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Matter of Brenner

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Mar 14, 1902
63 N.E. 133 (N.Y. 1902)

Summary

In Matter of Brenner (170 N.Y. 185) this court held that chapter 602 of the Laws of 1901, in so far as it transferred the appointment of the commissioner of jurors to state authorities was in violation of section 2 of article X of the Constitution.

Summary of this case from People v. Damron

Opinion

Argued February 11, 1902

Decided March 14, 1902

Frank S. Black and Henry W. Goodrich for appellant in first and second proceedings.

Robert H. Elder and Charles H. Hyde for respondent in first and second proceedings. George L. Rives, Corporation Counsel ( James McKeen of counsel), for appellant in third proceeding.

Robert H. Elder and Charles H. Hyde for respondent in third proceeding.

Robert H. Elder and Charles H. Hyde for appellant in fourth proceeding.

John C. Davies, Attorney-General ( Frank S. Black and Henry W. Goodrich of counsel), for respondents in fourth proceeding.



The order from which this appeal was taken reversed an order of the Special Term, which directed that William E. Melody, then in possession of the office of commissioner of jurors of the county of Kings, be committed to the county jail until he should deliver to Jacob Brenner, the petitioner, the books and papers pertaining to that office, the latter claiming to have been appointed to the office under the provisions of chapter 602 of the Laws of 1901. The learned court below not only reversed the original order in favor of the petitioner, but denied his application for the books and papers. It was, therefore, a final order in a special proceeding instituted under section 2174a of the Code, and so reviewable in this court.

The appeal involves the question as to the constitutional validity of the statute above referred to, under which the petitioner was appointed, and the learned court below has held that it is in conflict with section two, article ten of the Constitution, and, therefore, void. This section contains a clear and very important restriction upon the power of the legislature to appoint local officers and to provide for their appointment by any central or state authority. It provides as follows: "All county officers, whose election or appointment is not provided for by this constitution, shall be elected by the electors of the respective counties or appointed by the boards of supervisors, or other county authorities, as the legislature shall direct. * * * All other officers, whose election or appointment is not provided for by this constitution, and all officers, whose office may hereafter be created by law, shall be elected by the people, or appointed, as the legislature may direct." The scope and meaning of this constitutional provision has frequently been the subject of discussion in this court. It was said by Judge ALLEN in the case of People ex rel. Bolton v. Albertson ( 55 N.Y. 50) that the purpose and object of this section, as is very obvious, "was to secure to the several recognized civil and political divisions of the state the right of local self-government, by requiring that all county, city, town and village officers, whose election or appointment was not provided for by the Constitution, save those whose offices might thereafter be created by law, should be elected by the electors of the respective municipalities, or appointed by such authorities thereof as the legislature should designate. As to offices known and in existence at the time of the adoption of the Constitution this provision is absolute in its prohibition of an appointment by the general government or its authority, or by any body other than the local electors, or some local authority designated by law. * * * The Constitution cannot be evaded by a change in the name of an office, nor can an office be divided and the duties assigned to two or more officers under different names, and the appointment to the offices made in any manner except as authorized by the Constitution; and courts will scrutinize acts of the legislature and see that the Constitution is not evaded and its intent frustrated by a mere colorable change in the designation and title or the duties of an officer, when the appointment is taken from the locality, and will hold the act void unless the change is real and substantial." This exposition of the scope and purpose of that part of the Constitution has been steadily adhered to by this court. That it contains a sound and correct statement of the law on the subject is, we think, not open to question. ( Rathbone v. Wirth, 150 N.Y. 459.)

