(dissenting). Fifteen petitioners in five article 78 proceedings seek to annul a decision and order of the State Civil Service Commission rescinding City of Lackawanna civil service examinations and the eligible lists resulting therefrom, and canceling the appointments of petitioners from said lists. The examinations were for police matron, fire lieutenant, fire captain and police lieutenant, and were given between 1944 and 1946. Petitioners passed such examinations as were given them, and in due time were appointed, the last appointment having been made on September 27, 1948.
In 1946 the State Civil Service Commission commenced an investigation of the affairs of the Lackawanna Municipal Civil Service Commission, following which extended hearings were held under subdivision 7 of section 11 of the Civil Service Law, upon notice and charges as therein required, resulting in the determination sought to be annulled, which has thus far been sustained. The basis of the State commission’s decision and order was that the examinations did not properly or sufficiently carry out the provisions or purposes of the Civil Service Law; *229in other words, did not adequately test the candidates’ merit and fitness.
It would serve no useful purpose to discuss in detail each of the examinations. A brief reference thereto, however, will be illuminating. The police matron examination — the subject matter of the first proceeding — consisted of five simple questions. The first four were on first aid: “ #1 — What is fainting ? #2 — What is the treatment for fainting? #3 — What is sunstroke? #4 — What is the treatment for sunstroke?” These were evaluated at 60%. The sole remaining question, evaluated at 40%, was: “ Write a composition of forty words or more pertaining to the duties and responsibilities of a police matron.” The answer thereto was in the “ specification ” for this examination, as was indeed the case with the composition questions in all the other examinations. Petitioner was appointed within twenty-four hours after taking the examination.
In the fire lieutenant examination, a 60% credit was allowed for answers to three so-called “ service record ” questions, which asked for the commencement date of service, number of ilhiess absences in three years, and the number of charges against the candidate. Ten per cent was allowed for knowing where ten fire boxes were located; and 15% each for two compositions.
In the fire captain examination, the same first aid questions were asked as on the police matron examination, the same ‘6 service record ’ ’ questions as on the fire lieutenant examination, and a fifty-word composition was called for, rated together at 70%; fifteen general questions, rated at 30%, were also asked, the first of which was: “ Why is it so important that fire apparatus gets to the fire as soon as possible? ”
In the police lieutenant examination, 10% was allowed for substantially the same “ service record ” questions as were asked on the fire lieutenant examination, 30% for the correct spelling of eight simple words, such as “ kriminal ”, 20% for four elementary questions in arithmetic, one of which was: “ What part of an hour is 30 minutes? ” and likewise as to 20, 45 and 55 minutes; and 30% for six so-called practical questions, such as: “ What is a Barrister? ” and “ What is burglary? ” The examinations given under subdivision 5 of section *230246 of the Military Law were identical (not comparable, as required by that statute) with examinations given less than two years previously as to fire lieutenant, and less than a year previously as to fire captain.
Our State Constitution (art. V, § 6) provides* that “ Appointments and promotions in the civil service of the state and all of the civil divisions thereof, including cities and villages, shall be made according to merit and fitness to be ascertained, as far as practicable, by examination which, as far as practicable, shall be competitive To this fundamental constitutional mandate, all legislative and judicial power must yield. As we said, through Lehman, J., in Palmer v. Board of Educ. (276 N. Y. 222, 225, 226): “ By placing this provision in the Constitution the People of the State have declared in unmistakable terms that merit, ascertained as therein provided, shall govern appointments and promotions in the public service, and have thus formulated and announced the public policy of the State. No administrative officer may violate the provisions of the Constitution, and no court may sanction a violation. * * * An employment which in its inception violates the provisions of the Constitution is illegal and against public policy, regardless of the good faith of the parties.” (See, also, Matter of Carow v. Board of Educ., 272 N. Y. 341, 344; Matter of Scahill v. Drzewucki, 269 N. Y. 343, 346.)
