The Supreme Court allowed this writ to test the validity of an ordinance of the city of Bayonne fixing the term of the health officer of that city for the term of five years. The ordinance was adopted April 5th, 1938. The writ also tests the validity of an ordinance adopted January 5th, 1939, designed to repeal the earlier ordinance. The ordinance of April 5th, 1938, besides fixing the term, imposed upon the health officer the duty of enforcing the sanitary code and all other ordinances relating to the public health. The prosecutor was duly appointed November 14th, 1938, and qualified.
R.S. 26:3-19, so far as pertinent, in part provides as follows: "The local board [of health] may employ such personnel as it may deem necessary, including health officers, sanitary inspectors, and plumbing inspectors, to carry into effect the powers vested in it. It shall fix the duties, term, and compensation of every appointee. The appointee, agents and officers of a local board shall hold their offices during the term for which they are severally appointed, and shall not be removed except for cause and after an opportunity has been given them for a hearing. Any duly appointed health officer shall, during the term of his appointment and subject to the superior authority of the local board appointing him, be its general agent for the enforcement of its ordinances and the sanitary laws of the state within the territorial jurisdiction of the board."
The city contends that the Board of Commissioners on April 5th, 1938, had no power to fix the term of the health officer for five years; that fixing it is claimed was ultra vires, *Page 136
and that prosecutor was, therefore, appointed without legal authority and is a mere de facto officer. This is not the law. The term of the prosecutor having been fixed by ordinance, pursuant to the statute, the power to rescind was gone. Haight
v. Love,
The provisions of R.S. 26:3-19 apply to municipalities like Bayonne operating under the commission government. Salter v.Burk,
In Bodnar v. Board of Health of Carteret, 14 N.J. Mis. R.318 (Mr. Justice Case sitting on certiorari pursuant to the statute, affirmed,
See, also, McGrath v. Bayonne,
The record disclosing that the ordinance of 1938 was properly and lawfully adopted pursuant to legislative power, the repealing ordinance was therefore invalid, in so far as it affects the prosecutor's term, and will be set aside, with costs. *Page 138
