66 N.Y.S. 97 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
The relator is the widow of John J. Tobin, who died on the 6th day of April, 1896. He had been a member of the uniformed force of the fire department of the city of Brooklyn for more than ten-years, and on the 1st day of November, 1895, was retired on pension. The relator’s app>lication was for a peremptory writ of mandamus requiring the respondent, John J. Scanned, as fire commissioner of the city of New York, to pay to her the sum of $1,000 from the Brooklyn fire department widows and orphans’ relief fund, pursuant to section 15 of title 13 of the charter of the late city of Brooklyn (Chap. 583, Laws of 1888, as amd. by chap. 153, Laws of 1889), and which fund, by virtue of the provisions of the charter of the city of New York (Chap. 378, Laws of 1897), is now embraced in and a part of the New York fire department life insurance fund, of which the respondent is trustee. By the latter charter the obligations and duties are also transferred with the fund. The relator’s application was successfully resisted on the ground that her husband at the time of his retirement had notified the then secretary of the fire department of the city of Brooklyn and acting secretary of the trustees of the Brooklyn fire department widows and orphans’ relief fund, that because of his relations with his wife he did not desire her to receive anything as his widow from the fund, but wished whatever interest he had in the fund to lapse. During the few months between his retirement and death he accordingly received his ¡Dension without any deduction being made therefrom for the benefit of the fund,, and it is claimed by the respondent, and was apparently held by the court at Special Term, that the voluntary withdrawal by the deceased from future participation in the fund at the time of his retirement operated to destroy and
I am of opinion that the relator is entitled to the money. By the provisions of sections 14 and 15 of title 13 of the Brooklyn charter, as constructed by the Consolidation Act of 1888 (supra), two distinct funds were created, one known as the “ firemen’s insurance fund ” and the other as the “ Brooklyn fire department widows’ and orphans’ relief fund.” The firemen’s insurance fund was to be made up from fines imposed upon members of the department by way of discipline and collectible from pay or salary, from rewards, fees, proceeds of gifts and emoluments on account of extraordinary services of any member of the department, from moneys received for penalties, and from the percentage or tax on the receipts of the foreign fire insurance companies doing business in the city of Brooklyn. The provisions for the creation of this fund are embodied in section 14, and it is apparent that no regular voluntary contribution towards it is contemplated on the part of any officer or member of the force, and that the only way such persons could contribute to it was by being subjected to the imposition of fines or penalties, or by earning a reward by the rendition of extraordinary services, a contribution which could only be made in either case by an officer or member in active service. By section 15 of title 13 of the act of 1888 it was provided that any officer or member of the department who should become permanently disabled while in the performance of duty, or who after ten years’ membership should become superanuated by age or rendered incapable of performing duty by disease, might be placed on the pension roll of the firemen’s insurance fund, and granted and paid a pension from the fund of not exceeding one-half his salary. The section further provided that there “ shall be deducted by the comptroller of the city of Brooklyn, from the monthly pay of each officer and fireman of said department, and from that of the other employes of the said department, as shall desire to avail themselves of this provision, the monthly sum of one dollar, which shall be received and held by the trustees of the insurance fund herein created, in the like manner as the other moneys herein provided to be paid to them, and which shall be known as the Brooklyn fire department widows’ and orphans’ relief fund; and in the case of the death of any member or
I can see nothing in the amendments made to section 15 of title 13 by chapter 153 of the Laws of 1889 which discloses an intention to deprive the widow of a retired pensioner of the benefit of this fund. On the contrary, the intention of the amendments to confirm and strengthen her rights seems very manifest. By the amendments the amount of the payment to the widow was increased to the sum of $1,000, and.provision was made, in addition to the monthly deductions already referred to and provided for, for a deduction by the trustees of the firemen’s insurance fund of one dollar from the monthly pension of such retired members of the department as had contributed to said fund before retirement, the amount so deducted to become a part of the widows and orphans’ relief fund. It is not clear whether the words “ said fund ” refer to the firemen’s insurance fund or to the wddows and orphans’ relief fund, nor is it very material to the decision of this case. If they refer to the insurance fund, there is nothing in the record to indicate that Tobin before his retirement contributed anything to that fund, and, consequently, there would he no legislative authority for subsequently deducting anything from his monthly pension. If, however, the words refer to the widows and orphans’ fund, as seems most probable, then it was the duty of the trustees of the firemen’s insurance fund to deduct one dollar from Tobin’s pension in each of
But whatever view is taken of the statute as discussed, a final amendment to section 15 by chapter 153 of the Laws of 1889 would seem to place the relator’s right beyond all question. As so amended, and as if to confirm the claim of the widow of a retired pensioner to payment out of the fund, quite independently of her husband’s contributions after retirement, the section provides that “ The said
The order should be reversed, and the motion for a peremptory writ granted.
All concurred, except Bartlett, J., not voting, and Jenks, J., not sitting.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion for peremptory writ of mandamus granted.