It is the first sentence of the section that is applicable to this case, and it is settled that the officers there mentioned and designated are those existing under actual laws of the state at the time the present Constitution went into effect; that is, such county officers as existed under actual laws on and prior to January first, 1895. It was not competent for the legislature to provide for the appointment of such officers after that date otherwise than by and through some county authority ( People ex rel. Wood v. Draper, 15 N.Y. 532; People v. Pinckney, 32 N.Y. 377), and the restriction cannot be evaded by changing the name of the office, or by some colorable modification of the functions of the officer as they existed at the time of the adoption of the Constitution. ( People v. Raymond, 37 N.Y. 428. ) If the commissioner of jurors of the county of Kings was a county officer at the time of the adoption of the present Constitution, the slight modifications, if any, contained in the statute now under review, are immaterial, and the nature and character of the office has not been changed, but it still remains an old office and not a new one. Whatever the nature and character of the office was at the time the present Constitution went into effect, that is its nature and character now, since the substantial duties and functions of the officer were not changed by the recent statute, nor even his title. But it is not claimed in this case that the statute in question creates any new office, and it is admitted that the power to appoint to it, which is vested in the judges of the Appellate Division of the second department, has been conferred upon a state and not a county authority by the statute now under consideration, and, hence, the law is in conflict with the Constitution if the office of commissioner of jurors was at the time that the present Constitution went into effect a county office. All the learned judges in the court below who have passed upon that question in this case held that it was, except the learned judge at Special Term who granted the application, and he did not attempt to give to it any distinct classification, but held that the commissioner was an aid to the court in the selection of jurors in the general administration of justice. It is obvious, however, that it was either a county or state office, and the fact that the commissioner participated in some sense ministerially in the operation of the judicial machinery throws no light upon the question. All that is equally true of the county clerk and the sheriff, and no one would claim that either of these officers was for that reason anything but a county officer, so that the connection between the office and the courts has no bearing on that question. The ministerial duties that such local officer may be called upon to perform in the administration of justice does not detract in the least from his real character as a county officer.

The office of commissioner of jurors in the county of Kings was created by chapter 322 of the Laws of 1858. Prior to that time it may be that there was no distinctively county office of that character, but it was certainly competent for the legislature to create it and make it thereafter a county office, ( People ex rel. Taylor v. Dunlap, 66 N.Y. 162), and that is, we think, precisely what was accomplished by that statute. Reading the title of that statute, and its various provisions prescribing the duties of the officer, it would be difficult to conceive of anything more that the legislature could have done than was enacted to give to the commissioner the distinctive character of a county officer, and he has retained that character ever since. The legislature then exercised its undoubted power to abolish the methods of selecting jurors by an irregular board of town or county officers and vested these duties in a single individual to be known as a commissioner of jurors. The commissioner was then made a county officer and has continued in that character ever since, and was such at the time the present Constitution went into effect. The power of appointment was conferred upon county authorities except during the brief period following the amendment (Chapter 821 of the Laws of 1866), when the judge of the City Court of Brooklyn was added to the sheriff, county judge and district attorney as the board vested with the appointing power. But this board as so constituted was changed subsequently (Chapter 315 of the Laws of 1870), and the power of appointment conferred upon the county judge, surrogate and county treasurer, where it has remained ever since so far as appears. So that when the present Constitution went into effect, there was in the county of Kings a distinctively county officer, created by statute, the appointment of which was vested by law in a board composed of distinctively county officers. The statute of 1901 conferring the power of appointment of this same officer upon the judges of the Appellate Division is, we think, in conflict with the Constitution, since it changed the power of appointment from a county to a state authority.

We are aware that various statutes have been enacted since the present Constitution went into effect, applicable to other counties of the state, providing for the appointment of an officer charged with the duties of selecting, summoning and drawing jurors, being duties analogous to those performed by the commissioner in the county of Kings. These statutes are not necessarily affected by our decision in this case. We are dealing now only with a statute which provides for the appointment of a county officer by state authority, and the argument has no application to other statutes applicable to counties where there was no such county office when the Constitution went into effect, or if there was the appointing power is still left with the county authorities. It may be that the conditions in the county of Kings with respect to this office when the Constitution took effect were exceptional, in that the office had been made a county office by statute many years before, and, hence, the views here expressed apply only to such a case as is presented by this record. The cases of People v. Dunn ( 157 N.Y. 528) and People v. Hall ( 169 N.Y. 184) have no application to the question involved in this case, for the plain reason that in neither case was it claimed that the statute was at all in conflict with section two of article ten of the Constitution, or that any county officer had been displaced, or his appointment transferred to any state authority. In these cases other constitutional questions were involved, discussed and decided, but the question with which we are now concerned on this appeal was not touched at all, nor does it appear to have been involved.