To implement the constitutional mandate, the Legislature in 1944 (L. 1944, ch. 435) enacted subdivision 7 of section 11 of the Civil Service Law, which reads: “ Said state commission may at any time, by unanimous vote of the three commissioners, amend or rescind any rule, regulation or classification prescribed under the provisions of this section or rescind any examination or eligible list or cancel an appointment already made from a list so rescinded, provided that said state commission shall state the reasons for such action in writing and file the same and a certified transcript thereof as a public document as hereinbefore provided, and give an opportunity to the municipal civil service commissioners concerned to make a personal explanation and to file papers in opposition to such action. The said state commission, however, shall not take such action upon any ground *231other than that the provisions or purposes of this chapter are not properly or sufficiently carried out, nor without specifying in writing and detail in what particular such provisions or purposes are not carried out ”. (Emphasis supplied.) The constitutionality and the purpose of this statute have been passed upon by us in Matter of Kaney v. New York State Civil Service Comm. (190 Misc. 944, 949, affd. 273 App. Div. 1054, affd. 298 N. Y. 707), where it was said: “ Under the 1944 amendment, the State Civil Service Commission has the power to rescind an eligible list established by a municipal commission not only on the ground of fraud or material misstatement but also on the ground that ‘ the provisions or purposes of this chapter [Civil Service Law] are not properly or sufficiently carried out. ’ This would seem to embrace the power to rescind the list and cancel appointments upon the ground that the examination given for the position was not sufficiently practical in character and did not fairly test the relative capacity and fitness of the persons examined to discharge the duties of the position (Civil Service Law, § 14).” It was also held in that case that the statute does not entitle petitioners to notice and hearing before the State commission. (See, also, Matter of Connolly v. Conway, 277 App. Div. 945, motion for leave to appeal denied 301 N. Y. 814.)
Pursuant to the clear and unambiguous power vested in it by subdivision 7 of section 11, the State commission, in its decision and order herein, made the determination here challenged on the ground that the examinations “ did not properly or sufficiently carry out the provisions or purposes of the Civil Service Law ”, and, more specifically, that they did not meet the requirements “ of Section 14 ” (now § 14, subd. 6) thereof “ and of Bules X and XXVII(6) ” of the Lackawanna Eules of Civil Service. Section 14 provided: “ The examinations shall be public and shall be practical in their character and shall relate to those matters which will fairly test the relative capacity and fitness of the persons examined to discharge the duties of that service into which they seek to be appointed.” (Emphasis supplied.)
Having predicated its action on the enforcement of section 14, the State commission was clearly acting in strict compliance *232with the plain mandate of subdivision 7 of section 11. (Matter of Kaney v. New York State Civil Service Comm., supra; Matter of Connolly v. Conway, supra.) The statute must be read to mean what it says, and we may not read words into it that are at variance with its clear purpose. It expressly authorizes action by the commission in accordance with the “ provisions or purposes of this chapter ”, with appropriate safeguards against precipitate action, and with the requirement of unanimity. Section 14 is one of its provisions. And the purpose of the chapter — indeed its fundamental purpose — is mandated by the Constitution. The Legislature has endeavored to obey this direction; we have no right to disobey it nor to attribute to the Legislature such a design. The majority agree that the Legislature could enact such a statute as to achieve the result here attained, and the fact is that it has. The “ wisdom of the statute is for the Legislature, and not the courts, to decide ” (Matter of Kaney v. New York State Civil Service Comm., supra, p. 949). The purpose of the constitutional provision is to protect the civil service, so that appointments and promotions may be made only on “ merit and fitness ”, tested by valid competitive examinations. Failure to uphold this injunction will impair the integrity of and do incalculable harm to the whole civil service system, and result in withholding the very protection which the Constitution mandates.
