Court Opinion

ID: 5699809
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-12 15:38:54.442884+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:40:18.702264
License: Public Domain

M. M. FeaNk, J.
(dissenting). I must dissent from the majority decision reversing Special Term and reinstating the complaint. The action involves section 903 of the New York City Charter which is quoted in full in a footnote in the majority opinion.
It is my view that restoration, either voluntary by the board or as the result of an article 78 proceeding, is an essential prerequisite to recovery of compensation alleged to be illegally withheld. I must also disagree with the majority that, even though this complaint is held sufficient, there are available defenses. While we are not concerned with any defense just now, it is not inappropriate to observe that if the pleading is adequate to sustain the cause of action asserted, then the only issue which survives may well be the quantum of damage, and summary judgment with an assessment thereof may necessarily follow.
The plaintiffs urge that since the Supreme Court of the United States has held (Slochower v. Board of Educ. 350 U. S. 551) that section 903 was in respect to Slochower violative of his *669constitutional right of due process, it is an inevitable consequence that these plaintiffs are entitled to recover the salaries denied them from the time they were discharged. Regardless of the eonclusiveness of the Supreme Court determination as to Slochower, it does not necessarily follow that these plaintiffs can sustain this action for that reason. They were not, of course, parties to the action in the United States Supreme Court. Moreover, the distinction between the Slochower case and the one at bar cannot he ignored. The former was an article 78 proceeding (306 N. Y. 532; 350 U. S. 551; 2 N Y 2d 719) and the ultimate determination was tantamount to a direction to restore the petitioner to the position from which he had been removed, including an award for unpaid compensation. Had the hoard, in restoring him to his post, refused to pay him for the period during which he was barred, I assume that we would all agree that an action at law would he the appropriate remedy. Unlike that situation or any other article 78 proceeding seeking restoration to a civil service position, if the plaintiffs may recover damages in this action, they can continue to collect their salaries without the hoard having had the opportunity to test the propriety of the dismissals.
In essence, the issue to be resolved is whether an employee of the Board of Higher Education, removed from a civil service position, may disregard the requirement for reinstatement or restoration to his post, either by direct action by the hoard or by an order in an article 78 proceeding, and commence a plenary action to recover the compensation denied him by reason of his discharge.
There can be no dispute that the determination of the United States Supreme Court (Slochower v. Board of Educ., 350 U. S. 551, supra) is conclusive that the action taken by the board pursuant to section 903 of the New York City Charter was in respect to Slochower unconstitutional in that it was a violation of due process. However, nothing in that case should be characterized as deciding that section 903 of the charter is unconstitutional on its face or that all discharges thereunder are illegal. Rather, the majority opinion limited the determination to “ the summary dismissal of appellant [which] violates due process of law ” (p. 559). The court specifically reaffirmed the right of the city to discharge employees upon a “ proper inquiry ”. It indicated that such inquiry should consider “ the subject matter of the questions, remoteness of the period to which they are directed, or justification for exercise of the privilege * * * mistake, inadvertence or legal advice conscientiously given, whether wisely or unwisely ” (p. 558). Accordingly, to sanction *670an action at law hero would permit the question of the legality of the dismissals to be resolved in a contract action, although that is precisely an issue that should be determined in a special proceeding under article 78.
While the condemned statute provides that ‘ ‘ tenure of office or employment shall terminate and such office or employment shall be vacant”, the termination of employment in this case was not automatic and the plaintiffs in their pleading so concede. The amended complaint (par. 4) alleges that on or about March 16,, 1953, the board dismissed the plaintiffs from their employment without a hearing (par. 5). The distinction sought to be drawn between dismissals involving acts of discretion, quasi-judicial determinations, and ministerial or administrative acts as. permitting actions at, law rather than requiring an article 78 proceeding is, in my view, not justified or appropriate. Procedurally, the distinction between certiorari and mandamus no longer exists (Civ, Prac. Act, §§ 1283-1284). Whether these plaintiffs are barred by time from relief under article 78 will depend upon whether the wrong which they assert is a continuing one and whether they made an appropriate demand. However, we should not be concerned with that problem in this action at law¿ nor, because of a, short limitation statute, is it appropriate for us to provide the remedy of an action at law as a substitute for an article 78 proceeding, absent statutory or decisional authority, (See Colodny v. New York Coffee & Sugar Exch., 4 A D 2d 137, affd. 4 N Y 2d 698.)
The plaintiffs emphasize the characterization in the majority opinion of the United States Supreme Court in Shallower that dismissal under section 993 “is therefore automatic.” Prom that springboard, they argue, that the board had only ministerial duties to perform. I cannot agree with that conclusion. The “• automatic ” dismissal, if such there be, occurs subsequently to the decision to discharge- a particular employee.
