Summary
In People ex rel. Ward v. Scheu (167 N.Y. 292) the question presented was whether a vacancy existed in the office of commissioner of public works in the city of Buffalo.
Summary of this case from Matter of Trounstine v. BrittOpinion
Argued May 10, 1901
Decided June 4, 1901
Tracy C. Becker and Simon Fleischmann for appellant.
W.H. Cuddeback for respondent.
The charter of the city of Buffalo provides for a department of public works of which the board of public works shall be the head. This board consists of three commissioners of public works, one of whom is to be elected by the electors and the other two of whom are to be appointed by the mayor. Under section 271 of said charter "a vacancy in the office of an elected commissioner shall be filled by appointment by the mayor, until the first day of January, after the next municipal election, at which election a commissioner shall be elected to fill the unexpired term of the elected commissioner whose office became vacant." By section 370 of said charter it is provided that "the municipal and ward elections shall be held on the Tuesday succeeding the first Monday of November in each odd numbered year." Under these charter provisions a municipal election was held in the city of Buffalo in November, 1897, at which Martin Maher was elected to the office of commissioner of public works for the full term of four years, or until December 31st, 1901. Maher died in August, 1900, leaving a vacancy in the office. On September 24th, 1900, the mayor appointed the defendant Scheu to the office made vacant by the death of Maher, the appointment to take effect at once "and to continue until the first day of January after the municipal election, to wit: until January 1st, 1902." At the general election held on the 6th of November, 1900, candidates for three municipal offices were voted for to fill vacancies. Among them was the relator Ward who had been nominated by the Republican party for the office of elective commissioner of public works, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Maher. The Democratic party, proceeding upon the theory that Scheu had been appointed for Maher's full term, that is, until January 1st, 1902, made no nominations for that office, and Ward having received nearly all the votes cast for said office at said election, he was declared elected. After the election Ward took the oath of office, filed his official bond and then demanded possession of the office to which he claimed to have been elected. Scheu refused to surrender the office, and this action was brought. At the trial the relator was successful. Upon appeal the Appellate Division reversed the judgment of the trial court and held defendant's appointment good for the whole of the year 1901. If the case were controlled entirely by the charter provisions above referred to there could be no doubt that the defendant was legally appointed, and that his appointment holds good until January 1st, 1902. Section 271 of the charter plainly specifies that an appointment to fill a vacancy in the office of an elective commissioner of public works shall continue until the first day of January after the next municipal election, and section 370 of the charter fixes the time for municipal elections in November of each odd numbered year. Defendant was appointed in September, 1900, and according to the charter the next municipal election is to be held in November, 1901. It is, therefore, plain to a demonstration that if these sections of the charter are not in conflict with some other controlling provision of law the defendant was legally appointed for a term which does not expire until December 31st, 1901. The relator contends that these sections of the charter must be read in connection with sec. 5, art. 10, and sec. 3, art. 12, of the State Constitution, and when so read their language must either be so construed as to conform to the Constitution or, if that is impossible, be held unconstitutional. This broad proposition is beyond dispute. The difficulty in this case lies in the relator's attempt to apply it to his reading and construction of the Constitution. Section 5, article 10 of the Constitution says "the legislature shall provide for filling vacancies in office, and in case of elective officers, no person appointed to fill a vacancy shall hold his office by virtue of such appointment longer than the commencement of the political year next succeeding the first annual election after the happening of the vacancy." The relator contends that under this provision of the Constitution the defendant could not be appointed for a period which should extend beyond the first day of January, 1901, that being "the beginning of the political year next succeeding the first annual election after the happening of the vacancy." This provision of the Constitution was taken without change from the Constitution of 1846. It was before this court for construction in People ex rel. Hatfield v. Comstock ( 78 N.Y. 356), and was there held to apply only to constitutional offices as distinguished from those created by the legislature; that is, to such offices as are created or made elective by the Constitution and not to such as are created and controlled by statute. This judicial construction of the Constitution was not lost sight of by the legislature in 1892 when the "Public Officers Law" (Chap. 