Case ID: nys_5/html/0712-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Van Brunt, P. J.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

People ex rel. Washburn v. French et al., Police Commissioners.
    
      (Supreme Court, General Term, First Department.
    
    May 24, 1889.)
    Office and Offices—Civil Sekvice Laws—Vetebans.
    Laws N. V. 1886, c. 29, requiring that honorably discharged soldiers of the late war shall be preferred for appointment to positions in the civil service of the state, and providing that they shall not be disqualified from holding any position on account of age or physical disability, unless they are thereby rendered incompetent to discharge their duties, applies to veterans in office at the time of the passage of the act, as well as to those appointed under it.
    
      Certiorari on the relation of George Washburn against Stephen B. French and others, constituting the board of police commissioners of the city of Hew York, to review proceedings of the board in retiring relator from service and placing him on the pension roll.
    Argued before Van Brunt, P. J., and Cullen, J.
    
      Louis J. Grant, for relator. David J. Dean, for respondents.
   Van Brunt, P. J.

The relator was appointed a patrolman in 1856. In 1862 he entered the army and served during the war to its close, in 1865, when he was honorably discharged. Thereafter, in 1865, he was again appointed patrolman, and continued to be a member of the force until June, 1887, in the mean time having attained the rank of captain. On the last-mentioned day he was dismissed and placed on the roll of the police pension fund, because he had then reached the age of 60 years, the authority to make such dismissal being claimed from the provisions of section 2, c. 364, of the Laws of 1885. The question now brought up for review is whether the commissioners had the authority to discharge the relator, he being a veteran soldier, and honorably discharged from the service of the United States, because he had reached the age of 60 years. Section 2, c. 364, of the Laws of 1885, provides that any member of the police force who shall have reached the age of 60 years shall, by resolution adopted by a majority vote of the full board, be relieved and dismissed from said force and service and placed on the roll of the police pension fund. It is clear that under this legislation the commissioners had not only the power, but were required, to make the removal upon the arrival of the relator at the age of 60 years. It is, however, urged that the relator was relieved from the provisions of the act of 1885, above quoted, because of chapter 29 of the Laws of 1886, which provided that chapter 410 of the Laws of 1884 (an act to regulate and improve the civil service of the state of Hew York) should be amended by requiring the civil service commissioners to report names for appointment of veterans of the war, and that such persons shall be preferred for appointment for positions in the civil service over all other persons, though graded lower than others so examined and reported, provided their qualifications and fitness shall have been ascertained as provided in the act. And it was further provided that the person thus preferred should not be disqualified from holding any position on account of his age, or by reason of any physical disability, provided such age or disability does not render him incompetent to perform the duties of the position applied for. In answer to this claim it is urged upon the part of the respondents that the provisions of the act of 1886 applied only to applicants for appointment to office, and have no bearing upon the qualifications of those actually in office. It is a familiar rule in the construction of statutory and constitutional law that the intention of the law-making power shall be ascertained from the lan.guage of the act, from the nature of the subject-matter as to which the legislation is enacted, and the objects to be attained by such legislation, and that the mere language of the act cannot be permitted to override such intention where it is clearly to be gathered from the act under construction and the surrounding circumstances. Now, it is apparent from a reading of the act of 1886 that it was the intention to relieve veterans of the late war from the ■disabilities which other persons who had not the same claim to recognition were resting under in respect to holding office, and therefore it provided that such persons should not be disqualified from holding any position in the civil service of the state on account of their age, or by reason of any physical disability, provided such disability did not render them incompetent to perform the duties of their office. It certainly cannot be presumed to have been the intention of the legislature to place an applicant for an office in a better position than a veteran who had already been appointed. In other words, that a veteran whose qualifications were not sufficient of themselves to require his appointment under the civil service act because there were others who might be better qualified, should be preferred over a veteran who had been appointed because his qualifications alone compelled his appointment. It cannot be presumed that the legislature inténded "to work such an injustice, and if a construction can be adopted which gives force to the whole act, and to an intention which does not work such an injustice, such a construction must necessarily be adopted. It seems to us clear that the intention was to relieve veterans from the disqualification of age, and that in making use of the words “a person thus preferred” in the act of 1886 they undoubtedly intended that •such person should not be disqualified from holding any position in the civil service on account of his age, not merely after he had actually been thus preferred for the purpose of appointment, but that he would, under the terms of the act, be entitled to that preference if he could claim such preference in case he was an applicant for appointment. If this is not the true construction, then a member of the police force who is removed on account of age would have a right to apply under the act for reappointment, and the police commissioners would be required to reappoint him to the position from which he had been removed on account of age. This, of course, would refer but to .patrolmen, and would not necessarily refer to the higher ranks of the service, which are required to be drawn from the lower positions of the force. Such an anomalous condition of affairs was never intended by the legislature. It is clear that it was intended to relieve veterans from the disqualifications of age, and as a consequence the power of the commissioners to remove a veteran because he has reached the age of 60 was thereby repealed, and the relator, having been removed for this cause, and being a veteran, is entitled to be reinstated. The proceedings should be reversed, and the relator reinstated, with costs.

Cullen, J., concurs.