(concurring.) The affirmance of the order from which this appeal has been taken seems to be unavoidable, even though the applicant was not chief clerk in the sheriff’s office; for when he was appointed to his position by Sheriff Flack, the sheriff had no power to make the appointment' more extensive than his own term of office. That was done prior to the enactment of chapter 67 of the Laws of 1890, -and that act, therefore, could not apply to it; and there was no other law which entitled the sheriff to appoint a clerk whom his successor would be bound to keep in his office. As the appointment has been mentioned and described in the applicant’s affidavit it was for no certain or designated time; but it could not by means or force of the appointment transcend the power the sheriff was authorized to exercise, and that was limited to his own term of office, and an appointment indefinitely made by him would as surely end with that event as it would if it had been expressly dependent upon it. When Sheriff Flack resigned, and Gen. Sickles was appointed to hold the office for the residue of the term, he made no new appointment of the applicant, but continued him along under the appointment he had previously received. This" was done tacitly, and by mere acquiescence. He found the applicant in the office, and retained him without a word that would either add to or detract from the appointment he had received from Sheriff Flack, and when the term for which he had been elected came to an end that necessarily ended the term of the applicant. And within this act of 1890 he could be lawfully dismissed by the present sheriff, for that act does not apply to an employment where the appointee has been appointed for a definite term, as this appointee was, in the most favorable construction that can be given to the act of his appointment. That it was not to extend into the term of the present sheriff is also confirmed by section 2 of chapter 523 of the Laws of 1890, for that empowered the sheriff to designate the-number of the clerks and employes of his office, subject only to the revision of the board of estimate and apportionment as to their number, classification, and compensation. It committed the designation to the newly-elected sheriff, which he would not have the unrestricted right to exercise if he should be bound to retain any of the clerks or employes of his predecessors, who received their appointments before the enactment of chapter 67 of the Laws of 1890, as the applicant most surely did. The same result also follows from the fact that when the applicant was appointed he was to be compensated for his services by the sheriff himself, and not by the city and county of New York; and the fact that the balance owing him at the close of Gen. Sickles’ term was obtained from the city and county, under the authority of chapter 523 of the Laws of 1890, could not and did not have the effect of extending the appointment. It still remained as it was made by Sheriff Flack, when his compensaron was not payable by the city and county, but by the sheriff per*483sonally. The term Was then fixed, if, indeed, any term whatever was understood; and it could not go beyond the authority of the appointing power, which was restricted to his own term of office. If the applicant had applied for a further appointment from the present sheriff as an honorably discharged Union soldier, his application might then have'been successful; for while the position was vacant he was entitled to a preference in the appointment to it. But that he did not do. He applied only for his reinstatement to an employment which he claimed had not then terminated, and the fact that it had terminated was a legal answer to the application. The laws relating to these employments have not been very carefully framed, and it is essential to the success of these applications that they shall be brought as clearly as practicable within the enactments made for the security and protection of honorably discharged Union sailors and soldiers. That was not done in this case, and the order from which the appeal has been taken should be affirmed.