People Ex Rel. Sears v. . Tobey

If the position of clerk to the police justice of Syracuse was a confidential one within the meaning of the statute and the decisions of this court, the relator was not entitled to recover. This is conceded, and, therefore, neither argument nor authority is necessary in support of the proposition. The learned counsel for the plaintiff has not left us in any doubt with respect to his position upon this question. In order to show what relations must exist between the head of an office and his appointees to make the place confidential, he has placed upon his brief a liberal quotation from the opinion of this court as the result of the decision in the case of People ex rel. Crummey v. Palmer (152 N.Y. 217) and Chittenden v. Wurster (Id. 360). The quotation is as follows:

"Where the appointee is to receive, open, read and answer the letters of his chief, where he is to counsel and advise him with reference to the conduct and management of his office, sign his name to checks or warrants, collect and pay out his money, have the combination of his safe and the custody and control of its contents," the position is a confidential one.

"Where the duties of the position were not merely clerical, and were such as especially devolve upon the head of the office, *Page 392 which, by reason of his numerous duties, he is compelled to delegate to others, the performance of which requires skill, judgment, trust and confidence and involves the responsibility of the officer or the municipality which he represents, the position should be treated as confidential."

"If, therefore, the statute casts upon an officer a duty involving skill or integrity, and a liability either personal or on the part of the municipality which he represents, and he intrusts the discharge of this duty to another, their relations become confidential."

If we look into the statute which authorizes the justice to appoint a clerk we find that the clerk is required to give a bond for the faithful discharge of his duties; that he has charge of all the papers of the office; that he is to keep the records; that he is to receive all fines and penalties, has power to take oaths and acknowledgments, to take affidavits, to examine complaints and draw depositions upon which warrants may be issued by the justice and to adjourn trials and proceedings in the absence of the head of the office.

It is quite difficult to conceive how all these things can be done without the existence of intimate personal relations between the justice and the clerk. It is not written in the statute that he is the clerk of any court, but simply the clerk of the police justice. In one of the cases above cited it was quite distinctly held that the clerk or personal attendant of a judge was a position confidential in character. I assume that the criminal magistrate of a great city, who is empowered to hold Courts of Sessions, may be a judge within the meaning of this rule. It is quite conceivable, too, that his clerk may receive, open, read and answer his letters and equally reasonable to suppose that such a judge may frequently have to examine and dispose of important questions of law and fact, and that he may call on his clerk to assist him in the discharge of such duties. We may also assume that such an important office had a safe in it for the use of the justice, and that the clerk was intrusted with the key or the combination or both.

It is quite clear, therefore, that this clerk is required, or may *Page 393 be required, to perform duties which require skill, judgment, trust and confidence. How far the justice may be held responsible for his acts or his negligence or want of learning or skill, we cannot now say, but inasmuch as the justice is authorized to issue all criminal process upon papers prepared by the clerk, it is not difficult to see how he may be made responsible to individuals at least for things done or omitted by his subordinate.

When the criminal law is set in motion without jurisdiction, it frequently happens that the magistrate is held responsible for some wrong done to others, or at least put to great trouble and expense to defend himself. When he assumes this responsibility upon the faith of papers prepared by his clerk, he must necessarily repose a high degree of confidence and trust in him. I am quite unable to see how the relations of this clerk to the justice differ in any material respect from those of any other clerk to a judge. If the clerks or personal attendants of the judges of this court and the Supreme Court are confidential, what good reason is there for holding that the office in question is not confidential?

Whatever powers were specially conferred by statute upon this clerk, he must still be the clerk of the police justice, and he occupies such relations to him as that term reasonably implies.

A clerk in a bank or in a great financial office does not cease to be such when he is appointed a notary public, nor would the clerk to one of the judges of this court cease to be such if the legislature should confer upon him some special additional power. This brings me to the question which underlies the case.

