People v. Cooper

Davis, P. J.,

dissenting:

For the-reasons hereinafter stated, I am unable to concur in the result reached by my brethren in this case. I think it not correct to assume that this court, on the appeal from the order granting the writ in this case, passed upon the ^question whether the proceedings for the removal of the relator had reached a stage at which they could be reviewed in this form. It was argued on that appeal, that the proceedings of the Mayor and Governor under the provisions of the charter; in removing heads of departments, were final' and conclusive, and not the subject of review by any court. This court held to the contrary; and decided that such proceedings might be reviewed by certiorari; and upon that point alone the appeal was disposed of, leaving all questions relating to the merits, and to the efficacy of the writ in the particular case, to future'consideration, and without comment. The court in a very brief opinion, said, “We are of the opinion that a writ of certiorari may properly be sued out to review the action of the Mayor in *526cases of this character. The allowance of .the writ rests in the sound d'iscietion of the court to which application is made, and this court will not interfere with the exercise of such discretion in allowing the writ where it does not appear that it has been palpably abused. Without considering, or in any manner passing upon the merits of the case, which we think are not properly before us for that purpose, we dispose of the case simply on the ground that a certiorari will lie in such a case as this ; and that the action of the court in granting the same was not an abuse ■ of its discretion.” I am at a loss to see how it is possible from this opinion to say, that the court did any thing more than decide that a writ of certiorari would lie and was an appropriate course of procedure in such cases. . •

Nor was the question passed upon or considered by the Court of Appeals, on the decision of the appeal from the order of this court granting the writ of prohibition. That writ was directed to and prohibited a justice of the Supreme Court, then sitting at chambers for the purpose of hearing non-enumerated business and motions, from ordering a cause belonging to the enumerated calendar of the Special Term for the trial of issues of law and fact, and there to be tried according to the forms prescribed by statute, to be heard and tried before him at chambers upon such an order to show cause as he saw fit to direct. This court was of opinion that a justice had no power to make such an order, and thereby deprive the parties of such notice, form and mode of trial as the Legislature had seen, fit to prescribe, and we thought, had secured to all parties. There was no question in that case, either upon the merits of the controversy or the sufficiency or validity of the writ of certiorari, before this court, and no such question was considered or passed upon by this court, however much talked about by counsel. On the appeal, the Court of Appeals decided that a justice at chambers had such power; and that ruling disposed of the whole question before the court. It is not doubted that that decision became the law of the case, and for a time established the law in similar cases; but it is a fit subject for gratulation that ‘the flood of evil such a rule of law was likely to set loose in this city has been effectually sto ped, so far as writs of *527certiorari are concerned, by an act of the Legislature. Section 2138 of the “ Act supplemental to the Code of Civil Procedure ” (passed May 6, 1880), declares that in such cases, “the cause must be heard at a General Term of the court. In the Supreme Court, it must be heard at a General Term held within the judicial department embracing the county where the writ was returnable.” This act re-establishes the practice of the common law, which was never broken in upon in this State, until by a rule of the court, it was provided that such cases might be heard at a Special Term. It is true that the Court of Appeals having disposed of the question before it, the learned judge who pronounced the opinion gave expression, to some extent, of his views of the merits of this controversy — which are, of course, entitled to the respect due to his great learning and ability; but as the merits were not before that court, it is also- due to 'him to say that he could not have intended to have decided finally questions of law or fact which had not then reached, and might never reach that high tribunal. But as to the question now under consideration, he expressly said: “Various other questions have been argued by the counsel for the respondent relating to the form of the writ of certiorari, and the effect of the order made by the Mayor, whether it is interlocutory or final / hut these need not he considered. They relate to the procedure under the writ, and must be disposed of when that writ and the- return thereto come before the court. They lime no relation to the order before us/ that, as its Icvnguage shows, is quite narrow.” It was a mistake therefore, in the court below, as it is' a mistake in the majority of this court, to hold that the question whether the order of the Mayor was “ interlocutory or final,” and could be reviewed on certiorari, had been determined, and is therefore res adjudicata in this court. I think the question is entirely an open one.

