84 N.Y.S. 565 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
The police commissioner of the city of New York appeals from an order of the Special Term granting the relator’s application for a peremptory writ of mandamus. The order requires the appellant “ forthwith to grade and recognize the relator Oscar J. Finn as a detective sergeant of police on the police force of the Police Department of the City of New York, and to forthwith grant him, the said Oscar J. Finn, all the rights, privileges and emoluments belonging to said rank as a detective sergeant of police on said police force of the Police Department of the City of New York, with interest thereto pertaining as of January 1, 1902, together with fifty dollars ($80) as the relator’s costs in this proceeding.”
It appears by the record that prior to January, 1898, the relator was appointed a policeman in the city, of Brooklyn, and by force of the provisions of the charter of the Greater New York city, on January 1, 1898, he became a member of the police force of the city of New York.
It also appears by the record that at the time the revised charter of the Greater City of New York went into effect there was a headquarters or central station in the borough of Manhattan, and a central
The section of the New York charter under which the present relator claims his right was considered by. the Court of Appeals in Matter of Sugden v. Partridge (174 N. Y, 87). In the opinion of the court it is stated that it was inclined to the view that it was the intention that the provisions of the section should apply to those who continued in the positions occupied by them until the act took effect, and did not relate to those who were acting as detective sergeants on the 1st day of April, 1901, for that construction might extend the benefit of the act to those who were discharged from the service between that date and the date at which the new provision became a law or when it took effect. But the court also remarked that if the provision did not apply to those who continued in the position until the act took effect the fatal provision could be eliminated, leaving all the other provisions of the act in force as applying to those persons filling the office at the time the act went into effect. Under that interpretation of the statute the plaintiff is entitled to his writ (if not otherwise precluded from asserting his right), unless the headquarters squad referred to and mentioned in section 290 of the revised charter means the headquarters squad in the borough of Manhattan. The learned judge at Special Term considered that section 320 of the Greater New York city charter provided that there should be one headquarters in each borough, and that there could be no distinction between the headquarters squad in the borough of Manhattan and the headquarters squad in the borough of Brooklyn.
We think that view is correct. Section 290 of the revised charter provides that the patrolmen or roundsmen theretofore selected or appointed, or theretofore assigned to perform detective duty in
But it is urged that the delay of the relator in instituting the proceeding required that the writ should have been denied. The proceeding is not barred by the four months’ Statute of Limitations prescribed in section 302 of the revised charter, for the reason that the relator did not ask to be restored or reinstated to the police force, and the four months’ limitation contained in section 302 relates only to such a proceeding.
This court has decided that, although there is no statute limiting the time within which an application for a peremptory writ of mandamus must be made, the fotir months’ limitation applicablé to a writ of certiorari will be applied and that the application will be denied, if not made within that time, unless the delay is satisfactorily explained. (People, ex rel. McDonald v. Lantry, 48 App. Div. 131.) However, as said in Matter of McDonald (34 App. Div. 512) there is no hard and fast rule laid down upon the subject, and while an unexplained delay of oyer four months may in general be deemed laches in this class of cases, yet each case miist depend upon its own special facts and circumstances. . In Matter of Murphy v. Keller (61 App, Div. 145) the failure of the relator, who was removed from his position of superintendent of hospitals on January 3, 1898, to institute proceedings to compel his reinstatement until July 1, 1900, was held to constitute laches. He alleged that his failure to proceed earlier was because his right to reinstatement
In the present case the relator was detached from the Brooklyn borough headquarters squad on the 25th of April, 1902. His petition for the writ was sworn to on the 8th day of May, 1903. The excuse he offers is that the question of the constitutionality of the statute had been in litigation. We know from the records of this court that in Matter of Lahey v. Partridge (78 App. Div. 199) it was decided by the Special Term on the 17th of November, 1902, that the relator in that casé was not entitled to a writ of mandamus compelling his restoration to the office of detective sergeant. In January, 1903, this court held that section 290 of the revised Greater New York.charter was unconstitutional. With that decision of this court, the relator might well be excused for not suing out the writ until the Court of Appeals had reversed our judgment; but it remains that from the 25tli of April, 1902, until November, 1902, he was quiescent and made no assertion of his right. The excuse he offers is in kind the same as that advanced in Matter of Murphy v. Keller and People ex rel. Croft v. Keating (supra), and those cases require that the writ here should have been denied because of the relator’s laches.
The .order appealed from should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the- motion for the writ denied, with ten dollars costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., Hatch and Laughlin, JJ., concurred; Ingraham, J., concurred in result.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion for writ denied, with ten dollars costs.