It was tried and has been argued in this court upon the theory that the duties of the appointee and all the duties are to be found written in the statute; that we are not permitted to look to any other source for the actual relations existing between the justice and his clerk at the time of the appointment; that custom and the established practice of the office for years count for nothing; that the clerk could not possibly be intrusted with the key of the safe because the statute did *Page 394 not require him to have it, and he could not possibly have been intrusted with the charge of the letters and correspondence since the statute said nothing on the subject. On the trial the defendant's counsel called the police justice as a witness and offered to prove by him what the duties of the clerk were. This was objected to by the plaintiff's counsel without stating any ground of the objection. The court sustained him and the defendant excepted. Unless it be true that it was legally impossible for any other relations to exist between the justice and his clerk than those specified in the statute, this ruling was error. The learned counsel for the plaintiff defends this theory by pressing upon us the proposition that the duties of the clerk are defined by the statute. But his sound legal judgment was not quite satisfied with this position since he has added to it another important fact, namely, that "there is no evidence that any other duties were performed by him." He is quite right in this statement. There is no such evidence and there could be none since the defendant was not permitted to give it. Had he been allowed to give the proof, who can say that it would not have shown that, under the actual practice and custom of the office for years, the clerk was required to do and actually did all the things and performed all the duties that this court has said creates confidential relations between a public officer and his clerk? The proposition that the legislature has attempted to regulate, minutely, all the relations between a judge and his clerk, is an extraordinary one. If such was the intention of the statute in this case, it is safe to say that it stands alone and is a solitary exception to all legislation on such a subject. But such is not the language or the meaning of the statute. There is a wide difference between powers and duties, and this clerk has vastly more power than the clerks of other judges, but his duties are the same in nature and character. What the legislature intended was, not to disturb the relations between the justice and his clerk, but to confer upon the latter special powers which could not be derived from the appointment. He was still the clerk of the justice, holding all the *Page 395 relations to his chief that the term naturally implies, and bound to perform to that chief such duties as he might reasonably require of him. He could call on him for assistance in all matters pertaining to the duties of the office of police justice. The statute, by conferring other powers upon him, did not discharge him from any duty necessarily to be implied from his position as a clerk to the justice. The decision in this case really holds that the clerk of the police justice of Syracuse is not a clerk at all in the sense in which that term is commonly understood, but an independent officer, with powers and duties prescribed by statute, and just as independent of the justice as any other city officer was. He was not bound to take any orders from him or to render to him any service or assistance, since it was not written in the statute.

If all this be so it is quite remarkable that the legislature intrusted the justice with his selection and appointment, and still more remarkable that he was empowered to remove him at pleasure. If there were to be no confidential relations between the justice and his clerk the power of appointment and removal would naturally be left where it belonged, with the chief executive of the city. Moreover, until quite recently the appointment of any clerk was optional with the justice. It was left to him to say whether he needed a clerk or not, and can it be said that it was left to his discretion to appoint and remove a clerk without having the power to prescribe a single duty that he was bound to perform when appointed?

Surely an argument that results in such absurd conclusions must be founded upon premises that are essentially faulty and unsound. They proceed from the false proposition that the legislature has done in this case what it never did before, and has written into a statute all the details of the duties intended to govern the relations of a clerk at $1,000 a year with his chief. Nothing of the kind was intended or expressed. The statute is silent as to duties, but specific as to powers which could not otherwise be exercised, and which the justice could not confer upon his clerk. *Page 396

Suppose the statute simply authorized the justice to appoint a clerk and stopped there, how could we then know whether the relations between them were confidential or otherwise? Obviously, only by proof of the things which the justice had assigned to him to take charge of, and the nature and character of such duties. And how is this changed by the circumstance that the legislature from time to time conferred power upon the clerk to do certain other things? The truth is that the appointment of the justice makes the appointee a clerk for him and creates all the relations that may be implied from that word, and the statute has added to these relations certain other powers. The powers of the clerk as an officer are to be found in the statute. His duties to his chief as an assistant, and as one in whom trust and confidence are reposed, must be ascertained by an inquiry as to the facts and the actual relations created by the instructions of the chief to his subordinate and the establishment of these relations between them by consent, express or implied.

It follows that the defendant should have been permitted to prove what the actual relations were, independent of the statute, which did not cover all the relations which could properly exist between the justice and his clerk. The administration of the justice of his office would have to bear the burden of any faults or errors committed by his clerk, at least in the public eye. When two persons engaged in the performance of public duty are placed together in such close and intimate relations it is scarcely possible to exclude the idea of trust and confidence, and when their actual relations become material the statute is not the sole guide. The legislature did not make a catalogue of the numerous things that the chief might require his clerk to do. The clerk or an applicant for the place is not asking the court to put him in possession of a public office to which he was never appointed, but claims that he ought to have been. He was bound to prove every fact upon which that right depended, and since the practical relations that he would assume toward his chief constituted a material inquiry the defendant was not, upon such a question, limited *Page 397 to the words of the statute, but had the right to give oral proof from the justice on that subject.

