The members of the Elmira water board, called water commissioners, are elected by popular vote for terms of five years each. (Laws of 1913, chap. 660, as amd. by Laws of 1915, chap. 660.)* The petitioner was elected a water commissioner in June, 1920; he qualified and acted as such. He attended a meeting of the board held July 17, 1922,. but did not attend another meeting until November 27,1922. In the meantime meetings had been held on August twenty-first, September seventh, September eighteenth, October twentieth and November sixth. Section 2 of this act provides: “ The office of a water commissioner shall become vacant by his death, neglect or failure to qualify within fifteen days after notice of his election or appointment, resignation, removal from said city, or his refusal or neglect for three months to perform the duties of his office without being excused by vote of the board, or by his becoming of unsound mind.” The duties of petitioner’s office are set forth in this act. Section 1 provides: “ The commissioners so appointed and their successors in office are hereby created a body corporate by the name of the ‘ Elmira water board,’ and in that name may prosecute and defend actions and proceedings in any court.” Section 3 provides: “ Said board shall hold meetings in an office to be provided by the common council of said city.” No duties are to be performed by a water commissioner, except as one of the board. When the petitioner did not attend the meetings between July seventeenth and November twenty-seventh, having attended no meeting in August, September or October, he refused or neglected for three months to perform the duties of his office. He was not excused by vote of the water board. The return shows the above facts and the return is conclusive in this respect, (People ex rel. Fahy v. York, 49 App. Div. 173; affd., 163 N. Y. 551, on the opinion below.) The statute here is peremp*16tory in its form. Having neglected to perform his duties for three months without being excused by vote of this board, his office is vacant. He is not entitled to a trial or notice of a hearing, nor is any person or body authorized to declare or fix the vacancy. But the petitioner insists that he must be given opportunity after three months’ neglect of duty to ask the board for a vote excusing his neglect of duty. In our opinion this was not the intent of the act. If it were, the delinquent, by delaying to ask for the vote, could remain indefinitely in office and yet continue to neglect the performance of his duty. The statute does not provide that the office shall be vacant if the board refuses by vote to excuse the delinquent, but if he neglects his duty “ without being excused by vote.” In People ex rel. Fahy v. York (supra) the statute* provided that “ Absence, without leave, of any member of the police force, for five consecutive days, shall be deemed and held to be a resignation, and the member so absent shall, at the expiration of said period, cease to be a member of the police force, and be dismissed therefrom without notice.” (The last words, “ be dismissed therefrom without notice ” or words of similar import, are not included in the statute we are discussing.) The court there held that the relator, a member of the police force, who had been absent for five consecutive days, was not entitled to a trial or hearing; that the duty was put upon the commissioners absolutely by the statute, without any trial or notice, to dismiss the delinquent from the force; and said: “ The manner in which the commissioners become possessed of that fact [knowledge of his absence from duty without leave] is of no particular importance in any case. The question is the existence of that fact.” In our opinion the office occupied by relator is vacant.
The common council, however, assumed to act and the only complaint here made is of that action. On November 27, 1922, there was received by the mayor and filed in the city clerk’s office a communication from the water board, which certified that the petitioner had neglected to perform the duties of his office for more than three months and that he had not been excused therefor by a vote of the board; the common council took action thereon and, on February 27, 1923, by resolution removed petitioner from his office. The act of 1913 (supra) and the city charter were supposed to authorize this action of the common council. Section 2 of the act (supra) provides: “ Any water commissioner may, at any time, be suspended or removed from office by the common council in the manner and for the causes provided in the charter of the *17city of Elmira for the suspension or removal of officers elected or appointed by the common council.” And the charter (Laws of 1906, chap. 477), section 23, provides: “ The common council shall * * * have power * * * to remove all officers and persons appointed or elected by them for any neglect of duty or misconduct.” These provisions, however, do not apply to the present case. Here the vacancy is declared by the statute itself, which statute is entirely inconsistent with the idea that the water commissioner, who has refused or neglected to perform the duties of his office for three months without being excused by vote of the board, shall have a trial before the common council. This action by the common council was both unauthorized and futile. (People ex rel. Fahy v. York, supra.)
In section 2 of the Water Board Act (supra) it is provided: “ In case of a vacancy in office the common council shall fill such vacancy by appointment, and the person appointed shall hold his office until the next annual election of water commissioners and until another shall be qualified to fill his place.” After petitioner’s office had become vacant, the only duty of the common council in respect to him and his office was to fill the vacancy. Whether or not, the vacancy being filled, the petitioner might seek redress by an action in the nature of quo warranto is not here for us to decide.
The certiorari order cannot be maintained. The Civil Practice Act (§ 1286) provides: “Limitation upon granting certiorari orders. Except as otherwise expressly prescribed by statute, a certiorari order cannot be granted in either of the following cases: 1. To review a determination which does not finally determine the rights of the parties with respect to the matter to be reviewed. 2. Where the determination can be adequately reviewed by an appeal to a court or to some other body or officer.” There is no special statute covering this case. The subject-matter to be reviewed here is the right of the petitioner to occupy the office of water commissioner. In this proceeding, to review the action of the common council, that right cannot be determined. If the resolution of the common council be annulled, petitioner’s office is still vacant. Nor could this court reinstate the petitioner, since the action of the common council here under review7 did not remove him from his office. If the petitioner is prejudiced in any respect by the fact that the resolutions of the common- council are of public record, he may appeal to an equity court to have the resolutions expunged from the record.
Section 1290 of the Civil Practice Act provides that “ An application for the order must be made by or in behalf of a person *18aggrieved by the determination to be reviewed.” No rights of petitioner have been finally determined by the action of the common council and he is not aggrieved by the determination. (People ex rel. Oyster Bay v. Woodruff, 64 App. Div. 239, 242.)
The certiorari order should be dismissed, with fifty dollars costs and disbursements.
H. T. Kellogg, Acting P. J., and Hinman, J., concur; Hasbrouck, J., dissents, with an opinion.
See Laws of 1922, chap. 466 (adding § 2-a to statute).— [Rsp.
See Consolidation Act (Laws of 1882, chap. 410), § 273, as amd. by Laws of 1884, chap. 180.— [Rep.