149 N.Y.S. 895 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1914
In January, 1901, the relator herein was duly appointed a factory inspector in the Department of Labor. She continued to perform her duties until about December 1, 1911, when, on account of bad health, she began to absent herself from her work, so that during the period between December 1, 1911, and April 30, 1912, she was absent from her work forty-seven days — more than one-third of the time. She presented no-excuse to the department for-her delinquency. On May Y, 1912, the Labor Commissioner wrote to the relator and told her that, on account of her inability to render services, her name had been dropped from the roster of factory inspectors. The Commissioner requested the relator to turn over to the supervising inspector her badge and the other property in her possession which belonged to the State. The relator immediately replied to this notification by two letters, the second following soon after the first and being written to elaborate the first. In these letters the relator expressed surprise that she had been dropped from the roster and requested that instead of this disposition of her matter, she be granted a leave of absence •until September or October following. She related the ill
The Commissioner of Labor contends that he is without power to reinstate the relator, being debarred from so doing by rule 16 of the State Civil Service Commission. So far as it relates to the question under consideration that rule reads as follows: “ Any person who has held a position by appointment under the Civil Service Rules, and who has been separated from the service through no delinquency or misconduct on his part, may be reinstated without re-examination in a vacant position in the same office and in the same group, subdivision and grade, within one year from the date of such separation, * * * .” Reduced to a sediment it is the contention of the Commissioner of Labor that the relator “has been separated
This rule of the State Civil Service Commission has the force and effect of law (Civil Service Law, § 6); therefore, it is as potent as the statute and must be respected to the same degree. But we must resort to the statute itself in this case for an interpretation of the expression in dispute, for it is from the statute that the expression has been borrowed by the Civil Service Commission. And there can be no difficulty in discovering the meaning of the words as they are used in the statute, for we find them limited and explained in that place. In section 19 of the Civil Service Law occurs this sentence: “The official roster shall show opposite or in connection with each name the date of appointment, employment, promotion or reinstatement, the compensation of the position, the date of commencement of service, and date of transfer in or separation from service by dismissal, resignation, cancellation of appointment or death.” It is here seen that the statute recognizes and points out the ways, and the only ways, in which a person can be separated from the service; that is, by dismissal, resignation, cancellation of appointment or death. None of these conditions arose in the instance before us. The woman was not dismissed, she did not resign, her appointment was not canceled, and she did not die; therefore, she was not separated from the service. The definition in the Civil Service Rules must follow the definition in the law itself, for this is the command of the law. Section 10 of the Civil Service Law provides that the Commission may make rules not inconsistent with 1 ‘ the provisions of this chapter * * * .” The expression “separation from service” or the expression “separated from the service ” has, therefore, the same meaning in the rules that it has in the law. In the rules the meaning of the words is in no degree unlike their meaning in the statute; it is no broader, no narrower, no different.
There was nó laches. The relator was persistent in her demand for reinstatement. The Commissioner held her up from April 25, 1913, until January 5, 1914, without advising her as to his determination concerning her reinstatement, and then he only advised her after her lawyer had written. This is the first time the Commissioner made absolute refusal to reinstate her. This was her first discovery of the wrong for
The order of the Special Term should be reversed and the writ should issue.
All concurred.
Order of the Special Term reversed and peremptory writ of mandamus granted directing' that the relator be restored to the roster or list of eligible employees, and that she be assigned to the first vacancy in this position or in a position similar to the one which she previously held, regardless of the name of the position.