Welch v. Bard

81 Misc. 262
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 81 Misc. 262 (Welch v. Bard) 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
Welch v. Bard, 81 Misc. 262 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1913).

Opinion

Mabcus, J.

On the 8th day of April, 1913, there was a street car strike in the city of Buffalo. For several days prior to that time there had been an almost total cessation of street car traffic and much disorder in consequence thereof. On the evening of the eighth, Mr. Justice Brown called for aid upon the commanding officer of the fourth brigade stationed in Buffalo; and it must be assumed the call was made upon sufficient evidence to satisfy him that the facts stated in the order were true. Upon the service of this order General Welch immediately called his brigade in aid of the civil authorities and his troops were in active service in pursuance of such order until the twelfth instant, when the same justice granted an order terminating the service and dismissing the troops.

Upon presentation of pay-rolls duly certified to the county treasurer, that official, acting under instructions of the county attorney, refused to issue the certificate required by law upon which the money should be raised to pay the troops, on the ground that Mr. Justice Brown had no power to grant the order and that the [264]*264same was void. Pay-rolls aggregating over $19,000, covering the pay of over 2,000 troops, were rejected upon the claim that these citizen soldiers are debarred from receiving the compensation provided by law, because the order was illegal and void.

The organization of the National Guard is provided for in the Military Law of the state of New York. There are upwards of 15,000 men in this force. The governor of the state is the commander-in-chief, and the active commander of the forces is the major-general. There are various brigades under the command of brigadier-generals. The fourth brigade has its headquarters in Buffalo and is composed of three regiments, two of which have their headquarters in Buffalo and the third at Rochester. The law provides that in case men are warned for duty in aid of the civil authority, they must immediately obey the call, and in the event of their failure so to do they are subject to court-martial which results in a fine or imprisonment. The officers and enlisted men of these commands have no recourse except to obey the orders of their superiors. And so as to General Welch, upon receiving the order from Mr. Justice Brown, he likewise had no recourse save to obey it, and when his order was issued to the various organizations for duty, the officers and enlisted men of those commands had no recourse save to promptly obey. This force was scattered in various cities in the western end of the state, including places as remote from Buffalo as Oswego and Hornell. The entire force mobilized in Buffalo on the morning of the ninth. Every man who should have refused to obey such a call would have been punished and civilly disgraced.

It is claimed that the statute giving a justice of the Supreme Court full and complete authority to make such a call for aid — and which has been upon the [265]*265statutes of this state for upwards of thirty years — is of no effect and void, and that the legislature had no power to enact any law which imposes npon a justice of the Supreme Court any duty or function other than a judicial one, and that a justice of the Supreme Court may not exercise any public trust other than such as is connected with the jurisdiction vested in the Supreme Court by the Constitution of the state of New York, and that to that extent section 115 of the Military Law is unconstitutional and void; (2) assuming that the provisions of section 115 are valid and constitutional, still no condition existed in the state of New York at the time of the exercise of the power by Mr. Justice Brown that required the intervention of the military aid, and therefore the question of the necessity for the use of the military power at the time and occasion is one of fact to be passed upon by “ a court and jury ” and any expenses incurred thereon necessarily must be subject to a judicial determination by a court and jury.

An examination of the statutory authority under which this call was made shows that chapter 4 of the Code of Criminal Procedure deals with the prevention and suppression of riots.

Section 102 provides that when a sheriff or other public officer authorized to execute process has reason to believe that resistance may be made, he may order out any military companies in the county to overcome resistance, and every person who refuses to comply with his order is guilty of a misdemeanor.

§ 104. If the power of the county is not sufficient to execute process, the governor must on the application of the sheriff order a military force from such other county or counties as are necessary. Section 106 provides that where five or more persons armed with dangerous weapons, or ten or more persons, [266]*266whether armed or not, riotously assemble in a city, the sheriff, mayor and aldermen, supervisor, or the president or chief executive officer, the justices of the peace or police justices, must go among the people assembled and command them in the name of the people immediately to disperse, and the magistrates must arrest them if they fail to do so. §§ 106, 10'7. It is made a misdemeanor not to disperse when ordered so to do.

Section 111 provides as follows:

“ § 111. Officers who may order out the military.— When there is an unlawful or riotous assembly, with intent to commit a felony, or to offer violence to person or property, or to resist by force the laws of the state, and the fact is made to appear to the governor, or to a judge of the supreme court, or to a county judge, or to the sheriff of the county, or to the mayor, recorder or city judge of a city, either of those officers may issue an order directed to the commanding officer of a division, brigade, regiment, battalion or company, to order Ms command, or any part of it (describing the kind and number of troops), to appear at a specified time and place to aid the civil authorities in suppressing violence and enforcing the law.”

Section 112 provides that the commanding officer, when the order is given, must forthwith obey it and the troops must appear to render the aid. Section 113 provides that, when an armed force is called out for the purpose of suppressing an unlawful or riotous assembly, it must obey the orders in relation thereto of either of the officers mentioned in section 111.

All of these provisions have been in the Code of Criminal Procedure since its enactment in 1881.

From the above provisions it will be observed that a justice of the Supreme Court is vested with power to issue the call for aid and the military authorities have no alternative save to obey. The present Military Law [267]*267contains very full provisions along the same lines. Section 115 of the Military Law is as follows:

“ § 115. Civil officers who may call on commanding officer for aid and conduct of national guard and naval militia officers.— In case of any breach of the peace, tumult, riot or resistance to process of this state, or imminent danger thereof, a justice of the supreme court, a county judge or recorder or city judge of a city or sheriff of a county, or mayor of a city, may call for aid upon the commanding officer of the national guard or naval militia stationed therein or adjacent thereto; such call shall be in writing. The commanding officer upon whom the call is made, shall order out, in aid of the civil authorities, the military or naval force or any part thereof under his command,

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Bluebook (online)
81 Misc. 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welch-v-bard-nysupct-1913.