681, L. 1892) and the "General Election Law" (Chap. 680, L. 1892) were enacted. The first of these (Sec. 27) declares "the term of an officer appointed to fill a vacancy in an elective office, shall be until the commencement of the political year next succeeding the first annual election after the happening of the vacancy, if the office be made elective by the constitution, or at which the vacancy can be filled by election, if the office be otherwise made elective." The other (Sec. 4) provides that "A vacancy occurring before October 15th in any year, in an office authorized to be filled at a general election, shall be filled at the general election held next thereafter, unless otherwise provided by the constitution, or unless previously filled at a special election, or unless a special election therefor shall have been ordered to be held on or after such 15th of October and before such general election." This practical legislative construction of the Constitution, although not controlling, is significant because it emphasizes what was made clear in the Hatfield case. If we were to discontinue our discussion of the case at this point it would appear, (1) that the office of the elective commissioner of public works is not a constitutional office; (2) that sec. 5, article 10 of the Constitution has no application to that office; (3) that said office is of statutory origin and under legislative control; (4) that the legislature has not provided for elections to fill vacancies in said office except in municipal elections; (5) that municipal elections can only be held in November of odd years. The logical deduction from all of these facts would necessarily be that the relator has no claim to the office in dispute. But the relator points to a section of the Constitution of 1895 which was not in the Constitution of 1846, and says that it not only controls the provisions of the charter above referred to, but invests section 5 of article 10 of the Constitution with a new meaning which it did not have when standing alone, and, therefore, the decision in the Hatfield case, which was rendered in 1879, is no longer good law. The new constitutional provision referred to is section 3, article 12, and reads as follows: "All elections of city officers, including supervisors and judicial officers of inferior local courts, elected in any city or part of a city, and of county officers elected in the counties of New York and Kings, and in all counties whose boundaries are the same as those of a city, except to fill vacancies, shall be held on the Tuesday succeeding the first Monday in November in an odd numbered year, and the term of every such officer shall expire at the end of an odd numbered year." It is argued for the relator that the words " except to fill vacancies" in the foregoing section are mandatory and not permissive; that they relate to all municipal officers and, therefore, control this case; that they must be read in connection with the language of section 5 of article 10 of the Constitution which limits the term of an appointee to an elective office to the first of January next succeeding the first annual election after such appointment; and that when these two sections of the Constitution are thus read together it must follow, (1) that section 5, article 10 of the Constitution has a broader meaning in the new Constitution than it had in the old and that its language now includes such offices as are not created or made elective by the Constitution; (2) that the provisions of the charter requiring elections to fill vacancies in such offices to be held in odd numbered years are unconstitutional; or (3) that the word "municipal" whenever it is used in the charter with reference to elections to fill such vacancies must be construed to be synonymous with the word "annual" as used in said section 5 of article 10 of the Constitution. This ingenious argument has been presented with great ability, but it cannot survive the test of analysis. In the first place, the words " except to fill vacancies" in section 3 of article 12 of the Constitution are not mandatory. They are merely permissive and simply reserve to the legislature the right to fill vacancies in elective offices in even numbered years. When so construed they are in perfect harmony with the provisions of section 5 of article 10 of the Constitution. The fair meaning of these words is indicated not only by the context of the paragraph in which they appear, but by the presumption that the framers of the Constitution of 1895 would not have imported into that instrument any part of the old Constitution in conflict with it. Following the example of the legislature as evinced in the Laws of 1892 above referred to, the framers of the new Constitution gave to said section 5 of article 10 the same construction which had been given to it by this court in 1879, and that was that said provision applied only to constitutional offices. These circumstances stamp the words " except to fill vacancies" (in section 3, article 12) with a character and meaning which no amount of argument can change or disguise. The logical corollary of the foregoing statement is that the language of section 5 of article 10 has no different or broader meaning in the new Constitution than it had in the old Constitution when it was construed by this court in 1879 in the Hatfield