Whitney v. Patrick

64 Misc. 191, 120 N.Y.S. 550
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 64 Misc. 191 (Whitney v. Patrick) 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
Whitney v. Patrick, 64 Misc. 191, 120 N.Y.S. 550 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1909).

Opinion

Houghton, J.

The plaintiff brings this action as a taxpayer of the village of Mechanicville to restrain expenditures by an alleged board of health of that village, on the ground that such board is illegally constituted aid assumes to act without authority of law.

A board of health of the village of Mechanicville had heen appointed pursuant to the requirements of chapter 661 of the Laws of 1893; and, 'when chapter 49 of the Laws of 1909 went into effect, on the seventeenth day of February, the members of the board were Messrs. Cassidy, Bas.sett and Lenhardt.

According to the provisions of the special charter of the village of Mechanicville, the annual election of trustees takes place on the .first Wednesday of March, which in the present year fell on the third day of that month. The old board of trustees held its first meeting after such election on the eighth day of March last and voted to increase the number of members of the board of health from three, as it had formerly been, to five members, and appointed as such new members Messrs. Clarke and Snell, and appointed William L. Palmatier to succeed Lenhardt, whose term of office was alleged to have expired. Snell resigned and, on the fifteenth day of March, Caron was appointed in his place. On the [193]*193sixteenth day of March, the new hoard of trustees held its first meeting and voted to increase, the membership of the board of health to seven members, and appointed Messrs. Hickey and Pinnigan as such new members, and reappointed Lenhardt, on the theory that his term had not expired when the old board of trustees appointed Palmatier in his place.

It, therefore, transpires that eight men claim to be members of the board of health of the village of Meehanicville and Cassidy, Lenhardt, Pinnigan and Hickey have met and appointed health inspectors and incurred liability against the village which the plaintiff says they have no right to do.

The plaintiff contends that the board of health consists of five members only and that they are Bassett, Cassidy, Palmatier, Clarke and Caron. The defendants admit that ■the increase of the board to seven members was ineffectual, but insist that it consists of Bassett, Cassidy, Lenhardt, Pinnigan and Hickey, and that the four men who assume to act have the right so to do.

The legality of the appointments of the members of the board of health depends upon whether the old or outgoing board had the right of appointment or whether that right was vested in the new or incoming board of trustees. If the outgoing board of trustees, at its first meeting after the annual election on March third, had the right to increase the number of members of the board of health and make appointments, and if Lenhai'dt’s term had expired so that an appointment in his place was properly made, then what may be termed the Bassett board, including Cassidy who concededly held over, is the legal board of health of the village. On the other hand, if the outgoing had no power to appoint or increase the number, and such power was vested only in the incoming or new board, then its appointees, which may be termed the Cassidy board, including Bassett who held over, constitute the legal board of health.

Section 20 of chapter 49 of the Laws of 1909 is a re-enactment, word for word, so far as village boards of health are concerned, of section 20 of chapter 661 of the Laws of 1893, as amended from time to time, and is surprisingly indefinite in view of the fact that it is fresh from the hands of the [194]*194Board of Statutory Consolidation. The length of the term of office of a member of the board of health is not definitely stated; and the time when it begins and ends is left in doubt ; and which board of trustees, whether the outgoing or the incoming, has the right of appointment at its first meeting after the annual election is not specifically stated.

I do not think there is any doubt that the Legislature intended that, after the organization of the boards of health under the act of 1893, the term of office of the subsequent members should be three years. The history of public health legislation shows this. Villages throughout the State which had not already established boards of health were directed by chapter 270 of the Laws of 1885 so to do. The language of that act is as follows: “And it shall be the duty of the trustees of every incorporated village in this state to appoint, once in each year, a board of health of such village, to consist of not less than three nor more than seven members (who are not village trustees), who shall hold office for one year or until their successors shall have been appointed.” The act of 1893 provided -as follows: “In villages the board (of health) shall consist of not less than three nor -more than seven persons, not trustees of' the village, who shall he appointed by the board of trustees at the first meeting of the board of trustees of such village after the next annual election of the village; the members of said board of health shall at their first meeting divide themselves by lot into three classes, whose terms of office shall expire respectively in one, two and three years from the annual election held prior to their -appointment; and in the case of an increase in the members of such board, as hereinafter provided, there shall be a like apportionment by lot, of the added members, in respect to their terms of office, at the first meeting of said board after such increase occurs, whereby the whole number of terms expiring annually shall be as nearly equal as possible.” The act of 1893 became a law oa May ninth of that year. It did not direct the immediate reorganization of the boards of health throughout the State, but did prescribe that, immediately following the next annual election in each village in the State, not necessarily [195]*195or probably held on the same day of the month or in the same month even, annual appointments of boards of health should cease, and wholly new boards should be appointed; and those appointed should cast lots to determine who should serve one, two and three years. Thus one-year boards were done away with, and a new scheme of appointment was inaugurated. Manifestly, when the term of the one-year member expired, his successor was to be appointed not for one year but for three; and, when the term of the two-year member expired, his successor was to be appointed for three years. In this way experienced men could be kept in the board; for the term of only a part of the board would expire annually, and thus the public health would be protected in a business rather than in a political way.

This interpretation of the law is not disputed, and appointments were made after this manner, and Lenhardt was appointed for three years in 1906. As to him and his successor, the question turns on when his term expired. He was appointed March 20-, 1906; and the defendants claim his term did not expire until that date in 1909 and, hence, that there was no vacancy when the board of trustees assumed to appoint Palmatier as his successor on the eighth day of March.

It will be observed that the law of 1893, which reorganized boards of health throughout the State, provided that the terms of office of members of the boards directed to be appointed after the next succeeding annual election should be for one, two and three years from the date of such annual election.

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Bluebook (online)
64 Misc. 191, 120 N.Y.S. 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitney-v-patrick-nysupct-1909.