68 N.Y.S. 15 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
The facts are agreed upon. Plaintiff was a constable of the town of Deer Park in the county of Orange. The defendant is a munici
Between June 25, 1897, and October 31, 1897, plaintiff, at the request of and in pursuance of writs, commitments, warrants and other processes delivered to him by Joseph V. McCormick, as police justice of the village, performed certain services and made certain disbursements in criminal actions pending in and issued out of the court of said police justice. On May 3, 1897, the board of trustees of the defendant passed this resolution :
“ The matter of the bills rendered the village by the police constables for carrying and transportation was brought before the Board by the Corporation Attorney. After some discussion it was moved by Trustee Wood, seconded by Trustee Purtell, that all commitments issued by the Police Justice be placed in the hands of town constables.”
The decision of this controversy does not turn upon the question whether the plaintiff had the power, under the Criminal Code, to execute these processes, but whether he is entitled to be paid therefor ■ from the village funds. The claim of the plaintiff is based upon his employment by the police justice, under authority of the-foregoing resolution. Section 2 of the charter provides for a police justice of the village whose jurisdiction is prescribed by section 10. Section 2 provides for one or more police constables, as the trustees shall determine. Section 36 provides that the police constables shall possess the same powers and perform the same duties within said village, and be subject to the same liabilities, as town constables in the town of Deer Park, and that they shall “ execute all civil and criminal processes issued by the police justice, * * * and such police justice * * * shall deliver all such processes to the police constables, or one of them, to be executed.” Section 37 prohibits the receipt of fees by the police constables, and provides in lieu thereof a salary to be fixed by the trustees, not to exceed $1,000 per annum. I find no express authority vested in the board of trustees or in the police justice to employ this plaintiff to execute the processes in question. On the contrary, there is a plain direction of the village charter that such processes shall be served by the salaried village
The resolution reads that certain processes should be placed in the hands of town constables, and, therefore, the contention must be that the placing of a process in the hands of a town constable made him a special policeman of the village. There is not the slightest evidence that the plaintiff ever claimed to be such officer or ever qualified by taking the oath of office prescribed. The contention is hardly worth further consideration. But it may be pointed out that as such special policeman is invested with the powers and discharges the duties of a police constable (§ 39), the distinction is but in name and. in the temporary character of the appointment, and that section 35 of the charter provides that no police constable shall be appointed who is a constable of the town of Deer Park. Now, the plaintiff was at all times a constable of that town.
Judgment for the defendant on submitted case, without costs.
All concurred, except Sewell, J., taking no part.
Judgment for the defendant on submitted case, without costs.