case. Counsel for the relator seeks to supplant these deductions by the contention that if the words " except to fill vacancies" in section 3 of article 12 of the Constitution are merely permissive and not mandatory, then the charter is unconstitutional in so far as it limits the right to hold elections to fill vacancies in elective municipal offices, to odd numbered years. The case of People ex rel. Howard v. Bd. of Supervisors of Erie County ( 42 App. Div. 510; affirmed in this court, 160 N.Y. 687) is cited in support of this contention. In that case the relator Howard claimed to have been elected to the office of supervisor at the general election of 1898 to succeed one Cleveland, who had been elected by the common council to fill a vacancy caused by the death of one Tilson, who had been elected in 1897 for two years. Cleveland claimed to hold over to the end of the term for which Tilson had been elected. Howard claimed to have been regularly elected in the general election of 1898, which was the "first annual election after the happening of the vacancy." A glance at the opinion in that case will suffice to show that it was decided upon the very principles which we have been trying to elucidate in the foregoing pages of this opinion. The office of supervisor in a city is a constitutional office, although the method of election is left to the legislature and, as such, comes within the provision of section 5 of article 10 of the Constitution and of the decision in the Hatfield case. In the Howard case, by the explicit language of the Constitution, the relator was entitled to election in an even numbered year, because the appointee to fill the vacancy could hold the office only until the next first of January. The office of commissioner of public works in the city of Buffalo, both appointive and elective, is a statutory office. It is created by the charter, which is the act of the legislature. The power which creates an office can regulate the incidents to its creation and existence. The term, compensation, mode of appointment or election, and the time and manner of filling vacancies are all subject to the legislative will. Thus, it will be seen that there is nothing in the Howard case that conflicts with the provisions of the charter applicable to statutory or legislative offices. The essential difference between the Howard case and the case at bar is that in the former the office in dispute was of constitutional creation and in the latter it is of statutory origin. We have, therefore, been able to discover no ground for holding that the sections of the charter which relate to the election of a commissioner of public works after a vacancy therein has been filled by appointment are in contravention of the Constitution. It is further urged that the expressions "annual election" and "municipal election" whenever used in this charter are interchangeable, and justify the relator's contention that his election in 1900 was valid. A few references to the charter will disclose the unsoundness of this position. Prior to 1895, section 370 of the charter provided that "The annual city and ward election shall be held on the same day with the general state election," and section 271 was as follows: "A vacancy in the office of an elected commissioner shall be filled by appointment by the mayor, until the first Monday of January, after the next annual election, at which election a commissioner shall be elected to fill the unexpired term of the elected commissioner whose office became vacant." In 1895 the charter was amended to conform to the new Constitution, and the word " annual" in these sections was changed to " municipal" in the amended sections. Other sections of the charter were similarly amended, and the only instance in which the expression " annual" seems to have been retained is found in the section relating to the election of councilmen. This was obviously a mere inadvertence, as the " annual" election therein referred to is directed to be "held in each odd numbered year" after 1895; an inadvertence easily explained by the use of the qualifying words which deprive the word " annual," as there used, of any special significance. We have not attempted to answer in detail every phase of the argument made for the relator, but have endeavored to confine our discussion to the salient and controlling features of the case. Having disposed of these, our conclusions may be briefly recapitulated as follows: 1. The provisions of section 5 of article 10 of the Constitution apply only to constitutional offices. 2. The office of commissioner of public works in the city of Buffalo is not a constitutional one. 3. The provisions of section 3, article 12 of the Constitution are permissive, not mandatory, and, therefore, not in conflict with section 5, article 10 of the Constitution. 4. The provisions of the charter relating to the filling of a vacancy in the office of an elected commissioner of public works do not contravene the Constitution. 5. The words " annual" and "municipal" as used in the charter are not synonymous, and do not justify relator's claim that he was legally elected to said office.
These conclusions require an affirmance of the order of the Appellate Division, with costs to the defendant, and it is so ordered.
PARKER, Ch. J., GRAY, BARTLETT, HAIGHT, MARTIN and VANN, JJ., concur.
Order affirmed.