120 Misc. 314 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1923
The College of the City of New York makes this application for an order of mandamus requiring the board of estimate and apportionment of the city of New York to revise the city budget for the year 1923 by increasing the appropriations for compensation of the faculty and employees of the college so as to comply with the salary schedules compiled by the trustees of the collfege and presented to the board pursuant to statute. The sufficiency of the trustees’ requisition as to form, timeliness and other technical requirements is not challenged. Nor, except in respect of the salary of the president of the college, is it claimed on behalf of the city that the college trustees have exceeded the compensations which the legislature, by chapter 120 of the Laws of 1921, permitted the trustees to fix, the city resting its claim of right to refuse to appropriate the sums fixed by the trustees upon the contention that the statute referred to is void for unconstitutionality. I shall first consider the city’s point that the fixation by the trustees of the salary of the president of the college was of a sum in excess of the maximum allowed by the act. The ground of this contention is that the president is permitted to occupy without charge a house owned by the city, situate adjacent to the college grounds, and that if the sum of an adequate rental were to be added to the money compensation fixed for the president the total of his compensation would be in excess of the statutory maximum. I think the point is not deserving of extended consideration. The statute speaks merely of money compensation. The board of estimate in 1907 authorized the purchase of the house in question for the express and stated purpose of providing a residence for the president, and the building has been occupied
Ordered accordingly.