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Brennan v. Mayor

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Jun 25, 1875
62 N.Y. 365 (N.Y. 1875)

Summary

In Brennan v. The Mayor (62 N.Y. 365), the pay-rolls were introduced by the defendant, and so open to the objection that they were not evidence against the plaintiff, but in the case before us they were put in by the plaintiff, and the defendant became entitled to the benefit of such facts as they contained.

Summary of this case from Fitch v. Mayor, Etc., of the City of N.Y

Opinion

Argued June 16, 1875

Decided June 25, 1875

Franklin Bartlett for the appellant. D.J. Dean for the respondents.



The plaintiff has been unfortunate in that in pursuing his claim for four months' service, as an attendant upon one of the courts of the city of New York, he has been compelled to test the constitutionality of a general provision of law relating to the courts of the city, and to force to a judicial determination a contest for power between the chief of the financial department of the city and the judges of the local courts of record. Still if the invalidity of any statute under which he took employment, or any defect of power in the officer by whom he was appointed, or any technical informality in his employment, constitutes a legal bar to his recovery, his action must fail, notwithstanding the fact that he has rendered service in good faith, and with the assent of his superiors, the judges of the court, as well as the comptroller of the city.

Upon a careful examination of the record, I am of opinion that his right of action does not depend upon any of the questions argued at bar; that we are not called upon to pass upon the important questions suggested; and that, upon the evidence, whatever may be the right of those questions, the plaintiff is entitled to recover. Much of the evidence given upon the part of the defendant should have been excluded. First, as not being within any issue made by the pleadings; and, secondly, as incompetent to prove the facts sought to be established. No affirmative defence is put forth in the answer. The defendants content themselves with traversing the allegations of the complaint. Under the issues thus made, it was not competent to prove that the appointment of the plaintiff was in excess of the number of employes allowed by law, or that the fund for the payment of such employes was exhausted. Again, the payrolls made out by clerks and others for the use of the comptroller in the payment of salaries were not evidence for any purpose as against the plaintiff, and were not competent to prove the number of attendants in regular service having rights prior or paramount to the plaintiff. But, assuming that the evidence was competent, and proved every fact which could legally be inferred from it, the plaintiff's rights were not affected by it. First, as to the source of the plaintiff's employment. Prior to the enactment of chapter 382 of the Laws of 1870, on the twenty-sixth of April of that year, vesting in the comptroller of the city the power of appointing and removing attendants in the several courts of the city and county of New York, except Police and District Courts, the courts had and exercised such power of appointment and removal. (Laws of 1853, chap. 529, § 1.) If this power was not constitutionally transferred to the comptroller by the act of 1870, it continued in the courts respectively, and each could employ its own attendants. Neither statute prescribed any form for employing, appointing or commissioning the attendants. They were not officers, but merely servants of the court, performing such menial services as should be required of them from time to time. If the comptroller had the legal right and constitutional power to make the appointment, then the employment of the plaintiff was technically legal, and he was an attendant in actual service, under a formal and regular appointment from March, 1871, to May 20, 1872, and is entitled to recover the compensation by law payable to that class of public servants.

If the attempted transfer of power from the courts to the comptroller was futile as in contravention of the Constitution, the judges of the court might nevertheless acquiesce in the exercise of the power by that officer. The power as lodged in the judges was not judicial in its character, and did not affect the jurisdiction of the courts, or the public interests. It was rather a franchise personal in its character, and if by reason of doubt as to the validity of the law, or for any reason they chose temporarily not to assert the right but to accept the attendants appointed by the comptroller they might lawfully do so, and the attendants thus accepted and adopted, became the attendants of the court as well by the assent and employments of the courts, as the formal designation by the comptroller. Courts and judges cannot, as we have recently held, divest themselves at pleasure of jurisdiction over judicial matters and causes, but they can waive exercise of power, executive and ministerial in its character, in matters affecting only their own personal service and convenience, or accept the result of the action of others, accomplishing the same purpose. The plaintiff presented himself for service in March, 1871, reported himself to the clerk, and by the direction of that officer an oath of office was administered to him by a deputy clerk, and his duties were assigned him in part one of the court. He continued in that service at that place, under the eye of the judges and the court, doing the biddings of the judges, and observing the orders of the court, performing the usual duties of an attendant until May of the following year, when he was formally dismissed by the court through its clerk. This was an employment and appointment by, and a serving as an attendant of the Court of Common Pleas by its direction, entitling the plaintiff to his compensation irrespective of the acts of the comptroller. The paper he held from the comptroller did not disqualify him. The evidence shows no conflict during all this time between the comptroller and the courts, or that the services of the plaintiff were not necessary, or that there were others in attendance, performing or ready to perform the same service. If the power was in the Court of Common Pleas to appoint their own attendants, and they could not forego the exercise of such power, and accept those designated by the comptroller, it was well exercised in respect of the plaintiff, by accepting the plaintiff upon his offer of service, employing him as an attendant, and recognizing him as such. It should be stated in addition that from March to January, he was certified by the court or its proper officers as one of the attendants, and paid as such.

Secondly. As to the suggestion that if the appointment was in the comptroller, the appointment of the plaintiff was in excess of the number allowed by law. This objection is inconsistent with the position taken by the counsel for the corporation, that the power of appointment was in the court, for the reason that by the act of 1853 the court might appoint all necessary attendants. But the great difficulty in giving effect to the objection is, that it is nowhere disclosed how many attendants were in the employ of the Court of Common Pleas in March, 1871, when the plaintiff was first appointed and entered upon his duties. It is claimed that in April, 1870, there were fourteen. Whether all or any of those continued in service until March, 1871, does not appear. There is no evidence that there was more than one other attendant at the latter date, or while the plaintiff was in service, in part one of the court. It cannot be inferred that the fourteen living and in service in April, 1870, continued in the same service in March, 1871, when no such fact is alleged in the answer, and to defeat a claim for services actually performed. The presumption is that officers and courts do not exceed their powers in the performance of ministerial duties. It is claimed, but not proved, that twenty, exclusive of the plaintiff, were in the service from January to May, 1872, the period for which the plaintiff seeks to recover compensation. If this be so they may have been and probably were appointed after the plaintiff's employment, and without notice to him; and if so it would be unjust to hold him to have forfeited his right to compensation. He left on being notified that his services were no longer needed; and until that notification he was an attendant of the court, properly appointed and holding his place. Those subsequently appointed or appointed after his service commenced, must be the losers, if more were appointed than could legally be paid. As the limitation in the number of attendants seems to have been merely a restriction upon the power of the comptroller to appoint, it is possible that the appointments on and after January were by the court, which did not regard the restriction as operative upon it.

The plaintiff's claim is equitable and the defence technical in the extreme, and is not sustained.

The judgment must be reversed and a new trial granted.

All concur.

Judgment reversed.


Summaries of

Brennan v. Mayor

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Jun 25, 1875
62 N.Y. 365 (N.Y. 1875)

In Brennan v. The Mayor (62 N.Y. 365), the pay-rolls were introduced by the defendant, and so open to the objection that they were not evidence against the plaintiff, but in the case before us they were put in by the plaintiff, and the defendant became entitled to the benefit of such facts as they contained.

Summary of this case from Fitch v. Mayor, Etc., of the City of N.Y
Case details for

Brennan v. Mayor

Case Details

Full title:JOHN BRENNAN, Appellant, v . THE MAYOR, ALDERMEN AND COMMONALTY OF THE…

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: Jun 25, 1875

Citations

62 N.Y. 365 (N.Y. 1875)

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