34 A.D. 475 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
■. The relator was removed from the police force of the city of Eew York after a hearing before the commissi.oners upon a charge of conduct unbecoming an officer, neglect of duty and insubordination. There were four specifications of the charge: (1) That the relator
On the return of a writ of certiorari to review the action of the police commissioners in removing the relator, he contends that his conviction of the charge and his subsequent removal were unauthorized and contrary to law, for the reason that it does not appear from the return that the witnesses.against him on the hearing were sworn. It is true that the return does not show that an oath was administered to all the witnesses. The commissioners have made a return that “ an examination of the stenographer’s minutes taken upon the hearing fails to disclose whether or not” certain witnesses named were sworn. But there is nothing in the record to show that they were not sworn, and this statement of' what the stenographer’s minutes fails to disclose falls far short of establishing that fact. In People ex rel. Kasschau v. Police Commissioners (155 N. Y. 40) the Court of Appeals held that,, in proceedings of this character,, the witnesses against the accused must be sworn; the general principle being stated that “when a party is .protected in the enjoyment of a public office or employment from removal, except for. cause to be ascertained and adjudged upon a hearing of a judicial nature, and it appears that he has heen removed without any proof of the necessary facts upon oath, the determination if not absolutely without jurisdiction, is clearly erroneous as matter of law.” But it will' be observed, upon an examination ■ of the Kasschau case, that the Court of Appeals say- “ in the return to the writ of certiorari the commissioners state affirmatively that none of the witnesses called to prove the charge were sworn.” In the return before us no such affirmative declaration appears. The most that can be said is that the record fails to disclose whether certain witnesses were sworn or not. The commissioners had jurisdiction to.entertain charges against this relator and to put him upon his trial therefor. This they did, and now we are asked to assume irregularities in that trial and to conclude from the. fact that the record does not
But independent of this fact it affirmatively appears that there was testimony under oath before the commissioners on the trial of this relator which established the substance of the charge against him, and that testimony was given by himself under his own oath. -He testified that he went off his post for a short time on two differ- ' eht occasions during the evening in question, once when he went to the St. Cloud Hotel and once when he went for a bag of tobacco. He also testified that at the station house, to which he had been ordered, he said to the roundsman who there made a complaint against him “ yon lie,” which is the specification of the use of disrespectful language referred to in' the charge. His testimony, in fact, amounts-to a confession under oath of the charge against him. In any view there was enough sworn testimony before the commissioners bn the relator’s own showing to authorize them in the interest of the discipline of the service to dismiss him.
Patterson, O’Brien and Ingraham, JJ., concurred; Van Brunt, P. J., dissented.
Writ quashed and proceedings affirmed, with costs.