It is the well settled rale of law in this State, in such cases, that the order or judgment to be reviewed on common law certiorari must be complete and final before the writ will lie. ‘ This rule is now so well established that the Legislature has embodied it in section 2122 of the Code of Civil Procedure, by declaring that, “ Except as otherwise expressly prescribed by *528statute, a writ of certiorari cannot be issued: 1. “To review a determination, which does not family determine the rights of the parties with respect to the matter to be reviewed.” I accept this language as a terse and vigorous exjaression of the law, codified from the reports, which have long settled that “ the writ is powerless to remove a civil proceeding before an inferior magistrate exercising statutory jurisdiction, until after a final adjudication in the proceeding.” (5 "Wait Pr., 457; Lynde v. Noble, 20 Johns., 80; People v. Peabody, 26 Barb., 437; Devlin v. Platt, 11 Abb. Pr., 398; People v. Common Council of Utica, 65 Barb., 1; 8. C., 45 How. Pr., 289.) Especially must this be the rule where, as in this case, the court has no power to proceed, and determine the question or issue brought up by the writ. In England it has been the practice on certiorari to remove matters pending in inferior courts to a superior court, and for the latter thereupon to proceed de novo to hear and determine the same; but not in cases where by statute the powe/r to do the act complained of was vested im some officer or body.

The power to remove is given in this case to the Mayor alone with the approval of the Governor; and neither this court nor the Court of Appeals can exercise it' under any circumstances, although we may review the proceedings by which a removal was made when they have become a final and effective determination.

In the light of the rule above mentioned, let us examine the mode of removal of heads of departments provided by the city charter. The mode is a single and simple one. It is made up of two things, or acts, which though independent of each other must coexist and concur before there can be any final determination, “ which determines the rights of the parties with respect to the matter to be reviewed.” The charter (Laws of 1873, p. 491, ch. 335, § 25) provides that the heads of all departments . . . may be removed by the Mayor for cause, and after opportunity to be heard, subject however before such removal shall take effect, to the approval of the Governor expressed in writing. The Mayor shall in all cases communicate to the Governor in writing his reasons for such removal.”

*529To me it seems too plain for argument that the action of the Mayor cannot be final when he determines to remove, until the “ approval of the Governor is expressed in writing.” His determination is purely interlocutory until another act over which he has no control gives to it finality. By it the officer is not and cannot be disturbed in his functions, nor suspended in his operations, nor relieved from his duties, nor deprived of his salary, nor affected officially in any degree. In the strictest and most literal, as well as in the broadest sense, the proceedings to remove, where nothing appears except the action of the Mayor, are inchoate,' incomplete, . and wholly ineffective, and they may exist in that form forever, and neither impair nor legally prejudice the status or functions of the officer. It neither does nor can it appear, while that condition remains, that any determination will ever be made that will be or become final and effective. The law cannot' presume that the Governor will approve. On the contrary if the proceedings be erroneous, the legal presumption if .any, is that he will not approve. His duties are not merely perfunctory. Before approving he may investigate, re-examine and re-try to whatever extent he chooses, not for the purpose of removing by any official energy or power of his own, but to inform his conscience or judgment before he approves or rejects. It is the Mayor’s detenrdnaüon that removes; but it is his a/pproved determination. His v/napproved determinartion is legally speaking, as harmless and 'powerless as was the blank paper upon which it may have been written. Hence it appears that the Mayor’s act is but one step in a process which requires two steps, and can never be final or effective without both. It is a necessary step it is true, but without the other it accomplishes nothing, for the process remains incomplete, and is but “ the half of a scissors which will not cut.” A certiorari will not lie to review the several steps in such a process, for the court is then called upon to review something which has. no legal force to work injury to anyone. If the statute had declared that the Mayor’s determination should have “ no effect ” until filed with the Governor, the point would have been very clear, and no one would have thought of suing out a certiorari till after such a filing; but the case in principle would have been no different, because the approval is as requisite to make the *530Mayor’s act a final adjudication, as would be thsfili/ng in tbe case supposed. The completed process may be reviewed, because the several steps that have made it complete have resulted in a final determination which does an injury to right or property, fit to be redressed. The writ of certiorari is not a preventive process, but a remedial one; and hence it does not lie to review each of the several steps that may culminate in a wrong, but only the completed and final determination that works the wrong. The confusion seems to spring from considering the ' Governor as an appellate tribunal appointed to review a final determination of the Mayor. He is nothing of the sort; he is only a constituent element of a system, which is nothing without him, as it is nothing without the Mayor, but, with both concurring, is complete and efficient. It is the very common thing, of a statute requiring two or more public officers to do several and separate acts, to consummate a specific result. The act of neither is such a final and complete thing, that it can be reviewed and reversed except by special statutory provision, because of its legal incapacity to effect anything. For instance, to bond a town, if the statute requires the consent of two thirds of the freeholders and the approval of the county judge. There is nothing to review, by certiorari till both acts combine, for the consent is but a step, complete in itself, but of no legal effect, till the approval be obtained. Then it may be reviewed because it has become a completed process, affecting and perhaps injuring the rights of others. So also of proceedings in the various steps to lay out a highway. None of them is the subject of separate review, though it be in itself a completed part of the several things to be done to constitute a legal whole. It would be different if the determination of the Mayor had efficacy and force, ex proprio vigore, which remained operative unless, or until disapproved by the Governor. In that case it would be a final determination affecting substantial rights; but in the case before us, the statute in substance declares that the Mayor’s proceedings have no effect till the Governor expresses his consent in writing.

