70 A.2d 77 | N.J. | 1949
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *300 The plaintiff, a police officer of the City of Newark since 1924, applied for and was granted a leave of absence without pay for a period from February 1, 1949, to May 31, 1949, to enable him to become a candidate in the city commission election in Newark on May 10th. In the course of the campaign and while on leave of absence he distributed literature and made several speeches and radio addresses in a number of which he asserted both generally and specifically that there was corruption, graft and misconduct in the police department of the City of Newark and charged his superiors with knowledge of and participation therein. In the middle of the campaign and while the plaintiff was still on leave, the Chief of Police called him in and requested him to furnish details with respect to the charges he had been making, but the plaintiff refused to answer any questions. His leave of absence was not revoked, however, and he was permitted to continue with his campaigning.
On June 1st, the first day of his return to active duty, the plaintiff was served with departmental charges preferred by the Chief of Police and was suspended from duty without pay pending the hearing of these charges. The charges, all of which are founded upon the violation of departmental rules and regulations, are six in number: (1) willful disobedience of orders and failure to report crime to his commanding officer, based upon his refusal to answer the questions put to him by his chief; (2) neglect of duty and failure to report the commission of crime, based upon a radio address made on April 4th wherein he professed to know the names of certain violators of the law; (3) failure to take proper police action and to divulge information to his superior officers, based upon a broadcast made on April 11th to the effect that narcotic peddlers were operating in Newark; (4) failure *301 to take proper police action and to divulge information to his superior officers, based upon a statement made in the same broadcast in which he publicly named a number of alleged gamblers still at large; (5) conduct contrary to good order and discipline in the making of false and inaccurate statements in broadcasts made on April 18th and May 9th concerning the handling by the police department of the case of a person arrested for carrying concealed weapons; and (6) public disparagement and unfavorable comment on the official actions of the Director of Public Safety, whom he charged in the course of a broadcast on May 9th with neglecting his public duties.
Prior to the date set for the hearing of these departmental charges by Director of Public Safety Keenan, the plaintiff commenced the present proceeding in lieu of a prerogative writ and, on June 27, 1949, on his motion a summary judgment was entered in his favor, vacating his suspension, directing his reinstatement and ordering that the charges against him be expunged, that the defendant Director of Public Safety be permanently enjoined from conducting any hearings on these charges, and that the Board of Commissioners reimburse him for the loss of his salary between the date of his suspension and his reinstatement. From this judgment the defendants took an appeal to the Appellate Division of the Superior Court. That appeal has now been brought here on our own certification.
The defendants contend that the plaintiff must exhaust his administrative remedies, consisting in this case, first, of a hearing before the defendant Director of Public Safety, and then a review by way of a hearing de novo before the Civil Service Commission, R.S. 11:22-38 and 39, before the plaintiff may resort to a proceeding in lieu of a prerogative writ. The plaintiff claims that the charges against him are insufficient as a matter of law for the reason that while he was on leave of absence he was not subject to the rules and regulations of the Police Department and so he could not have been guilty of violating any of them. These two questions will be considered separately. *302
Enough has been said to raise grave doubts as to the wisdom of adopting the rule of exhaustion of administrative remedies as contended for by the defendants. To determine what rule of law should be adopted in the case before us, we must consider what was intended to be accomplished by Article VI, Section V, paragraph 4, of our Constitution:
"4. Prerogative writs are superseded and, in lieu thereof, review, hearing and relief shall be afforded in the Superior Court, on terms and in the manner provided by rules of the Supreme Court, as of right, except in criminal causes where such review shall be discretionary."
