78 N.Y.S. 779 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
The plaintiff brings this action as a taxpayer, under the provisions of section 1925 of the Code of Civil Procedure, against Charles H. Knox, William N. Dykman, and Alexander T. Mason, as civil service commissioners of the city of New York, Bird S. Coler, as comptroller of the city of New York, Michael C. Murphy, as police commissioner of the city of New York, and Edward A. Gaus, James Gannon, and John J. Lantry, as police captains; and demands judgment that the “promotion and appointment of the defendants Edward A. Gaus, James Gannon, and John J. Lantry as captains in the police department of the city of New York, and each of them, be set aside, and declared null and void,” and that the civil service commissioners named, as well as the police commissioner, be restrained from certifying the pay rolls for the three defendants above mentioned, and that the comptroller be enjoined and restrained from paying these three defendants their salaries as captains of police. Gaus, Gannon, and Lantry, who are the real defendants, demur to the complaint upon the grounds that the plaintiff has not legal capacity to sue, in that no authority is by law conferred upon a taxpayer to bring and maintain an action of the character stated in the complaint; that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; and that causes of action have been improperly united. The learned court at special term has overruled these demurrers, and from the interlocutory judgment entered appeal comes to this court.
We are of opinion that the learned court erred in this disposition of the demurrers. There is no allegation in the complaint that the appointment of these three defendants, who were promoted from police sergeants to captains, has or will result in “waste of, or injury to, the estate, funds, or other property of” the city of New York, and without such an allegation the complaint does not state facts which would entitle a taxpayer to interfere. Johnston v. Garside, 65 Hun, 208, 210, 20 N. Y. Supp. 327. “Full force and effect can be given to the statute by confining it to a case where the acts complained of are without power, or where corruption, fraud, or bad faith, amounting to fraud, is charged,” say the court in Talcott v. City of Buffalo, 125 N. Y. 280, 281, 26 N. E. 263, 265. “Any other construction,” continue the court, “would subject the discretionary action of all local officers and municipal bodies to review by the courts at the suit of the taxpayers,—
“The proceeding by quo warranto is the-proper and appropriate remedy for trying and determining the title to a public office and of ascertaining who is entitled to hold it; of obtaining possession of an office to which one has been legally elected, and has become duly qualified to hold; and also of removing an incumbent who has usurped it, or who claims it by an invalid election, or who illegally continues to hold it after the expiration of his term.”
And section 1948 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that:
“The attorney-general may maintain an action, upon his own information, or upon complaint of a private person, * * * against a person who usurps, intrudes into, or unlawfully holds or exercises within the state, a franchise or a public office, civil or military, or an office in a domestic corporation.”
If the defendants now before this court have been legally inducted into office, they are entitled to receive their compensation, and, the facts alleged in the complaint not showing that any waste or injury to the estate, funds, or other property of the city of New York is to follow the payment of such salaries, or that their appointments were not without authority of law, the plaintiff in the present action cannot be permitted to try the title by which their positions are held. He has a complete and adequate remedy under the provisions of section 1948 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and the courts ought not, as suggested in Talcott v. City of Buffalo, supra, to be burdened with reviewing the discretionary powers of civil service commissioners and other local officials (Keim v. U. S., 177 U. S. 290, 296, 20 Sup. Ct. 574, 44 L. Ed. 774) in actions of this character. See People v. Roosevelt, 19 App. Div. 431, 46 N. Y. Supp. 517; People v. Neubrand, 32 App. Div. 49, 51, 52 N. Y. Supp. 280; People v. Ferris, 76 N. Y. 326, 328. 329; In re Hart, 159 N Y. 278, 285, 286, 54 N. E. 44.
The interlocutory judgment appealed from should be reversed, with costs, and the demurrers to the complaints should be allowed. All concur.