, duly allowed in August, 1879, and made returnable at a Special Term of the Supreme Court, at the courthouse in the city of New York, on the first Monday in September then next. This was one of the terms regularly appointed, but was among those designated “ for noil-enumerated motions and chamber business.” After some delays a return was made to the writ, and filed on the fifteenth of September. On the sixteenth day of that month Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
79 N.Y. 582, 58 How. Pr. 200, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-ex-rel-the-mayor-v-nichols-ny-1880.