In this article 78 proceeding, the petitioner sought a judgment directing the respondents to -reinstate him, without loss of seniority rights, and recovery of back pay, as a result of his alleged discharge without a hearing. The Special Term, relying upon Board of Regents v. Roth (408 U. S. 564), dismissed -the petition in all respects, finding that, since the petitioner had not yet attained the status of an (apprentice within the contemplation of section 90 of the Navigation Law, he had not acquired a ‘‘ property right ’ ’ which would entitle him to a hearing before discharge. The majority of this court apparently agrees with the Special Term. I do not.
At the time of his discharge, the petitioner was engaged in what the respondents concede to be a three and a-half-year ‘ ‘ preapprenticeship ” (or “ applicant apprentice ”) training course. This training course is a preliminary step to formal (acceptance, by the Board of Commissioners of Pilots, of applications for Sandy Hook pilot apprenticeship, a statutorily mandated four-year apprenticeship program required of all persons who seek *395licensure as full harbor pilots. The appellant asserts, and on the argument of this appeal the respondents conceded, that every person whose application for Sandy Hook pilot apprenticeship registration has been .accepted has completed the ‘ ‘ pi e-apprenticeship ” training course. Realistically, therefore, it must be concluded that the three-and-a-half-year pre-apprenticeship (training course is a de facto prerequisite to participation in the four-year apprentice program provided by section 90 of the Navigation Law, and hence to eventual licensure as a harbor pilot, by the Board of Commissioners of Pilots.
Approximately three years after the petitioner began employment with the respondent Pilots’ Association as an “ applicant apprentice ”, he was discharged by the executive committee of the United New York Sandy Hook Pilots Benevolent Association (the parent association of the Pilots’ Association). The Pilots ’ Association, in its answer to the petition, explained that, due to a dispute that had arisen between the petitioner and a pilot apprentice, having nothing to do with the appellant’s performance as an apprentice, it had determined that it would not be in the best interest of the pilots and the benevolent association to .retain him in its employ. It is undenied that no written complaint had ever been made to the board of commissioners regarding the petitioner’s performance of his duties. The Pilots’ Association also admits that the board made no investigation to determine the verities of the situation and that the petitioner was not given a hearing.
The Special Term found that since the petitioner was engaged only in a pre-apprenticeship program, for which there is no statutory authorization, he was not entitled to the procedural due process accorded an apprentice by subdivisions 4 and 5 of section 94 of the Navigation Law. Yet it is admitted that the pre-apprenticeship program is virtually mandatory and serves a purpose similar to, if not the same as, the apprentice program. Nevertheless, the respondents claim that such a pre-apprentice applicant is not a “ person connected with a pilot boat ” within the contemplation of subdivision 4 and therefore is not entitled to the benefit of the procedural due process provisions contained in section 94.
In effect, the respondents have decided, sua sponte, to extend a training program (regardless of what name it bears) from 4 to 7½ years, and have done .so in the belief that they may safely disregard compliance with specific statutory procedural safeguards accorded aspiring harbor pilots during their last four years of training. Vague formulations, such as “ preapprenticeship *396training programs ” and “ pre-apprentice applicants ”, developed by the respondents—whether intentionally so designed or not—have the practical effect of establishing additional requirements and procedures for pilot licensure insulated from the constitutional protections against the arbitrary exercise of administrative discretion.
The fact ¡that no statutory protections for due process are provided in the Navigation Law for pre-apprentices is not a sufficient predicate for holding that due process protections may not nevertheless attach (cf. Matter of Hecht v. Monaghan, 307 N. Y. 461, 468). In that case the court said: “Although the statutes empowering the hack bureau and the commissioner to grant, suspend or revoke a hack driver’s license do not expressly require that those licenses may be withdrawn only upon notice and an opportunity to be heard, it is not necessary that they do so. Where the exercise of a statutory power adversely affects property rights * * * the courts have implied the requirement of notice and hearing, where the statute was silent (see Wong Tang Sung v. McGrath, 339 U. S. 33; Clarksburg-Columbus Short Route Bridge Co. v. Woodring, 89 F. 2d 788, 790; Anti-Fascist Committee v. McGrath, 341 U. S. 123; Railroad Comm. v. Pacific Gas Co., 302 U. S. 388; Bauer v. Acheson, 106 F. Supp. 445; People ex rel. Copcutt v. Board of Health of City of Yonkers, 140 N, Y. 1, 6-7).”
As heretofore noted, the question of whether the petitioner had attained a “ property right ” was answered in the negative by the Special Term on the authority of Board of Regents v. Roth (408 U. S. 564, supra). Such reliance is misplaced. In Roth, the ¡respondent, hired' for a fixed term of one academic year to teach ¡at a State university, was informed, without explanation, that he would not be rehired for the ensuing year. The court held that the terms of his employment accorded him no " property " interest protected by procedural due process. Most important was the fact that the respondent, already licensed, was working pursuant to a fixed agreement.
More in point with the facts here is Perry v. Sindermann (408 U. S. 593), decided on the same day as Roth. There, the respondent had been employed as a junior college professor for four years under a series of one-year written contracts. The Regents declined to renew his employment for the fifth year, without giving him an explanation or prior hearing. Besides holding that the respondent was entitled to a hearing on First Amendment grounds, the court also found that, though a subjective “ expectancy ” of tenure is not protected by procedural *397due process, the respondent’s allegation that the college had a de facto tenure policy, arising from rules and understandings officially promulgated and fostered, entitled him to an opportunity of proving the legitimacy of his claim to job tenure.
The allegations of the petitioner here to the effect that representations were made to him that the pre-apprenticeship, program was part and parcel of the apprenticeship program itself entitle him to an evidentiary hearing. As the Supreme Court said in Perry v. Sindermatm (supra, p. 603), “ Proof of such a property interest would not, of course, entitle him to reinstatement. But such proof would obligate * * * [the respondents] to grant a hearing at his request, where he could be informed of the grounds for his nonretention and challenge their sufficiency.”
Consequently, I would reverse the judgment and remand the proceeding to the Special Term for a full evidentiary hearing.
Martuscello and Latham, JJ., concur with Christ, J.; Shapiro, J., dissents and votes to reverse the judgment and to remand the proceeding to Special Term for a full evidentiary hearing, with an opinion, in which Hopkins, Acting P. J., concurs.
Judgment of the Supreme Court, Kings County, dated May 22, 1974, affirmed, without costs.