184 Misc. 916 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1945
In 1917, the Legislature of the State of New York added to the State Education Law, section 866 (L. 1917, ch. 786, § 1), which provides ,with respect to the selection of members of the Board of Education in the class of cities which includes the City of Yonkers, that “ * * * members of the board of education shall be appointed * * * by the mayor * * * but in a city having a population of four hundred thousand or more and less than one million, such appointment shall be subject to confirmation by the council.” (Education Law, § 866, subd. 5.)
In 1938, by local law,
In 1943, the Mayor of the City of Yonkers, then in office, reappointed the defendants, who were then serving in that capacity, and whose terms were about to expire, members of the board of education. The Common Council neither advised such-appointments nor consented to them. Since Yonkers was a city having a population of less than four hundred thousand, no such advice or consent was necessary, if the provisions of the Education Law alone governed such appointments. However, if the provisions of the amended charter, which limit the power of the mayor to appoint, by providing that the advice and consent of the council must he obtained, are valid, the appointments of defendants were void, and of no effect.
Apparently believing that such appointments were void and that vacancies consequently existed, the present Mayor has appointed the plaintiffs-relators to the board of education, to succeed the defendants, whose terms were stated, in such latter appointment, to have expired in 1943.
The latter appointees have now brought this action, to determine the title to the offices in question. The facts are not
If the local law governs, plaintiffs are entitled to relief. If the State law governs, defendants were properly appointed and the complaint must be dismissed.
The-authority of the Legislature to enact section 866 of the Education Law is not questioned. The question presented concerns the authority of the city to restrict, by local law, the power of appointment vested in the mayor, by the State Education Law.
If such power existed, it must be found in the State Constitution, or in State legislation enacted pursuant thereto. The city, which is a municipal corporation, is a creature of the law. The law defines its powers and duties. It has no more right to act in excess of the powers granted to it than has a private corporation. (Brooklyn City Railroad Co. v. Whalen, 191 App. Div. 737.) Public education is essentially a State and not a city function. (Gunnison v. Bd. of Education, 176 N. Y. 11.) The Legislature, by general law, has provided for a complete system of public education, and imposed upon boards of education, as corporate bodies, separate and apart from the municipalities in which they exist, the responsibility of maintaining and administering its public school system. (People ex rel. Wells & Newton Co. v. Craig, 232 N. Y. 125; Matter of Fuhrmann v. Graves, 235 N. Y. 77; Matter of Divisich v. Marshall, 281 N. Y. 170.) The same general law provides the powers and duties of such boards (Education Law, § 868), and for the qualifications, terms of office, and methods of selection of the members thereof (Education Law, § 866). Since the Legislature has so provided, the authority of a city to supersede such provision by local law, or ordinance, must come from an express grant of power, and will not be inferred from general grants, or held to exist as an implied, or incidental right. A State policy may not be ignored by a municipality, unless it is specifically empowered to do so in terms clear and explicit. (People ex rel. Kieley v. Lent, 166 App. Div. 550, affd. 215 N. Y. 626; Jewish Consumptives’ Relief Soc. v. Town of Woodbury, 230 App. Div. 228, affd. 256 N. Y. 619; People v. County of Westchester, 282 N. Y. 224.) Neither the Constitution of 1894 (as in effect when the amended charter was adopted), nor any State statute, gave to the City of Yonkers in express terms, any power to enact the provisions of the amended charter, under attack in
It is true that the restrictions imposed on city legislation by section 21 of the City Home Rule Law, apply only to action by the local legislative bodies of cities. The city had no right, however, to adopt local laws by the vote of its electors, any more than it had to adopt such laws by action of its legislative body, if authority for such legislation had not been granted, by the Constitution, or by statute. Moreover, the Constitution expressly excluded from the power granted to cities to adopt local laws, whether adopted by local legislation, or by popular vote, any enactment which might apply to or affect the administration of the public school systems in such cities. Administration is generally understood to mean management, direction or supervision. It may be conceded that one who appoints a public officer does not join in the administration of the public office, by the act of appointment alone. The act of appointment, however, is one which has application to, and affects the administration of the duties or functions of such office, since without an appointment, the office cannot be administered.
The contention of the plaintiffs that the charter provision under attack is not inconsistent with section 866 of the Education Law, may not be sustained. It is true that in 1917, when section 866 of the Education Law was adopted, municipal government in general,- and particularly in Yonkers, was carried on by a mayor, who was the chief executive of the city, and by a council, vested with legislative powers, and that under the present form of government, the mayor of the City of Yonkers is no longer its chief executive, and does not exercise the powers formerly vested in the elected mayor. The council, however, has not, as plaintiffs contend, retained to itself, the powers
The court may not decide, and expresses no opinion, as to which method of appointment is preferable, or best calculated to assure an efficient and nonpolitical administration of the school system. That question is for the Legislature, and not for the court to decide, and is one which may not. be decided by the city, either through its council, or by vote of its electors, until legislative sanction for such action shall have been obtained.
It is the court’s opinion, therefore, that the appointment of the defendants in 1943, was a valid exercise of the appointive power vested in the mayor of the City of Yonkers, pursuant to
Not published in Local Laws of Cities in State, pursuant to section 22 of City Home Rule Law, although adopted as such local law.— [Rep.