The relator, by statute, having been a soldier in the war of the Rebellion, and honorably discharged, was entitled to be notified of all charges against him before his removal from the position of conductor on the Brooklyn bridge. Laws 1888, c. 119; Id. c. 583, tit. 22, § 29, (Brooklyn city charter;) Laws 1887, c.708. Otherwise the right of employment and' discharge of employes is given to the trustees. Laws 1875, c. 300. The relator was discharged without a hearing, and therefore the discharge was illegal, unless thtkrelator waived his privilege. The return avers this defense: that the trustees did not know that the relator had been a Union soldier, and that they discharged him for good cause. The particulars of that cause are not an issue in the proceeding. If the trustees discharged him without cause, he has no remedy if he waived his privilege as a soldier. If he did not waive it, the best of causes to be proven on the trial will not justify the removal without a hearing before the discharge, The order for a bill of particulars was unnecessary, and should be reversed, with costs and disbursements.
All concur.