The prerogative writs were superseded in the 1947 Constitution because certain phases of their procedure had been the cause of widespread dissatisfaction. First, there was always the danger of discovering in an appellate court that one had sued out the wrong prerogative writ, rendering it necessary to start over again, if indeed one had not lost his cause of action by laches or through an intervening change of position. Thus, for example, one might have applied for and been granted certiorari only to discover after argument and determination that he should have proceeded by way of quo warranto or mandamus, or vice versa; see, e.g.,Ford v. Gilbert,
Another complaint directed against the old prerogative writs was the delay on bringing them to a conclusion. Fifty-three years ago a writer in the New Jersey Law Journal commented: "The function of the writ [certiorari] will be greatly enhanced when a more speedy determination follows its allowance, and it ceases to arrest unto death the enterprises and projected improvements of our citizens." 19 N.J.L.J. 133 (1896). The taking of depositions on proceedings by prerogative writs, like ordinary references, had all too often proceeded at a leisurely pace without regard to the public importance of the issues, and arguments before the former Supreme Court could only be heard at its terms in February, May and October. The delays on appeal were even greater: by reason of the fact that only ten days ensued between each *305 term of the Supreme Court and the next ensuing term of the Court of Errors and Appeals, there was always a lapse of at least one term and generally more than one term before any appeal could ultimately be heard in the court of last resort. To be considered in dealing with the constitutional provisions for proceedings in lieu of prerogative writs is the policy of the new Constitution against delay and delaying tactics in all litigation; Cf. Const., Article VI, Section II, paragraph 3, conferring on the Supreme Court the power to "make rules governing the administration of all courts in the State and, subject to law, the practice and procedure in all such courts," and Article VI, Section VII, paragraphs 1 and 2, designating the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court as "the administrative head of all of the courts in the State" and giving him the power to "assign judges of the Superior Court to the Divisions and Parts of the Superior Court" and "from time to time to transfer judges from one assignment to another as need appears." The importance of dispatch in this particular class of cases is recognized in the rule above referred to, especially in Rule 3:81-6 advancing such proceedings "for hearing, trial and disposition by the court," and in Rule 3:81-4, providing for motions for summary judgment on proceedings in lieu of prerogative writs brought to enforce a ministerial act or duty. These cases are required to be decided promptly as befits the transaction of important public business. The taking of testimony in open court or, more commonly, hearings on stipulated facts have replaced the taking of depositions, a practice that may achieve as great a change in this field as was accomplished almost a century ago by the rule permitting the taking of testimony in Chancery orally rather than by depositions, Rule 175 of the Rules of the Court of Chancery (1871). Finally, each of the old prerogative writs retained a formality in its pleading and technicalities in its procedure that contrasted to their disadvantage with the simplicity of actions at law under the Practice Act (1912) and the Chancery Act (1915).
Despite these objections to the former practice on prerogative writs, the fact remains that certiorari, the most widely *306
used of the prerogative writs, as it developed in New Jersey, presents an outstanding example of the capacity of the common law to develop to meet new needs. The New Jersey courts "have taken in almost every respect a more liberal view of the province of the writ [of certiorari] than the courts of other commonwealths — * * *" Goodnow, The Writ of Certiorari, 6 Pol. Sci. Q.
493-532 (1891). At common law the writ of certiorari was one of limited utility, serving merely to bring up a record of an inferior court or of certain of its officers such as sheriffs or coroners, 1 Holdsworth, History of English Law 228 (1922). Evidence outside the record was never admissible, King v.Inhabitants of Wootton-Rivers, 5 Mod. 150, 87 Eng. Rep. 576
(1794); Inter the Inhabitants of Weston-Rivers, 2 Salk. 493,91 Eng. Rep. 423 (1795); Pike v. Herriman,
"Upon a Certiorari from the County Court Upon reading severall Affidavits hearing the Counsell on both Sides It is Ordered by the Court that a procedendo be awarded to the Court below." *307 This practice had reached full growth by 1794 in State v.Justices, etc., of Middlesex, 1 N.J.L. [[*]244] 283, 284 (Sup. Ct. 1794), where the writ was used to inquire into the validity of an election and the court relied on the facts developed in the depositions in reaching its decision, and is reflected in the first available rules of the Supreme Court. 1 N.J.L. xii-xiii (1805).
The policy of enlarging the record by extrinsic evidence made it possible to extend the scope of the writ beyond the review of the judicial action of inferior courts to includequasi-judicial, quasi-legislative, and administrative action of all kinds (even including cases where there was an abuse of administrative discretion) to do justice between the private citizen and a public official or body in many types of cases where it could not have been attained under the common law rule to the contrary. The variety of uses to which certiorari was put in civil matters (its use in criminal causes is dealt with separately in the new Constitution and is not treated here) was summarized by Chief Justice Green in Treasurer of Camden v.Mulford,
"* * * in this state the remedy [certiorari] has been extended to wrongs inflicted upon individuals, whether by judicial decision, by corporate acts, or by the acts of special jurisdictions created by statute.
"Thus, it is habitually used as a remedy against unlawful taxation, either for state, county, township, or city purposes; and while the remedy has been denied in other states, as dangerous or prejudicial to the public welfare, no such evil has been experienced from the use of the remedy, while it has been found eminently salutary and efficacious as a protection to private rights against oppressive and illegal taxation.
