14 N.J. Misc. 535 | N.J. | 1936
The basic question presented is whether the board of commissioners of the town of Montclair, at an organ
At the organization meeting of the newly elected commissioners held on May 19th, 1936, the following resolution, among others, was adopted:
“Besolved, that the board of commissioners of the town of Montclair * * * that the executive, administrative, judicial and legislative powers, authority and duties appertaining to * * * the Building Department including the Office of Building Inspector * * * be and the same hereby are distributed into the Department of Public Works; * * * and the Director of Public Works is hereby vested with all the aforesaid * * * powers * * * and shall perform all duties * * * with respect thereto.”
Pursuant to that resolution John Picken was appointed building inspector. At the time of his appointment an ordinance had been adopted on January 9th, 1936, under which the building department and the office of building inspector were vested in the director of parks and public property. In pursuance of that ordinance prosecutor was, on May 25th, 1936, appointed building inspector by Commissioner McMahan, who was the director of parks and public property.
It appears that the prosecutor had been building inspector for some years prior to the last election of commissioners. He was, however, dismissed before the last election of commissioners by the then director of parks and public property in charge of the building department. He sought a writ of certiorari to review that dismissal and the writ was denied by Chief Justice Brogan on May 2d, 1936.
All this notwithstanding, it is now urged for the prosecutor- that the board of commissioners were without authority or power to adopt the challenged resolution of May 19th, 1936. The alleged lack of authority or power is rested upon the contentions that the commissioners could not, under the law, effect the change from one department to the other, as aforesaid, and, at all events, it could not be effectuated by a resolution.
The rule is discharged, with costs.