171 N.Y. 263 | NY | 1902
By chapter 296 of the Laws of 1894 there was enacted a provision for retiring and pensioning on half pay male teachers in the city of New York who had served thirty-five years, and female teachers in that city who had served for thirty years. The fund for the payment of these pensions was to consist of fines and deductions from teachers' wages made for any cause and from donations or legacies that might be made to it. Chapter 91 of the Laws of 1898 added to the fund five per cent of the excise money *265 or license fee belonging to the city of New York. The relator had been a teacher in a public school in the city of New York, from which position she retired in September, 1892. In 1900 an act was passed (Chap. 725, laws of that year) by which the board of education of the city was directed to place the relator and thirty-two other teachers, who had also been retired before the establishment of the pension system, on the list of retired teachers entitled to receive as annuities one-half the salaries paid to them while in service, and to pay to them such annuities from the time of their respective retirements not earlier than the enactment of the statute of 1894. The respondent having declined to place the relator's name on the list, this proceeding was instituted to compel it to take such action.
We agree with the learned Appellate Division in the view that the statute of 1900 is unconstitutional and approve the able opinion delivered by that learned court. That the excise money appropriated to the pension fund is public money is plain. (People ex rel. Einsfeld v. Murray,
We think not. In Town of Guilford v. Supervisors of *266 Chenango County (
Neither the case of Cole v. State of New York (
The order appealed from should be affirmed, but without costs.
PARKER, Ch. J., GRAY, O'BRIEN, BARTLETT, HAIGHT and WERNER, JJ., concur.
Order affirmed.