According to the plaintiff's contention the situation is this: The police justice of Syracuse may appoint and have a clerk, but has no power to prescribe a single duty that he is bound to perform. The statute alone does that and the justice has nothing to do with it. The clerk may perform and do all the things nominated in the statute and yet the justice may remove him without reason and without cause. There are no personal confidential relations between the clerk and his chief, and it is absolutely impossible that there can be, since they are not enumerated in the statute, and yet when the court puts the relator in possession of the office the justice has the power to remove him the next day. The clerk prepares the papers upon which the justice issues criminal process, for the use of which the latter alone is responsible, and while the clerk may possess himself of all the secrets of the office, yet the statute will not permit anything like confidential relations to exist. It must be admitted that this is an exceptional and unique situation, and the mind naturally looks for some flaw in the reasoning process upon which it is based.

It is not difficult to find it. It proceeds from an obvious misconstruction of the purpose of the statute in assuming that it covers or was intended to cover the whole subject of duties and obligations which may exist between the head of an office and his clerk. The personal and confidential relations that must always exist in such cases do not depend upon any statute, but grow out of the nature and character of the place. When the justice makes the appointment he creates duties and relations that must exist independent of any statute, since they are inherent in the very nature and character of the employment. The clerk of the police justice of Syracuse assumes the same duties and holds the same relations to his chief that the clerk of any other judicial officer does to his chief, with certain statutory powers superadded. It will be noticed that none of the powers enumerated in the statute could be exercised by the clerk under his appointment, and *Page 398 hence it was necessary to confer them by legislation, and that is what the statute intended to do and what it means. The exercise of these special powers is perfectly consistent with the existence of those undefined personal relations that must always exist in such cases and which are to be implied from the very nature of the relation. No one can be a clerk to a judge or judicial officer in any proper sense without a duty resting upon him to do such things as his chief may reasonably require him to do in the performance of his judicial duties. This duty may give rise to confidential relations, and in any case when the inquiry is whether such relations attach to the appointment, the question cannot be solved by simply looking into the statute and disregarding everything else. We must look at the custom and practices of the office and find out what the clerk does and what he is required to do by his chief.

These propositions may be illustrated in many ways and by many examples.

Suppose that the relator in his application to the justice for this appointment had stated to him, in writing or otherwise, that he would refuse to do anything except the things named in the statute, would any court compel the justice under such circumstances to appoint him? Suppose that, being appointed, he should refuse to do anything except the things named in the statute, and should refuse to assist the justice in the performance of his duties in other respects, can there be any doubt that such refusal would be a good ground for his removal?

It is just as erroneous to suppose that all the duties of the clerk are to be found specified and enumerated in the sections of the charter referred to as it would be to assert that all the law has been written in statutes.

The learned trial judge virtually held that the relator had made out his case and proved what all the duties of the place were by producing the statute, and that upon this vital question of the duties of the clerk the defendant could not go outside the statute, but was conclusively bound thereby since *Page 399 he could not possibly have any other duties than those specified by the legislature. That no duties whatever could be implied from the relation of chief of a department and his clerk or from the nature of the employment.

This, I think, is a fundamental error that pervades the whole case. The defendant should have been permitted to give proof of the actual duties of the place as fixed by the justice himself or as established by custom and practice.

The ruling cannot be justified on any technical ground as the objection was general. In such a case, when competent evidence is excluded without any specific objection, the burden is upon the objecting party to show that it was not admissible under any circumstances or under any aspect of the case. He cannot upon appeal justify the ruling on some ground concealed at the trial and which, if disclosed, might have been answered or avoided. (Cary v. White, 59 N.Y. 336; Mead v. Shea, 92 N.Y. 127;Cruikshank v. Gordon, 118 N.Y. 178; Valton v. NationalFund Life Assur. Co., 20 N.Y. 32.)

The defendant was entitled to show the actual relations between the justice and his personal clerk, since in no other way could it be determined whether these relations were confidential or otherwise. It is now suggested that the office was not that of personal clerk to the justice, but clerk of the Police Court, the duties of which were defined and enumerated in the statute. In the court below the place in question is described as clerk to the police justice. On the argument in this court it was not asserted as matter of fact or law that the position is that of a clerk of a court. The position is not so described in the statute.

But if it be now assumed that the office created by the statute is that of clerk of the Police Court of Syracuse the plaintiff at once meets another difficulty.

Police Courts in cities are state courts. They are so designated and defined in § 3 of the Code of Civil Procedure. They are a part of the judicial system of the state in the administration of the criminal law. The fact that the justices *Page 400 are elected and paid by the city does not change the character of the courts as courts of the state. The county judge is elected and paid by the county, but his court is one of the courts of the state. In fact, all the members of the judiciary except the members of this court are elected by localities or appointed by local authority, but they are parts of the judicial system of the state and their duties pertain to the government of the state. The manner of their election or appointment and the source from which their compensation comes is mere matter of legislative regulation.