The learned counsel for the petitioner contends that the validity of this statute, or the petitioner's title to the office, cannot be raised or decided in this proceeding. It is quite true that the title to the office cannot be regularly tried or decided except in an action in the nature of a quo warranto, but the petitioner was not entitled to the order that he applied for until he made out a prima facie right to the possession of the books and papers, and that right is not made out by the production of the certificate of his appointment. That certificate is not evidence of any right to demand the books and papers unless there was some valid law conferring authority upon the judges to make it. The old incumbent had the right to refuse to deliver the books and papers at his peril and thus challenge the validity of the law upon which the whole proceeding rests. When the petitioner applied to the court for an order virtually to put him in possession of the office by transferring to him the custody and possession of the records, and that application was resisted by the incumbent under the old law, the validity of the new statute was necessarily raised, since until that question was decided the court could not determine the evidentiary value of the certificate of appointment. The petitioner did not make a prima facie case by presenting a certificate made under and pursuant to a statute in conflict with the Constitution. Such a law is simply void. It confers no rights, imposes no duties, confers no protection, creates no office, and in legal contemplation is as inoperative for any purpose as if it had never been passed. ( Norton v. Shelby County, 118 U.S. 425.) The petitioner, therefore, established no prima facie right to have the possession of the books and papers, since the statute in so far as it was sought to be applied to Kings county, was void.

This controversy involves four distinct appeals to this court on four different records and all argued together. They all present the same question, and the other three are really adjuncts to this proceeding, and so can be finally disposed of in this decision. Our conclusions in regard to them are:

(1) That the final order in this proceeding, reversing the Special Term, should be affirmed, with costs.

(2) That the order of Justice GAYNOR, staying the proceedings upon the original order of the Special Term, was not a final order in a special proceeding, and, moreover, involved the exercise of discretion. The order affirming it below is not reviewable in this court, and the appeal from it should be dismissed, without costs.

(3) The order granting a mandamus against the comptroller to pay the incumbent of the office under the old law his salary was within the power of the court at Special Term, and having been affirmed on appeal, that order of affirmance should be affirmed here, with costs.

(4) Melody, the incumbent under the old law, brought a taxpayer's action against the judges to restrain them from making any appointment under the new law, but it seems that the preliminary injunction was dissolved and the appointment made. There was a demurrer to the complaint on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, which has been sustained by the courts below, on the ground that the allegations as to waste and contemplated illegal action were insufficient without passing upon the validity of the statute. We think, without discussing the point, that the complaint was open to that objection, and since the purpose of the action is superseded by the decision in this proceeding, and as the action itself no longer involves any substantial question of fact or law, we are inclined to concur with the courts below in the decision upon the demurrer, and so the final order sustaining the demurrer in that action should be affirmed, without costs to either party.

PARKER, Ch. J., GRAY, CULLEN and WERNER, JJ., concur; BARTLETT and HAIGHT, JJ., dissent.

Ordered accordingly.


Summaries of

Matter of Brenner

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Mar 14, 1902
63 N.E. 133 (N.Y. 1902)

In Matter of Brenner (170 N.Y. 185) this court held that chapter 602 of the Laws of 1901, in so far as it transferred the appointment of the commissioner of jurors to state authorities was in violation of section 2 of article X of the Constitution.

Summary of this case from People v. Damron
Case details for

Matter of Brenner

Case Details

Full title:In the Matter of the Application of JACOB BRENNER, as Commissioner of…

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: Mar 14, 1902

Citations

63 N.E. 133 (N.Y. 1902)
63 N.E. 133

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