149 Mass. 443 | Mass. | 1889
It was admitted by the defendant that the plaintiff -was a subordinate legally appointed by the board of
The plaintiff contends that no order for his removal was made by the board. The approval by the board of the action of the superintendent reported to it was a sufficient order for removal. The removal dated from the order of the board, and not from the action of the superintendent. The recital that the superintendent had reported that he had discharged the plaintiff for drunkenness was the statement of the cause of the removal which the board made by approving the action of the superintendent. Whether the order was legal and effected the removal must depend upon the validity of the other objection presented by the plaintiff, that no opportunity was given him to be heard before the order was passed. The plaintiff contends that the statute requires that a removal shall be for cause; that the statute imports that there shall be charges stating the cause of removal, and a hearing and adjudication upon them; and that the words “for cause” have acquired a technical meaning, in which it will be presumed the Legislature used them. But the words as used in the statute are connected with and qualified by other words, and whether in that connection they have the meaning contended for by the plaintiff must be determined by all the language of the statute.
One meaning which may be given the statute is, that it authorizes the board to remove for any cause which, upon hearing and adjudication, it determines to be sufficient, and which it shall assign in an order for removal; and another meaning is, that it may remove for any cause which, with or without charges or hearing, it deems sufficient, and which it shall assign in the order for removal. We think the latter is the true meaning. The language of the statute indicates that it did not intend to require charges and a hearing. It is not to be at the discretion of the board for cause shown, which might have implied that there should be a hearing and adjudication, but it is to be for
The same intention appears in considering the change made in the law by the statute. Before the statute, it may be said, in general, that the dismissal of subordinates employed by the different departments and officers of the city was not regulated by statute, and that removals' from office regulated by different statutes were generally at pleasure. As is correctly said in the plaintiff’s brief, “ It would seem that it had been the policy of the law to allow perfect freedom of removal as an incident of the appointing power, except in a few cases where certain emoluments went with the office, or where for other reasons a more fixed tenure was found necessary.” The statute in question, amending the city charter, besides giving to the mayor the appointment of city boards and officers which had been elected by the city council or board of aldermen, and giving to boards and officers the appointment of their subordinates, made several important changes in the power of removal. It enlarged the scope of former statutes by regulating the removal of subordinates — which word the city ordinances declare includes employees and laborers (Revised Ordinances of 1885, c. 4, § 19) — appointed by boards and officers; it made the mayor the appointing power, and the different boards and officers the removing power; it fixed one uniform rule in regard to all officers appointed by the mayor, and all subordinates appointed by the different boards and officers, which was that they might be removed for such causes as were deemed sufficient by the
In adopting a new rule applicable to all cases, we do not think that the language of the statute indicates an intention to adopt the former rule of removal at pleasure, or the former exception to it of a technical removal for cause, but to allow summary removals without hearing, with the condition that the cause of the removal should be put on record. This would naturally have an effect to prevent improper removals, and, in case of a removal for a cause for which it could not lawfully be made, would make redress possible, giving to the person removed the same remedy he would have had if the removal had been for satisfactory cause found after a hearing. It may be doubted whether there would be much benefit to either officers or subordinates in a compulsory hearing before an absolute power, which would not voluntarily give a hearing when justice required it. With or without a hearing, there is a record of the cause of removal, and the appeal in either case is to public opinion. We cannot find in the language or reason of the statute the intention to establish the rule that officers and employees of the city should be removed or discharged only after charges made and a trial had upon them.
Judgment for the defendant affirmed.