I do not consider the question whether the Governor is a necessary party to a writ of certiorari, after he shall have approved: that is quite unnecessary. It is clear however, that the removal does not *531become tbe Governor’s act by Ms approval. It is still tbe Mayor’s act and must stand or fall on the proceedings before him. It cannot be helped ont by any investigation the Governor may set on foot to inform his conscience. When the Mayor’s proceedings and determination have become final and effective by the approval of the Governor, the question whether they were without jurisdiction, or were taken in violation of law, is one quite independent of, and to no extent supported or impaired by the Governor’s actions. • In this ease the return shows notMrig beyond the unapproved determination of the Mayor, and the writ should therefore be dismissed as prematurely issued.

I do not feel constrained to wholly yield my judgment on the merits to what I conceive to have been the obiter expressions of the learned judge of the Court of Appeals. In my opirnon, the charter provides a simple and effective mode for the removal of heads of departments by the Mayor, who is the representative of the whole people of the city. It was not, I think, intended- to provide “ a judicial proceeding,” but a summary administrative one, by wliich the Mayor, after giving to the officer an opportunity to be heard,” could remove “for cause,” with all the promptitude any exigency might require, provided his action received the approval of the Governor. The requirement of such approval was deemed a sufficient safeguard against inconsiderate, unjust or partisan action on the part of the Mayor. I have no doubt it was the intention of the Legislature that the Mayor might act upon his own knowledge, or observation of the misconduct or inefficiency of an officer, whenever' they became in Ms judgment sufficient cause, and the officer should fail on opportunity given, to show a satisfactory excuse or explanation. This construction would secure to the city an efficient government, under which the heads of departments could be held to a responsibility that would make them the servants and not the masters, of the people. The contrary construction has worked infinite mischief under the false idea, that the title of an officer to his place is a matter superior in importance to the right of the people to have and enforce the performance of the duties of the office.

It is not necessary to discuss this part of the case any further-; *532but I cannot forbear to say that, in my judgment, the return shows that the Mayor, in the removal of the relator (even if it be conceded that he acted under mistaken advice as to the law), did an act fully deserved, and which entitles him to the approbation of all good citizens. The return shows (what every citizen must well remember as overt facts) that through the inefficiency of the heads of the Police Department, the public streets had, to a large extent, become intolerable nuisances; that the Board of Commissioners were at deadlock, by a chronic and disgraceful quarrel among themselves, to such an extent that the offenses of members of the force could not be, and were not tried; that unfit men could not be removed, or fit men appointed; that measures demanded by the public interest could not be adopted ; that the discipline of the police force was relaxed and its morale debauched; that all the streets were neglected; and to such an extent had these things gone, that one member of the board had introduced resolutions in that body reciting some of these facts, and requesting the Mayor “ to investigate the department without delay,” and had personally appealed to him to make such investigation.

The charter simply required that removals should be for cause, and “ after opportunity to be bear’d.” It necessarily makes the Mayor the actor, as accuser, witness, and trior, and imposes upon him the duty of determining. It provides no process to bring in the officer; none to summon witnesses or compel testimony; no power to administer oaths, to punish contempts, to preserve order. In short, it provides nothing but to present the “ cause ” or causes to the officer, and hear his denial or explanation, or excuse. To hold that these simple provisions create a court of which the Mayor is a judge, bound to sit as a court, to produce witnesses to sustain his alleged “ causes ; ” and to be sworn and cross-examined himself; to hear the testimony of whatever interminable list of witnesses, the officer may choose to produce; and to listen to the objections, quibbles and arguments of lawyers, is to pervert the simple machinery of the statute into the cumbrous forms of a judicial tribunal, destitute of rules and powers, yet hampered by impediments and technicalities. Such a construction virtually prevents all removals, and reduces the scheme of the charter to an incongruous absurdity. *533The Constitution in so far as it restrains or regulates the trial of actions and indictments in the organized courts of justice, has nothing to do with such a case. A person who takes office under the charter takes it subject to the“provisions of the charter. It is his contract with the city, not only that he will faithfully perform the duties of the office, but that he will hold himself amenable to removal by the Mayor, under the provisions of the charter-, if he fails to do so. ' In iny opinion the Mayor acted iu removing the relator within the scope of his powers ; but if I err in that view I shall have an abiding conviction that whatever. flaws lawyers and courts may find in his action the common sense of justice and morality -will approve it. I think the judgment of the Special Term should be reversed and the writ quashed.

.Judgment affirmed.