The clerk of a state court is part of the court itself in the same sense that the justice is, and cannot be a city officer. He is no part of the political organization of the city, but concerned with the administration of state laws. The police justice cannot be an officer of the state or in the service of the state and the clerk of the court in the service of the city. Both are in the service of the state, engaged in the administration of the criminal law, though deriving title to their offices from local authority.

This conclusion must follow the contention that the office is that of clerk of a court. The principle does not rest entirely upon argument nor upon the statute, but upon the decisions of the courts as well.

In McDonald v. Mayor the question was whether an assistant clerk of the Marine Court was a city or local officer. It was held by the Supreme Court that the Marine Court of the city of New York was a part of the judicial department of the state government, and that its officers were not local officers of the city and county of New York, but as a part of the judicial system state officials. That was the only question in the case, and the judgment was affirmed in this court. (102 N.Y. 728.)

In Whitmore v. Mayor (67 N.Y. 21) it was held that clerks of the District Courts of the city of New York were not city officers, but officers embraced within the judiciary system of the state. The same point was decided in Quin v. Mayor (44 How. Pr. 266), affirmed in this court (53 N.Y. 627), and *Page 401 in Landon v. Mayor (7 J. S. 467), and it has been said that this cannot now be considered an open question (13 Hun, 398). The principle upon which this conclusion rests is that the judicial department, which embraces the officers of all courts, whether of general or limited jurisdiction, is a part of the general government of the state, since their functions are administered for the benefit and protection of the people at large. There may be a certain degree of locality in the organization and powers of inferior courts, but they are not for that reason dissevered from the general judicial department of the state. They are still a part of the entire judicial system, and so a part of the general government of the state. The Police Court of a city, empowered to hold Courts of Sessions and to administer the criminal law of the state, forms no part of the city government any more than does the Supreme Court when it exercises its powers and jurisdiction within the same territory. The local criminal court exercises functions which, for some purposes, at least, extend over the whole state, and hence its officers are part of the state judiciary. This principle was affirmed by the Supreme Court of the United States in a controversy touching the power of Congress to tax the salary of local judicial officers. It was held that they were part of the judicial department of the state, though elected by local suffrage or appointed by local authority, and though the salary was paid from the treasury of a city. (Collector v. Day, 11 Wallace, 113; Freedman v. Sigel, 10 Blatch. 327.)

All these courts, like the Police Courts in cities, are organized by the legislature under the power conferred by the Constitution to establish inferior local courts, and when created they are courts of the state, and their officers, whether judges or clerks, are in the civil service of the state and not of the city where they are located.

So that every argument to show that the office in controversy is that of clerk of the Police Court and not the personal clerk of the justice, must prove at the the same time that the place is not in the civil service of the city, but in the civil *Page 402 service of the state. It is only upon the theory that the appointee becomes the personal clerk of the justice, paid by the city, that the place can be said to be in the civil service of the city or within its civil service regulations.

In my opinion that is the correct theory, and, hence, evidence to show the actual personal relations between the chief and the clerk, independent of the statute, was admissible to show whether such relations were confidential or not. But if, on the other hand, the appointee becomes the clerk of a court which is one of the courts of the state, with statutory powers and duties, he stands upon the same footing as every other clerk of a court. He must be classified as an officer holding office under and belonging to the judicial system of the state, and the city has no power, through civil service regulations or otherwise, to organize one of the courts of the state or to prescribe the manner in which its officers or clerk shall be appointed. The mayor has power under the statute to make rules for the civil service of the city only. The place in controversy is either that of personal clerk to the police justice or that of clerk of the Police Court. If the former, then confidential relations may exist between the chief and his clerk, depending entirely on the duties of the place as established by the justice, or under his directions, or by consent, custom or practice, and, hence, it was error to exclude the proof offered with respect to the actual duties assigned to the clerk and their nature and character, independent of the statute. If the latter, then the place was not within the civil service regulations of the city, since these applied only to officers of the city, and the clerk of a state court cannot be classified as such, but as part of the judicial system of the state and in the civil service of the state.

The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.

HAIGHT, MARTIN and VANN, JJ., concur with BARTLETT, J., for modification of judgment; O'BRIEN, J., reads for reversal; ANDREWS, Ch. J., not voting; GRAY, J., absent.

Judgment accordingly. *Page 403