140 N.Y.S. 756 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1913
If the amendment of 1912 to section 1089 of the revised charter, which fixed a three-year limitation upon the life of lists of those eligible for appointment to the teaching staff of the public school system of the city of Hew York, had been placed in that charter upon its revision we should not now be confronted with the vexatious problem which this case presents. The controversy here, and which has engendered considerable acrimony among those charged with the administration of the public school system, is as to the effect to be given to the following clause contained in section 1090 of the revised charter: “ Existing eligible lists in The City of Hew York and the relative standing of persons whose names are on said lists shall not be affected by the passage of this act.” As might naturally be expected a wide diversity of view as to the interpretation of the clause quoted is entertained by the parties to' this litigation. On behalf of the relator, a school" teacher, and, as would appear from the papers on this motion, some three thousand other school teachers, all holding a certificate known as license Ho. 1, being the lowest or initial grade of license qualifying the holder to teach in the public schools of the city, it is claimed that such license at the time of the enactment of the educational chapter of the revised charter in February, 1902, qualified the holder for promotion to teach the much higher and the very much more important class generally known and entitled as the graduating class. For the purposes of this discussion such will be regarded to have been the status of the relator and others similarly situated at the time of the adoption of the revised charter. It is then the further contention of the relator that by reason of the above quoted clause (§ 1090, supra) his right to thereafter be promoted was fixed, determined and forever “ vested,” and that no additional mental qualifications touching his efficiency as a teacher entitled
On behalf of the city superintendent of schools, whose activity in this controversy entitles him to the characterization of being the real head and front of the opposition to the claims of the relator and the other holders of licenses Ho. 1, it is urged that the board of education possessed and exercised the power from time to time since the adoption of the revised charter to increase and raise the standards of efficiency and qualification of teachers for appointment and promotion to teach graduating classes and that the relator-is neither entitled nor qualified to be placed upon the eligible list for such promotion, and has not by the requisite examinations established or demonstrated the qualifications which for ten years last past have been required by the board of education of those who have been and are entitled to be appointed or promoted to teach said classes. The relator ignores all that the city superintendent urges against him and plants himself firmly and squarely upon what he says is his statutory right (§ 1090, sufra) to be placed upon such eligible list. He says that this clause in the charter not alone entitled him to a standing upon such list, but that it also gave him a “ vested ” right to promotion to the position of teacher of a graduating class without further examination as to his fitness, and that his lack of qualifications or his deficiencies could not thereafter be inquired into when such promotion was to be had. If, therefore, this statute accomplished what the relator claims it did he may prevail on this application, otherwise not.
The contention is serious and one which to my mind is fraught with some considerable peril to the educational system of the city. In fact so much so that if there is a reasonable doubt on this application as to the interpretation to' be given to the clause relied on it should in the interests of 'public education be resolved against* the relator.
The objections to the relator’s interpretation which appeal to me may be briefly stated.
First, the inequality of operation of the statute; As to
Second. By section 9 of article 5 of the Constitution, “Appointments and promotions in the civil service of the State, and of all the civil divisions thereof, including cities and villages, shall be made according to merit and fitness to be ascertained, so far as practicable, by examinations, which, so far as practicable, shall be competitive.”
In People ex rel. McClelland v. Roberts, 148 N. Y. 366, this language was said to be so broad and imperative as to place the principle of appointments according to merit and fitness to be ascertained by competitive examination, as practically beyond the control of the legislature and secure from any mere statutory changes; and that if the legislature should repeal all the statutes and regulations on the subject of appointments in the civil service “ the mandate of the Constitution would still remain, and would so far execute itself as to require the courts, in a proper case, to pronounce appointments made without compliance with its requirements illegal.” What was said here of appointments applies with equal force to promotions. Whilst I am not deciding that the clause in question if given the effect of a promotion by the legislature is in violation of the section of the Constitution referred to, I do think that the enactment ought not to be regarded as a right to promotion unless that is the only view permissible.
The question then is, can we find a fair and reasonable basis for the operation of the clause in question! In my opinion we can and that is by a limitation of it to the cases of original appointment or appointments in the first instance.
Therefore, reading the various sections of the charter as the occasion to my mind demands, the clause in question is given a rational, fair and appropriate meaning by limiting it, as I think it ought to be limited, to lists of those entitled to appointment as teachers and that promotions were subject to such increased and higher standards and qualifications as the educational requirements of the times should seem to demand.
Before we should ascribe to the legislature an intention to “ vest ” a permanent right in teachers of the more elementary classes of our public schools to a promotion to teach graduating classes, without showing fitness and qualification at the time of promotion, we should find it expressed in the clearest and most explicit terms and not in a clause of such doubtful and uncertain meaning as that under review. It would indeed be charging the Legislature with an almost unpardonable lack of foresight to hold that it had enacted that “ once eligible ” for certain branches of school teaching rendered one “ forever eligible.” It might do to so interpret in some kinds of service, even of a public nature, but not in so vital a sphere as public education with its almost daily mutations and inevitable progression. It is a far cry from the
It is further argued by the relator that the placement of his name on the eligible list for promotion to teach the graduating class does not necessarily mean that the promotion will follow, and that the board of education, when he is nominated by the hoard of superintendents for promotion pursuant to section 1090 of the revised charter, may ignore or reject him. Bearing in mind that about three thousand teachers are in the same class with the relator this proposition must assume that in order to obtain duly qualified teachers of graduating classes who will measure up to existing standards the board will ignore or reject the entire class.' :If they are on the eligible list for promotion, this wholesale rejection would be such an evidence of "bad faith and unjust discrim
If the foregoing views are correct, the present position of the board of education is erroneous and it, therefore, follows that the increased standards for promotions which were fixed from time to time by the board and which disqualified the holders of license No. 1 must prevail. The motion for a peremptory writ of mandamus should be denied.
Motion denied.