Nor should we overlook the fact that, the People of the State, who mandated the constitutional provision, have rights in the public policy which it announces. We are here dealing with fire captains and fire and police lieutenants, as well as police matrons — responsible officers charged by law with the duty of protecting the lives, the liberty and the property of our people. It is a grave matter when such officers may be admitted to their positions on the basis of examinations which utterly fail to test their “ relative capacity and fitness * * * to discharge the duties ” appertaining thereto. The preservation of the merit system is not only in the best interests of civil service, but also affords the public that protection to which it is entitled under our Constitution. The inconveniences to petitioners flowing from the determination challenged must yield to the constitutional and statutory requirements that a valid appointment *233can be based only upon merit and fitness as determined by a proper examination.
We are told by the majority (p. 227) that “ Nowhere in any statute or rule (except in § 11, subd. 7, supra) do we find any permission or requirement for review by the State commission of a municipal commission’s examinations and certifications.” Is not one enactment sufficient? Must it be multiplied to be effective ?
The fact that petitioners have already been appointed does not preclude the State commission from invalidating the appointments, for subdivision 7 of section 11 expressly provides that the commission may “ cancel an appointment already made ”, (Emphasis supplied.) (Matter of Kaney v. New York State Civil Service Comm., supra.) Petitioners are not being deprived of any vested right because if, as found by the State commission, these examinations failed to carry out the provisions of section 14, then each of the petitioners failed to pass a requisite examination. The effect is the same as if there had been no examinations; the appointments were therefore invalid and conferred no tenure on petitioners, irrespective of good faith. (Palmer v. Board of Educ., 276 N. Y. 222, supra; People ex rel. Hannan v. Board of Health, 153 N. Y. 513, 519-520.)
It may not be said, as a matter of law and on the record before us, that the commission was not justified in finding that the provisions of section 14 were not being obeyed. The examination questions speak eloquently for their own inadequacy. A comparison of the duties listed in the specifications with the subject matter of the examinations likewise establishes their utter deficiency. Moreover, the testimony of the commission’s two well-qualified experts in the field of preparation and grading of civil service examinations was comprehensive arid specific and clearly supported the commission’s findings, even when considered in the light of the affidavits of petitioners ’ experts, which were general in nature. The commission’s findings in each case were likewise clear and definite, and in accord with the statute.
In addition to failing to meet the standards- enunciated in section 14, there is a further basis for rescinding the fire captain and fire lieutenant examinations taken respectively by peti*234tioners Hughes and Kalamajka. They were in military service at the time the original examinations were given and upon discharge were examined for the respective positions pursuant to subdivision 5 of section 246 of the Military Law. The State commission rescinded their examinations, and properly so, because they were identical with the examinations originally given and not, as required by the Military Law, “ comparable ” examinations.
It is urged that the State commission has been guilty of loches. The short answer thereto is that subdivision 7 of section 11 specifically provides that the State commission may take the action authorized thereunder “ at any time ”. (Emphasis supplied.) Moreover, these examinations were given between 1944 and 1946. Appointments were made from 1945 until as late as September 27,1948. The commission’s investigation was already under way in 1946, and notice of charges was served upon the Lackawanna commission in 1947. Between that time and the decision and order of the State commission on April 12, 1949, it was confronted with litigation arising out of examinations given by the Lackawanna Municipal Civil Service Commission, two of which reached the appellate courts (Matter of Kaney v. New York State Civil Service Comm., supra; Matter of Conway v. Kaney, 274 App. Div. 849, appeal dismissed 298 N. Y. 709, motion for leave to appeal dismissed 298 N. Y. 752). Indeed, in the commission hearings, the president stated: “ nor is there any attitude or disposition on the part of any member of this Commission to engage in a race with the Courts to make a determination of the proceeding ”. Thus it may not be said that the commission did not proceed with reasonable dispatch, consistent with their onerous responsibilities, the numerous issues involved,, and the necessity of protracted hearings.
The orders of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, without costs.
Dye and Fuld, JJ., concur with Desmond, J.; Conway, J., concurs in the result upon the dissenting memorandum of Piper, J., in the Appellate Di-vision; Froessel, J., dissents in opinion in which Loughran, Ch. J., and Lewis, J., concur.
Orders reversed, etc.
Reflecting very slight, immaterial amendments made in 1950.