George DesMarteau, Esq. Attorney, Rush Henrietta Central School District
Based upon your letter and a telephone conversation with this office, you ask whether an elected member of the board of education of a central school district is disqualified under Judiciary Law, § 511(2) or (3) from serving as a juror.
Judiciary Law, § 511(2), in pertinent part, disqualifies elected "state, city, county, town or village officers" from serving as jurors. The Judiciary Law contains no definition of those terms. The Public Officers Law, §
We believe that members of a school board in a central school district are local, rather than State officers. They are elected locally by qualified electors of the school district (Education Law, §
Nor, in our view, are school board members "city, county, town or village officers" under Judiciary Law, § 511(2). A school district is a municipal corporation, having a legal status independent of a city, county, town or village. (See, General Construction Law, §
We conclude, therefore, that members of the board of education in a central school district are not disqualified under Judiciary Law, § 511 (2) from serving as jurors.
Judiciary Law, § 511(3), in pertinent part, disqualifies the "head of a civil department of the * * * state, city, county, town or village government" and "members of a public authority or state commission or board" from jury duty. We believe it follows from our earlier discussion that a school district, being an independent municipal corporation, is not a civil department of the city, county, town or village government and that a school board member is not, therefore, the "head of a civil department" of such units of local government (ibid., §§ 1701, 1709, 1804[1], 2102, 2103; General Construction Law, §
We conclude that a school board member is not the "head of a civil department of the * * * state, city, county, town or village government."
We construe the phrase "public authority" as used in section 511(3) as referring to those public benefit corporations created by the Legislature for the purpose of constructing or operating a public improvement. (See, for example, Public Authorities Law, §§
The remaining question is whether school board members are members of a "state commission or board" under section 511(3). In order to answer that question, it is necessary to examine the provisions of former Judiciary Law, §§
"Each of the following officers is disqualified to serve as a juror:
* * *
"* * * members of the state tax commission, members of the state commission of correction, members of the state industrial board, members of the public service and transit commissions, the commissioner of education, the commissioner of agriculture and markets, the commissioner of social welfare, the deputy of each officer specified in this subdivision * * *."
Present section 511(3) replaced this specific language with the general phrase "members of a * * * state commission or board" (L 1977, ch 316). We believe that, in adopting this general language, the Legislature intended that such phrase refer to commissions and boards operated at the State level by State officers, such as those commissions and boards previously specified in former sections 506(2), 598(2) and 664(2). We are of the opinion that a school board, although under the general supervision of the State Education Department (Education Law, §
We conclude that a member of the board of education of a central school district is not disqualified under Judiciary Law, § 511(2) or (3) from serving as a juror.
