Petitioners are members of defendant union. They petitioned the appropriate officers to call a general membership meeting. The petition was rejected and plaintiffs sought a mandatory injunction which was, we believe, correctly granted by iSpeeial Term. We are all in accord that petitioners were within their rights pursuant to the constitution of the defendant local in seeking the membership meeting. The only question is the extent of the action that may be taken at the meeting.
The petition sets forth the purpose of the proposed meeting. It is to amend section 1 of article VI of the constitution, which reads, “ all of said officers shall be elected for a term of three years ” to provide that the terms of said officers shall be for two years, that elections are to be held in January of each year commencing January, 1969, and that the unexpired terms of officers shall terminate at that date.
There can be little dispute but that the constitution is amendable by the means selected by the petitioners, or that a change in the term of elected officers is subject to such amendment. It is, however, argued that the term of a particular officer cannot be curtailed during his period of office. To put it more specifically, the claim is that once an officer has been duly elected the term of office cannot be altered during his incumbency. We neither find nor have been referred to any provision of the local’s constitution that makes any such exception as to the membership’s power to amend. Absent such restriction, the objection that the proposed amendment would curtail an existing term of office would be of no avail unless there is some overriding rule of law to the contrary.
Such is argued to exist in the decision of this court in Costello v. O’Kane (280 App. Div. 70). In our opinion the case does not *35touch directly upon the proposition and, to the extent that it does, is authority to the contrary. There, plaintiff had been elected an assistant business manager of defendant union for a term of two years. There were five assistant managers, and during his term the number was purported to be reduced to three. Plaintiff’s contention was that the office was improperly abolished — not because his term of office was curtailed but because the by-law by which the office was created was not amended in the proper way. The court held that according to the by-law any office could be abolished forthwith provided the amendment was regularly adopted according to the by-laws, that is, by being voted at three consecutive regular meetings of the membership. In addition, according to the same by-law the office held by plaintiff could be abolished without such formality but only at the expiration of its term. The sole question before the court, as it stated (p. 72) was the interpretation of the by-law in question, and it did not decide nor purport to decide that an individual union officer enjoys an inviolable tenure despite amendment of the constitution which fixes the office.
It is true that in respect to dates the order differs from the relief requested in the petition and order to show cause. This is a necessary concomitant of the time required to process the application through the courts. Likewise, it is true that the provision in the order for the supervision of the election by the Honest Ballot Association was not requested in the order to show cause. We take the same view as to this as expressed in the dissenting opinion.
The order entered August 18, 1969, should be affirmed with costs to respondents.