The plaintiff appeals from a dismissal of his amended complaint in an action for an injunction and for damages under the “Civil Rights Act” — §§ 43 and 47(3) of Title 8, U.S.C.A. The action was brought against the City of New York, the “Board of Standards and Appeals,” the “Department of Housing and Building,” the “Commissioner of Buildings,” the “Borough Superintendent,” and the chief engineer and two examiners of the Building Department. The amended complaint is hard to understand, but, considering the latitude to be allowed to pleadings under Rule 8(f), Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A. following section 723c (Dioguardi v. Durning, 2 Cir.,
Whatever may have been true before, it seems to us that, since the decision of the
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Supreme Court in Snowden v. Hughes,
Further, if there remained • any longer doubt whether the act of a state officer is the act of the state, if done under the pretended justification of a statute, that doubt was laid by Screws v. United States,
A final word as to the point that the plaintiff has not shown that he exhausted his remedies. So far as these lay in an appeal to the Board of Standards and Appeals under § 666 of Chapter 27, of the New York City Charter, the amended complaint included the Board in its charges. That is indeed not true as to the plaintiff’s remedy of certiorari in the Supreme Court of the state under § 668e — 1.0 of Chapter 27 of the Administrative Code, for it does not appear that he attempted such a review. Subdivision (a) of that section provides that the petition shall set forth in what ways the Board’s “decision is illegal * * * spe
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cifying the grounds of the illegality”; and for argument we may assume that what the plaintiff alleges in his amended complaint would constitute the sort of “illegality” which could be reached by certiorari. Further, we may even assume that the writ would be a bar to any injunction in this case, though we express no opinion upon the point. However that may be, clearly it is not an effective substitute for the damages which the plaintiff may have suffered from the subordinate officers whom he has made defendants, or from the Board itself. The risk of a recovery against them for these does on its face appear substantial; and indeed in Picking v. Pennsylvania R. Co., supra (3 Cir.,
Judgment reversed; cause remanded.
