300 N.Y. 55 | NY | 1949
Petitioner's husband, Francis J. Molinari, entered the United States Army in June, 1943. He was reported missing in action on January 12, 1945, and the War Department recorded the presumptive date of his death as January 13, 1946. While Molinari was away on active military service he was, on June 19, 1944, appointed a fireman in the New York City Fire Department, by an order of the fire commissioner. That order stated that Molinari was assigned to the military service division of the department, "subject to a medical examination by the Fire Department Medical Board", the appointment to be without compensation until Molinari (and others similarly appointed at the same time by the same order) should be discharged from military services and actually begin to perform their duties as firemen. Molinari never came home from war service to take the fire department medical examination, or take an oath of office, or go to work as a fireman. His widow applied to respondents, trustees of the New York Fire Department Insurance Fund, for payment to her of the $2,000 death benefit provided for by section B19-8.0 of the New York City Administrative Code. That section says that there shall be deducted from the pay of each fireman, $1 per month which deductions shall make up a special fund (separate from the pension system and not contributed to by the city) out of which, on the death of a member or pensioned or retired member of the fire department, there shall be paid to his named beneficiary, or to his widow, $2,000. Subdivision f of section B19-8.0 provides that any member of the fund on leave of absence for military duty shall continue to *58 be a member of the fund, his contributions thereto to be deferred until his return from military service, and further provides that, if he shall die during absence on military duty, his beneficiary or widow shall receive $2,000, less unpaid contributions. The trustees refused to pay the death benefit to Mrs. Molinari, on the ground that her husband had received a "conditional" appointment, only, to the fire department, and that he had never satisfied the conditions thereof by submitting to and passing the fire department medical examination and by taking an oath of office, so that, according to the trustees, he never became a fireman or a member of the life insurance fund. In this proceeding, brought by the widow to compel payment to her of the $2,000 benefit, less contributions, the courts below have denied her relief. We think that the special facts of this case, and a fair application thereto of the several pertinent statutes, require a holding that petitioner is entitled to payment of the death benefit.
Molinari passed the required civil service examination for fireman in December, 1941, and was, on February 1, 1943, certified by the civil service commission to the fire commissioner as eligible for appointment as a probationary fireman. He was refused appointment at that time by the commissioner, however, because his status in selective service was such that the commissioner thought it unwise or improper to appoint him (and many others similarly situated). In November, 1943, this court, in Matter of Berger v. Walsh (
Respondents concede that the Military Law makes no reference to a "conditional appointment" but argue that these appointments were, of necessity, conditioned upon the men passing medical examinations and filing oaths of office. True, there is a fire department rule (Rules and Regulations for the Uniformed Force, § 125) mandating an examination of applicants by a departmental medical board. But the department could waive its own rule, or modify it in special circumstances like these, and the commissioner's June 19, 1944, order, appointing as firemen, Molinari and others in like plight, subject to later physical examination, was such a modification of the rule, worked out to undo the damage done by the commissioner's own earlier mistake. Similarly, as to the oath of office, section 30 of the Civil Service Law and section 487a-5.0 of the Administrative Code require a fireman to take an oath of office, but the Civil Service Law requirement is that he take such oath "before he shall be entitled to enter upon the discharge of any of his duties". Reading those two statutes with subdivision 6 of section
While no decision in point is found, we consider that the result herein arrived at is in accord, generally, with Matter ofVerdecanna v. Carey (
The orders should be reversed, with costs in all courts, and the relief prayed for in the petition granted.
LOUGHRAN, Ch. J., CONWAY, DYE, FULD and BROMLEY, JJ., concur with DESMOND, J.; LEWIS, J., dissents and votes for affirmance.
Orders reversed, etc.