Section 90S does not purport to cover the refusal to answer any and all questions. Bather, the statute limits the refusal to answer, from which termination of employment may follow, to questions relating to either “ property, government or affairs of the city or of any county included within its territorial limits, ’ ’ or the “ official conduct of any officer or employee of the city or of any such county ’ ’. Thus, the very language of the statute requires the defendant to determine in each instance whether a question did relate to the property, government or affairs of the city or to the official conduct of any employee. The opinion of Chief Judge Conway (Matter of Daniman v. Board of Educ., *671306 N. Y. 532) details the mechanics by which the hoard exercised its primary jurisdiction and responsibility in that case. The corporation counsel advised the hoard that the questions asked of Daniman, Shlakman, Slochower and the other petitioners “ constituted an inquiry into the employees’ official conduct within the purview of ” section 903. Only then did it adopt a resolution terminating employment (306 N. Y. 537). It is a fair conclusion, from the absence in the pleading of anything to the contrary, that the same procedure was followed with respect to these plaintiffs. It follows, too, that the action taken by the hoard imports the finding that the questions which the plaintiffs refused to answer related to their official conduct.
Significantly, in every reported case under section 903, after the refusal of the public employee or officer to appear, to testify or to sign a waiver of immunity, the appointing officer affirmatively notified the employee that he was discharged. Just as “ the effect of the answer on the teacher’s fitness to continue teaching is for the hoard of education or of higher education, and those bodies only, to say ” (306 N. Y. 538), so, too, these boards must necessarily possess the power to say in individual cases whether an inquiry as to a remote immoral or illegal act relates to the employee’s official conduct.
It is reasonable to assume that there are circumstances where the determination by the appointing officer will constitute the exercise of discretion in its broadest sense. For example, Slochower testified before the Eapp-Coudert Committee in 194⅛ that he was a Communist. More than 10 years later, at a hearing held by a subcommittee of the United States Senate, Slochower refused to answer questions concerning his associations or political beliefs in 1941, although he did testify that he was no longer a member of the Communist party. When the corporation counsel advised the Board of Higher Education that his refusal fell within the ambit of section 903, the board could have properly determined, upon Slochower’s record and experience as a teacher, that it would not consider such an inquiry as affecting his official conduct. Had that been the determination, instead of the one actually made, it is unlikely that any court would interfere with such an exercise of discretion. It is reasonable to insist that the term “official conduct” would encompass more when applied to the higher echelons of government, e.g., a city commissioner, than it would to menial employees. For instance, there would he a rational basis for holding that the indulgence in an adulterous relationship by the head of a city college affects his official conduct, whereas a similar *672relationship maintained by a bandy man working in tbe same institution Avould not. (See Matter of Pinggera v. Municipal Civ. Serv. Comm., 206 Misc. 615.)
I do not tbink it is correct to assume that in Toscano v. McGoldrick (300 N. Y. 156), tbe Court of Appeals beld or intended to bold that an action at law for tbe recovery of salary illegally withheld would lie without restoration or reinstatement to tbe position for which tbe salary was claimed. Tbe city bad attempted to abolish Toscano’s job by eliminating tbe position in the budget. Thereafter, tbe “ city voluntarily and on its own initiative restored Toscano to the payroll * * * conditioned, however, upon a reduction in pay ”. (Pp. 159-160.) In restoring Toscano to bis position, everything that could have been done in that regard by an article 78 proceeding was accomplished and, in effect, was a concession by tbe city that be bad been illegally removed. To permit an action at law to lie under tbe circumstances outlined presented no problem since ‘1 tbe payment of salary at tbe budgetary rate * * * did not involve tbe exercise of either administrative or judicial discretion nor present any question requiring review in a special proceeding ” (300 N. Y. 160). Nor should we assume that in Toscano tbe Court of Appeals distinguished or overruled its determination in Thoma v. City of New York (263 N. Y. 402) and Matter of Barmonde v. Kaplan (266 N. Y. 214). It stated that Toscoaio was not ‘£ contrary ’ ’ to Thoma and both cases were inapplicable to tbe situation there. In Thoma tbe court indicated that even in mandamus, tbe plaintiff would not be entitled to relief, but it did state (p. 408): “ If this bad been an illegal or unlawful removal or demoting- of tbe plaintiff, bis remedy was by mandamus.” So too, in Barmonde, since tbe petitioner was not entitled to recover back salary upon any theory, tbe form of judicial relief sought was immaterial.
In sum, it is. my conclusion that tbe plaintiffs have not and cannot state a cause of action at law seeking recovery of salary withheld, in tbe absence of an allegation that they have been restored to tbe position from which each claims there was an illegal ouster. Tbe judgment and order should be affirmed.
BoteiN, P. J., McNally and SteveNs, JJ., concur with Bbeitel, J., FraNk, J., dissents in opinion.
Judgment and order reversed upon tbe law, with costs to tbe appellants, and tbe motion of defendant to dismiss the complaint for legal insufficiency is denied, with $10 costs.