107 N.E. 49 | NY | 1914
The relator is a volunteer fireman. For nine years he was employed as a laborer in the department of water supply, gas and electricity of the city of New York. On January 1, 1914, he was informed that until further notice he would not be allowed to work, and on February 6, 1914, he received a written order of *132 removal, in which it was stated that he had been removed on account of lack of appropriation, and that his name had been returned to the civil service commission to be placed on the preferred eligible list. The budget of 1914 made allowance for only 261 laborers, and from 273 to 276 were on the payroll of the department. In order to keep within the appropriation the number had to be reduced. Several laborers, exactly how many the record does not show, were, therefore, dropped from the roll, and among them was the relator. Simultaneously with these changes, two men who were not laborers, but who had been employed as assistant foremen and well drivers, were demoted, and are now classified as laborers. These assistant foremen and well drivers were not provided for in the new budget, and they were reclassified and put in the class of laborers to keep them in the department. The answer, which is very vague and evasive, admits that this was done. Of course, if it had not been done, two more laborers might have been retained. The relator claims upon these facts that the order of removal denies to him a preference secured by statute to volunteer firemen.
The Appellate Division, adopting the opinion of the Special Term, has held that under section
It is not, in our view, an adequate answer to say that the relator was one of a class of laborers, who were engaged in similar work. A laborer holds a position, though he does not hold an office, and it is possible to abolish his position though other laborers are retained. If a hundred laborers are employed, and the budget makes provision for ninety, it is necessary to reduce the positions by ten; and men who are relieved from duty for that reason, owe their suspension to the termination of their positions just as truly as if their functions were extraordinary or unique. The real question is whether the statute imposes a duty on the appointing power to terminate their positions as a last resort, after first sacrificing the positions held by other and less favored classes. We think the duty does not exist.
Unable, though we are, to accept the construction of the statute that found favor in the court below, we have been led by another path to the conclusion that the relator was entitled to reinstatement. We think the record shows that his position has not been abolished, but that it has been maintained and filled by some one else. It the relator was ousted in order to give his place to another, he is not without a remedy. (People ex rel.Shields v. Scannell,
We do not overlook the argument that the two men who were added to the list of laborers may be considered as succeeding to the positions of other laborers, not within any preferred class, who were dropped from the roll at the same time as the relator. We think the argument will not hold. The record makes it plain that the demotion of the well drivers, their reclassification as laborers, their addition as laborers to the payroll, and the dropping from the payroll of the relator and others, were all parts *136 of one transaction. The commissioner makes no claim that he intended that the new men should succeed to any specific position from among the total number of positions ostensibly abolished. If it cannot be said with certainty that either of them took the place of the relator, it cannot be said with any greater approach to certainty that they took the place of any one else. All that we can say with certainty is that in the very act of declaring some ten or twelve places unnecessary and abolished, two new places of the same nature were created; and the relator, because of his preferred right to reinstatement, was entitled, in our judgment, to be appointed to one of them. To deny to him that measure of preference would do violence alike to the spirit and to the letter of the statute.
The order should be affirmed, with costs.
WERNER, HISCOCK, COLLIN, HOGAN and MILLER, JJ., concur; CHASE, J., concurs on last ground stated in opinion.
Order affirmed.