14 N.J. Misc. 164 | N.J. | 1936
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Philip William Grece was, in February, 1930, appointed judge of the Second District Court of the City of Jersey City for a term of five years. On August 20th, 1932, he appointed, effective as of August -22d, 1932, John D. Rotherham, Jr., to be his confidential employe or agent in that judgeship. In February, 1935, Grece was reappointed and on February 20th, 1935, was sworn to his new term. On February 25th, 1935, effective February 28th, 1935, he summarily informed Rotherham that the latter’s employment was terminated. Rotherham appeal to the civil service commission which decided that by reason of the fact that the position was in the unclassified service the commission had no jurisdiction. This is the return of a rule, sued out by Rotherham, directing the District Court judge to show cause why a peremptory or alternative writ of mandamus should not issue directing restoration of Rotherham to his job.
The legal authority to set up the employment is not questioned. It remains, however, that the only apparent statutory authority is that which specifically classifies the employment as not in the classified service; viz., chapter 176 of the Pamphlet Laws of 1930 (Cum. Supp. Comp. Stat. 1925-1930, pp. 1305 et seq., §§ 144-136 et seq.), a supplement to the Civil Service act which in paragraph 17 of section 44 (Cum. Supp. Comp. Stat. 1925-1936, p. 1324, § 144-179, 44 (17) (m), under the caption “Definition of Terms,” provides:
The question of whether or not the duties actually performed by Rotherham were of a confidential nature is not to the point. It may be, as argued, that the judge, in declining to retain Rotherham, was motivated by unethical political considerations, and indeed—which is not argued—that the very setting up of the employment was attributable to those influences. To moralize thereon would help to settle no issue in the case. It is, however, important to determine whether the employment, which we shall assume is authorized by the legislative enactment, is, by the intent of the act, confidential in character. It seems inescapable that the expression “one confidential employe or agent” comprehends none other than one who shall perform confidential services. And since the services are to be confidential it is difficult to imagine their nature unless they are to fall within the field of the judge’s own activities, for which he is himself responsible and for the doing of which another who is within the confidence of the judge may be by him selected. This particularly because the services of the court clerk and of the sergeant-at-arms continue without interruption. The appointment is such, we think, as does not out-last the term of the appointing officer. Lacking earlier termination it ends with the last mentioned term. Its
We think, too, that the work to which prosecutor was appointed was neither an office nor a position, and if this be so he is not entitled to a writ of mandamus. The duties are not assigned by any public law. They are not certain. There is nothing to prove that they are permanent. The statutory language—a confidential employe—suggests that the work is merely an employment. It is, we think, quite consistent with the statute that the judge or other officer who makes such an appointment may later terminate the employment as well as the service of a particular employe.
We find that the occupation is not one to which the legislature intended to give tenure. On the merits, therefore, the prosecutor is not entitled to prevail.
Also, it may well be doubted whether prosecutor, in waiting for four months after the act of which he complains before he sought the rule, is free of laches.
The writ will be denied and the rule discharged, with costs.