"It is used to test the legality of an election, State v.Justices of Middlesex, Coxe 244; State v. Anderson, Coxe 318; to test the validity of a by-law of a municipal corporation,State v. Corporation of New Brunswick, Coxe 393; to test the validity of the classing and assessing of the militia under the militia act of 1794, State v. Chambers, Coxe 400; to review the return list of delinquents, and executions issued for the collection of fines imposed for neglect of militia duty, Statev. Kirby, 1 Halst. 143; State v. Atkinson, 4 Halst. 271; the laying out of a road under an act incorporating a turnpike company, State v. Newark and Pompton Turnpike Co.,
The especial significance of the broad scope of certiorari in New Jersey in protecting an aggrieved citizen from almost every form of improper official action is epitomized by Holdsworth in speaking of the prerogative writs generally:
"This judicial control could be applied at the suit of the private citizen. The private citizen could set in motion the different forms of procedure open to the Crown, and, in addition, he could bring a civil action. This power to bring a civil action was an effective control, a safeguard of the liberty of the subject, and one of the best of all the securities for the maintenance of the supremacy of the law." (10 History of EnglishLaw, 157.)
Our problem is, therefore, by rules of court and judicial decisions, to preserve as far as may be the substantive law of the former prerogative writs as a means of safeguarding individual rights against public officials and governmental bodies, while at the same time avoiding the defects of procedure that led to criticism. Among our new Rules is 3:81-14:
"Except where it is manifest that the interests of justice require otherwise, proceedings under Rule 3:81 shall not be maintainable, so long as there is available judicial review to a county court or inferior tribunal or administrative review to an administrative agency or tribunal, which has not been exhausted."
When do the interests of justice require the use of a proceeding in lieu of a prerogative writ before exhausting the remedies specified in Rule 3:81-14? Under the former practice there were two generally recognized exceptions to the rule: first, when the jurisdiction of the statutory tribunal was questioned on persuasive grounds a writ of certiorari might be allowed the challenging party in advance of the hearing before the statutory tribunal for the obvious reason that if the question of jurisdiction were resolved against the statutory tribunal the parties would be spared the vexation of a useless hearing; second, when the statutory tribunal had jurisdiction but the charges asserted before it were so palpably defective that its jurisdiction was merely colorable, a writ might likewise *309
be allowed in advance of the hearing before a statutory tribunal,Mowery v. Camden,
An examination of the charges made in the pending case against the plaintiff by the defendant Chief of Police does not convince us that they are so palpably defective as to make his jurisdiction merely colorable, but on the contrary, for the reasons which we will set forth under Point II, we think the charges are substantial and well founded in law, with the result that Rule 3:81-14 should be applied.
To insist, for example, as the plaintiff does, that, in the circumstances here present, the plaintiff, being in Newark, *311 could have with impunity refused to obey an order to return to duty temporarily in an emergency that occurred during the period of his leave of absence is to ignore the role in our government of a police officer. For the same reason he was not privileged during his self-styled hiatus to fail to report the commission of any crimes of which he had knowledge or to refuse to divulge such information when so requested by his superior officers. To hold otherwise would permit of conduct adverse to the discipline and morale of a police department that is so vital to the efficient discharge of its duties in the protection of the public:
"* * * The police department of our cities * * * is built upon a plane of public efficiency, which has ordinary truth and morality as its base, and when these essential elements of public probity be lost, the department shall have lost, not only the confidence of the community, but the fundamental mainstay and support which is necessary to its effective and satisfactory operation." [Martin v. Smith,
So far as concerns the obligation of a police officer to observe applicable departmental rules and regulations, it is our conviction that a leave of absence, instead of constituting a complete severance of responsibility, is analogous to the off duty period enjoyed daily by every police officer, except that it extends for a longer period, subjecting him to liability for his misconduct or for his breach of rules and regulations in accord with the philosophy expressed in Herbert v. Atlantic City,
"It is argued for the prosecutor that because he was not on duty at the time as a police officer when the episode related occurred, therefore, the quoted section of the statute is not applicable to him. In other words, the contention practically is that a police officer when off duty may misbehave and misconduct himself as much as he pleases, namely, he may be engaged openly in conduct tending to reflect upon the morale and discipline of the police force and department, without being held to account for such misbehavior or misconduct. If this were so, then the discipline and morale of the police force, which the legislature evidently intended to secure by the provision of the statute referred to, is seriously threatened, and its efficacious object of requiring good behavior and denouncing misconduct of a police officer will be signally defeated." *312
This view was expressly adopted by unanimous vote of the Court of Errors and Appeals in Hailes v. Town of Kearny,
We conclude, therefore, that the plaintiff during his leave of absence was subject to the departmental rules and regulations that he is charged with having breached, that the charges made against him are not for this reason insufficient as a matter of law, and that the relief granted by the court below is erroneous. Accordingly, the judgment of the Law Division of the Superior Court is reversed.
For reversal — Chief Justice VANDERBILT, and Justices CASE, HEHER, OLIPHANT, BURLING and ACKERSON — 6.
For affirmance — None.