61 N.J.L. 117 | N.J. | 1897
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The relator complains that, being deputy warden of the Hudson county almshouse, he was, on December 17th; 1896, dismissed from that place by resolution of the board of chosen freeholders, without good cause shown after a fair and impartial hearing, although he is an honorably-discharged Union soldier who served in the war of the rebellion; and he prays a mandamus directing the board to restore him.
His claim depends upon the act of March 14th, 1895 (Gen. Stat., p. ,3702), which enacts that no honorably-discharged Union soldier, sailor or marine, having served in the war of the rebellion, who holds a position or office under the govern
It is admitted that the relator received a salary from the county, and the .first question to be considered is whether his .place was■ “a position or office” within the meaning of this statute.
We think it was not “an office/’ but was “a position.”
“An office” is a place created, or at least recognized, by the law of the state, and to which certain permanent public duties are assigned either by the law itself or by regulations adopted under authority of law. Bownes v. Meehan, 16 Vroom 189; Lewis v. Jersey City, 22 Id. 240 ; State v. Broome, ante p. 115. So far as we have discovered, the relator’s place does not possess these characteristics.
“A position,” within the purview óf this act, is defined to be a place, the duties of which are continuous and permanent, analogous to those of an office, and which pertain to the position as such. Lewis v. Jersey City, ubi supra. The place of deputy warden of the almshouse comes within this description. The duties of a deputy warden are indicated by the title of his position, and consist in'rendering assistance to the warden in the discharge of his functions, and hence are continuous and permanent, as are those of his superior.
The next question is, was the term of his position “fixed by law ? ” The respondent insists that it was, on two grounds— first, the. eighth section of the act of May 16th, 1894 (Gen. Stat., p. 422); second, the resolution of the board passed December 5th, 1895, by which the relator received his last appointment.'
The act cited fixes the term of “ offices ” only, and for reasons just stated we think it does not apply to the position held by the relator.
In our judgment the relator’s term was not fixed by law, except as the act of 1895 fixed it—during good behavior. Adams v. Haines, 19 Vroom 25; Townsend v. Boughner, 26 Id. 380.
The case of Horan v. Orange, 29 Vroom 533, is cited in opposition to this view. But the decision of that case appears to have rested on the idea that the relations between Horan and the board of education depended wholly on a special contract to which the act in question had no application, and no reference was made to the clause of the statute
Finally, the relator’s status as an honorably-discharged Union soldier who served in the war of the rebellion is questioned by the respondent. But on this point we deem the proof satisfactory. The formal discharge issued by the government of the United States at the time of mustering out is not essential as evidence to establish the fact of honorable discharge.
A peremptory mandamus should issue, commanding the board to restore the relator to his position as deputy warden of the county almshouse.