Walters v. City of New York

119 A.D. 464, 105 N.Y.S. 950, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3965
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 3, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 119 A.D. 464 (Walters v. City of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walters v. City of New York, 119 A.D. 464, 105 N.Y.S. 950, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3965 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinions

Jenks, J.:

The plaintiff was a clerk in.the department, of finance in the city of New York at a yearly salary of $1,800. On April 30, 1902, the board of estimate and apportionment of the city by resolution of a general scheme fixed the salary at $1,500. The plaintiff remained ' as a clerk in the department, discharged the same duties and accepted the salary as thus reduced, receipting for it under protest. He has recovered a judgment against the city for the difference between these salaries. The action of the board of estimate and apportionment was pursuant to the charter (Laws of 1901, chap. 466, § 10, as amd. by Laws of 1902, chap. 436), and under a provision described by the first department of this court (per Clarke, J., in Matter of Hamburger v. Board of Estimate, 109 App. Div. 427; appeal dismissed, 184 N. Y. 577), “ as broad a gran( of power as human language could frame.” I have no doubt that this power to fix salaries-and hence to reduce them was duly conferred upon that board.. The legality of its action is challenged on the sole ground that the effect thereof was to remove the plaintiff summarily in violation of his rights as a veteran of the late .Civil war and of a volunteer fire, department. The assertion, of removal rests upon the prbposition that this reduction of the salary ipso facto transferred the plaintiff from the fifth grade of clerks to the fourth grade of clerks in the classification of such employees made by. the municipal civil service commission. If there were any removal at all, it was technical to the last degree, as the position was continued and the plaintiff remained in it to the discharge of the same duties. It is not asserted that the municipal civil service commission was clothed with any direct power in the premises. But. the proposition necessarily is that as the action of the board of estimate and apportionment incidentally changes the class'df the clerk as arranged by the 'civil service commission, such action is illegal in that it worked an illegal remo val. If the proposition be sound, then the classification of the municipal civil service commission is a check upon the broad powers conferred in express terms upon the board of estimate and apportionment to regulate and incidentally to reduce this compensation. If the question were entirely open, 1 should riot hesitate to conclude that such a classification could not thus hinder the board of estimate and apportionment, for thereby the civil service com[466]*466mission would be vested with powers wholly foreign to its furictión '. and not properly devolved upon it. The civil service system and the machinery of its working exists to open the public. service to . competent men ascertained by tests, common generally to all appli- ' cants, to retain in that service efficient and faithful public servants, and tó promote them according to their merits. Classification is an orderly detail. It is made to limit and to define the examinations, and to segregate like employees and to. restrict and to regulate promotion. I have no doubt that a classification upon the basis of maximum and minimum compensation .works well, and that it makes for the observance and the enforcement of the Civil Service Law. But that is not the question. The practical question in this case is whether the civil service"commission by its rule for such classification can prevent the board of estimate and apportionment under this statute from reducing the salary of a municipal employed below the minimum of his grade, in any case where the employee cannot be summarily removed from his position. If the commission can thus, check the boat'd of estimate and apportionment, .it in effect possesses an administrative or legislative power. (People ex rel. Trustees v. Board of Supervisors, 131 N. Y. 468; People ex rel. Smith v. Trustees, 23 App. Div. 231) wholly foreign to the . system or principle which it represents. The board of estimate and apportionment naturally could be vested with the matter of municipal ways and means, and be empowered, in the work of appropriation and . as incidental thereto, with the adjustment of the pay of the various municipal employees, but tlie civil service commission has no concern with such questions, and tb clothe it with power of indirect visitation or indirect veto over .the board of estimate and apportionment is" to assign it a function! ¡to ¡the municipal machinery'foreign to its office. (See Powell v. City of New York, 65 App. Div. 421 ; People ex rel. Havron v. Dalton, 85 id. 110.) ¡Neither section 10

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Bluebook (online)
119 A.D. 464, 105 N.Y.S. 950, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3965, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walters-v-city-of-new-york-nyappdiv-1907.