Opinion
Argued October 9, 1889
Decided November 26, 1889
W.W. MacFarland for appellant. E. Countryman for respondent.
The act of April 29, 1863, establishing a quarantine, and, among other things, defining the qualifications of certain officers who should execute the powers and perform the duties created by it (Laws of 1863, chap. 358), made it the duty of the governor to appoint "three discreet persons, citizens of this state, who shall be residents of the `Metropolitan Police District,'" as commissioners of quarantine, who should hold their offices for three years and until their successors were appointed and qualified, and required him every three years thereafter, and as often as vacancies should occur by reason, among other things, of "removal from the said district." to appoint persons of like qualifications to fill the places thus made vacant. (id. § 54.) Under this act commissioners were, from time to time, appointed, and on the 29th of January, 1880, a vacancy existing, the defendant, Thomas C. Platt, was appointed quarantine commissioner. He entered upon the duties of his office and was in the exercise of its functions when this action was instituted for his removal upon the ground that he was not, at the time of his appointment, a resident of the "Metropolitan Police District," or of any territory included therein, but was a resident of the county of Tioga, which at no time was or had been part of said district.
Upon trial of the issues formed in the action, the jury found for the plaintiff, and, in answer to a specific question submitted to them, said, that "the defendant did not have a legal residence and domicile at the time in question in the metropolitan police district," thus sustaining, as the plaintiff claims, the ground upon which the action was brought. On the other hand, the defendant contends that his actual residence, at the time of his appointment, was in the city of New York, a place within the specified district, that it continued to be there during his whole incumbency, and that this was enough although his domicile remained in Tioga county and he there exercised all the rights which pertained to it. The appeal, therefore, presents a single question, and that is to be answered by ascertaining the true construction of the statute. ( Supra).
Before going to that it will be well to rehearse the facts on which the verdict turned. From the allegations in the answer, born in the village of Owego and county of Tioga, and always resided there down to 1878. He sold his family residence in Owego in the spring of 1878, and has never kept house anywhere since. After selling his house he and his wife boarded at a hotel in Owego until September, 1879. He then changed his boarding-house to the city of New York, but retained a room in the Owego hotel, hiring it by the month, until September, 1882, occupying it on occasional visits during that period. After going to New York he and his wife occupied rooms in a boarding-house until the fall of 1880, when they changed their quarters to the Fifth Avenue Hotel, and have remained there, except during the hot season of each year, ever since. It was while they were boarding at the corner of Fifth avenue and Forty-first street, in the city of New York, that the defendant received the appointment of commissioner of quarantine. He has been, since April, 1879, secretary or president of an express company in New York, and during the same period president of a bank in Owego, and president of a railroad company, having its head-quarters at Auburn. He has also been, since October, 1883, a partner in a manufacturing firm carrying on business at Owego. He also, during the same period, nearly every year, and whenever he exercised the right anywhere, at local, state and national elections, voted at Owego. On one occasion, in July, 1880, about five months after he had qualified as and assumed the office of quarantine commissioner, he offered to vote at a special election in Owego, called for the purpose of voting money for school purposes. His right to vote was challenged on the ground that he was not a resident of the village, and he took the general oath and voted under the challenge. He thus declared, under oath, that he had resided in the county of Tioga for four months, and in the village for thirty days prior to that election. About a year later, in September, 1881, he again made oath before a notary public, in acknowledging the execution of a deed, that he then resided in the village of Owego."
Upon the trial he also testified that "he never intended to change or abandon his domicile in Owego." He further testified that he adhered to this view down to the trial, and "that during all these years he had intended to retain his domicile in Owego."
Concerning these matters both parties agree. It is thus obvious that the specific question was properly answered by the jury, and we have now to inquire whether that finding warrants the judgment which followed.
The office is a statutory one, and the act which created the patronage or power to confer the trust prescribes particular circumstances without which a person is not eligible to its enjoyment. He must be "a citizen of the state," and he must also be "a resident of the metropolitan police district," a well defined, but comparatively small portion of the state. A person so situated is put in a certain relation to the district, and, as a resident, is distinguished from a stranger. The relation is one which has a legal sanction, and, in some cases, secures its possessor a settlement and pauper privileges under the poor laws or under the election laws a right to vote. And in all cases where a statute prescribes "residence" as a qualification for the enjoyment of a privilege or the exercise of a franchise, the word is equivalent to the place of domicile of the person who claims its benefit.
The defendant offers his vote in Tioga county because he is a resident of that county, and of the election district where it is offered; it is received under the provision of law, that a person so situated shall be entitled to the privilege. And his absence from that county, however long, so that it is temporary, and not in abandonment of his home, will not deprive him of his residence, though his absence extend through a series of years. Nor can his actual presence during that time in another district entitle him to the enjoyment of another franchise for which only a resident of that district is, by law, qualified. For the latter purpose he is, in contemplation of law, as much a stranger in the "Metropolitan Police District," as for the other purpose he is at home, or resident in Tioga. The inquiry suggested by the statute is a simple one, easily determined by the appointing power when the legal home of the candidate is found, and it would be productive of great confusion and difficulty if its answer was made to depend upon his place of business, or its nature, or amount, or the degree of attention which he personally gave to it.
We entertain no doubt as to the true meaning of the statute, and in view of the extended discussion given to the question in the Supreme Court (50 Hun, 454), we think it necessary only to add that we agree in the conclusion at which that court arrived.
The judgment appealed from should, therefore, be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.