114 Misc. 2d 8 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1982
OPINION OF THE COURT
When a member of a town board on her own initiative and without board authorization brings a proceeding against the town’s board of zoning appeals pursuant to subdivision 7 of section 267 of the Town Law, is she acting within the scope of her “public employment or duties”? This is the primary issue raised on this motion by the respondent Town of North Hempstead and its Town Attorney to dismiss this article 78 proceeding in which the petitioner Barbara Blumberg seeks a judgment directing the town to provide for her defense in an action instituted against her as a result of a proceeding she brought against the board of appeals.
THE FACTS
It appears that Blumberg was at all relevant times a councilwoman serving on the Town Board of the Town of
Meanwhile, in September of 1981 upon receipt of the Triad complaint, Blumberg asked the Town Attorney to provide for her defense and when the request was denied she retained private counsel and, in December, commenced the instant proceeding.
In support of their motion to dismiss, the respondents urge that Blumberg is not entitled to the relief she seeks essentially upon the ground that she did not comply with section 23-15.2 of the Town Code which details the conditions under which the town will provide for the defense of an employee in a civil action (see, also, Public Officers Law, §§17, 18). The code defines the word “employee” to include any person holding a position “by election, appointment or employment in the service of the town and all members of all boards and commissions of the town.”
Subdivision A of section 23-15.2 of the code provides, inter alia, that the town shall provide for the defense of an employee in a civil action or proceeding “arising out of any alleged act or omission which occurred or is alleged in the complaint to have occurred while the employee was acting within the scope of his public employment or duties, or
“A. The duty to defend or indemnify and save harmless prescribed by this Article shall be conditioned upon:
“(1) Delivery, to the Town Attorney by the employee, of the original or a copy of any summons, complaint, process, notice, demand or pleading within five (5) days after he is served with such document; and
“(2) The full cooperation of the employee in the defense of such action or proceeding”.
The respondents allege that:
(1) Blumberg failed to deliver the summons and complaint to the Town Attorney within the five-day period prescribed in the code;
(2) she did not obtain a determination by the Town Attorney that representation by the Town Attorney would be inappropriate before she retained private counsel; and
(3) the acts alleged in the Triad complaint did not occur while she was acting within the scope of her public employment or duties, nor was the action brought to enforce a provision of section 1981 or 1983 of title 42 of the United States Code.
Thus, the only issue is whether Blumberg was sued by Triad for an act done within the scope of her employment or duties as a public officer.
ACTS WITHIN THE SCOPE OF OFFICIAL DUTIES
Preliminarily, it is noted that an attorney may not be compensated for services rendered a municipal board or officer unless he has been retained in accordance with statutory authority or appropriate resolution of the governing body (Corning v Village of Laurel Hollow, 48 NY2d 348; Cahn v Town of Huntington, 29 NY2d 451; Seif v City of Long Beach, 286 NY 382; see, also, Gavin v Board of Supervisors of Rensselaer County, 221 NY 222). Without the benefit of authorizing legislation, reimbursement by a municipality of the expense incurred by a board or officer in defending an action would constitute a gift of public funds for a purely private purpose, a matter expressly forbidden by section 1 of article VIII of the New York State Constitution (see, e.g., Corning v Village of Laurel Hollow, supra; Leo v Barnett, 48 AD2d 463, affd 41 NY2d 879). Where an officer is compelled to engage counsel to avoid personal liability for alleged misconduct, it has been held that no benefit inures to the municipality and that the officer is not representing the public interest (see, e.g., Levine v Miteer, 16 AD2d 990; Buckley v City of New York, 264 App Div 116; Matter of Kilroe v Craig, 208 App Div 93;
It has been said that the acts of a public officer are performed within the “scope of official duties” if such acts are done in relation to matters committed by law to the officer’s control or supervision (Cooper v O’Connor, 107 F2d 207). It has also been said that the test for determining an “official duty” is whether the officer is acting within the scope of what he is employed to do (United States v Cho Po Sun, 409 F2d 489; United States v Heliczer, 373 F2d 241). As a general rule, municipal officers have only such powers as are expressly granted by statute or by sovereign authority or those which are necessarily to be implied from those granted (56 Am Jur 2d, Municipal Corporations, § 276).
No section of the Town Law details the duties of individual members of a town board. Instead, the statute spells out the powers and duties of the board itself as a legislative, governing and policy determining body (see Town Law, §§ 51, 64), including the power to adopt a zoning ordinance (Town Law, § 261), the power to provide by ordinance for the enforcement of such an ordinance (Town Law, § 268) and the power to initiate actions in the name of the town to enjoin violations (Town Law, § 135). Section 267 of the Town Law directs appointment by the town board of a zoning board of appeals. Although section 267 of the Town Law grants to the board of appeals original jurisdiction to grant variances from the zoning ordinance (Matter of Bach v Board of Zoning & Appeals of Town of North Hempstead, 282 App Div 879) and the town board
Nevertheless, no statute has committed to any one member of a town board individual control or supervision of any aspect of the zoning power. Although a legislator derives powers and duties from the power to vote, these derivative powers and duties are essentially participatory: in addition to the power to vote on legislative measures and to confirm appointments, a legislator is empowered to conduct or participate in a legislative investigation and to conduct discussions with or to persuade or influence other legislators (People v Ginsberg, 80 Misc 2d 921, affd 50 AD2d 804; People v Adams, 86 Misc 2d 634). A legislator may also exercise a power or authority expressly conferred by law or derived from an actual relationship between the legislator in his legislative capacity and a particular matter. In sum, a town councilman is not employed to sue the board of appeals and such an action is not within the scope of his employment or duties unless he has been directed to bring the action in the name of the town by the town board.
The fact that subdivision 7 of section 267 of the Town Law authorizes “any officer, department, board or bureau of the town” (including a member of the town board [see, e.g., Matter of Bachety v Volz, 65 Misc 2d 176, affd 39 AD2d 842]) to seek review of board of appeals’ determinations in an article 78 proceeding does not compel a different conclusion. Since the powers and duties of many such officers, departments, boards or bureaus of a town — virtually the entire municipal government — have nothing at all to do with the issue of variances or zoning generally, it cannot be said of all of them that suing the board of appeals relates to matters committed by law to their discretion or control or that such is what they are employed to do. Thus, the section cannot be construed as defining a scope of public
It is concluded that Blumberg was not acting within the scope of her public employment or duties when she brought the article 78 proceeding against the board of appeals (even though she had standing to do so and even though she performed a valuable service on behalf of her constituents as evidenced by the outcome) and that, accordingly, the town cannot be compelled to provide for her defense in Triad’s subsequent action for malicious prosecution. On the same rationale, Blumberg had no implied authority to employ counsel to defend her under the rule enunciated in Cahn v Town of Huntington (29 NY2d 451, supra), since the rule requires that she have undertaken the defense in the public interest and in conjunction with her “official duties”.
Given this determination, it is unnecessary to reach the respondents’ other contentions, although it should be noted in passing that their argument that Blumberg was es-topped to bring the proceeding against the zoning board of appeals because she had previously voted approval of Triad’s site plan is nonsense. Site plan approval is a ministerial act which can be compelled by mandamus; where the plan submitted is in compliance with the ordinance (or where necessary variances have been granted) and all procedures required for site plan approval have been com
Submit judgment dismissing the petition.