Schultze v. City of New York

INGRAHAM, P. J.

[1] The coroners in the city of New York are classed under section 1570 of the charter (chapter 466 of the Laws of 1901) as borough officers. In the case of People ex rel. Burger v. Blair, 21 App. Div. 213, 47 N. Y. Supp. 495, affirmed on opinion below 154 N. Y. 734, 49 N. E. 1102, the status of coroners was determined, and it was held that by the enactment of the charter the office of county coroner was abolished and borough officers elected under its provisions were vested with the powers and jurisdiction theretofore exercised by the county coroners; that the borough coroners are city officers. And in People ex rel. Hillman v. Scholer, 94 App. Div. 282, 87 N. Y. Supp. 1122, affirmed 179 N. Y. 602, 72 N. E. 1148, we held, following Burger v. Blair, supra, that the borough coroners were city officers, and their salaries and the expenses of their offices were chargeable on the entire city alike. It was also held that section 1543 of the charter did not apply to a clerk appointed by a coroner, as that section by its express terms applies only to “the heads of all departments and all borough presidents.” Section 1769 of the Consolidation Act was continued by the express provisions of section 1571 of the charter, which provides that each of said coroners shall possess all the powers vested in or imposed upon coroners by any existing law relating to coroners in the city of New York as heretofore known and bounded or by any of the laws of - this state. By that section each coroner of said city should, on assuming office, appoint a qualified physician who should be a resident in said city, and who should be known as a coroner’s physician, and by section 1773 the duties of a coroner’s physician are prescribed.'

The plaintiff was duly appointed a coroner’s physician under this provision or law by one of the coroners of the borough of Manhattan in the city of New York, and received for his services as such coroner’s physician the salary prescribed by law. I think the coroner’s physician held an office under the provisions of the charter and the Consolidation Act before referred to. He was appointed for a definite term, and received a stated salary for his services. Section 1770 of the Consolidation Act. While acting in this capacity, he was required to make autopsies, and to give evidence in relation thereto at the coroner’s inquest. The position held by a coroner’s physician is entirely distinct from a mere clerical position to which the coroner is authorized to appoint from time to time as it becomes necessary. He held a definite position with a definite salary attached and was required to perform definite services for the borough in which he was appointed. He was appointed by a borough officer elected in a particular borough, and, as the coroner became a city officer, the physician appointed by him to the position of coroner’s .physician also, I think, held a position as a city officer whose salary was paid by the *717city of New York for the performance of the specific duties in the said city, and the general provisions of the charter in relation to city officers are applicable to a coroner and a coroner’s physician.

[2] While the plaintiff held this office as coroner’s physician, he was called upon by the district attorney for assistance in three cases in which there had been indictments for murder. The first case was that of one Patrick, who had been indicted for the murder of one Rice, and who had been tried and convicted. There was a motion for a new trial after the conviction, and in preparing to meet that motion the plaintiff rendered assistance to the district attorney, and wrote a brief on the medical affidavits submitted by the defense. The plaintiff had not performed an autopsy in the Patrick Case, and had never seen the body of the deceased. In the Binge Case, which was also where there had been an indictment for murder, he performed an autopsy upon the deceased and reported the result to the coroner, and later, at the request of the district attorney, he made a microscopic examination of the organs of the deceased, consulted with an assistant district attorney, and gave evidence before the grand jury. The third case was that of People v. Bauer, where the plaintiff had made an autopsy upon the body of the deceased, gave testimony for the people on the trial of the case, and in rebuttal gave further testimony to disprove a claim by the defendant that it was impossible to inflict the wound from which the deceased died by an instrument which was in the possession of the deceased. In none of these employments so far as appears by the record was there any express agreement by the 'district attorney or his assistant that the plaintiff should be paid a fee for the services that he rendered. He was apparently called upon as one of the coroner’s physicians to aid the district attorney in his .prosecution of the case of the people, and rendered those services without any express agreement as to compensation. Aftel the services were rendered, he presented a bill to the district attorney for his services, which apparently was approved by the district attorney, and submitted to the comptroller, but which the comptroller refused to pay, whereupon this action was instituted in which the plaintiff has ' recovered a judgment for the full amount claimed by him as an expert, and the question is presented as to the liability of the city of New York for such services rendered by a coroner’s physician to the district attorney.

Section 1533 of the charter expressly provides that no officer of the corporation shall be or become interested, directly or indirectly, as contracting party, partner, stockholder, or otherwise, in or in the performance of any contract, work, or business; or the sale of any article, the expense, price, or consideration of which is payable from the city treasury, and for a violation of this act the officer offending forfeits his' office and is punishable as for a misdemeanor, and all such contracts shall at the option of the comptroller be forfeited and void. Section 1550 of the charter prohibits any officer of the city government from receiving to his own use any fees, perquisites, or commissions or any percentage, but every such officer shall be paid by a •fixed salary, and all fees, percentages, and commissions received by *718any such officer shall be the property of the city. Section 1561 of the charter provides that no officer or employé of the city of New York or of any of the counties comprised within its territorial limits shall detail or cause any officer, employé, or subordinate of the city or any of said counties to do or perform any service or work outside of his public office, work, or employment; and any violation of this section should constitute a misdemeanor. These prohibitions are merely declaratory of the common law. Smith v. City of Albany, 61 N. Y. 444. It is quite necessary to protect the public or a municipal corporation that its officers who are charged with the performance of duties for the public or the municipality should be content for the services they render with the salary prescribed by law, and certainly there is no implied obligation on behalf of a public official to pay a city officer or employé for services that he is called upon to perform for the public in the absence of an express contract that such officer shall receive a compensation in addition to that of his regular salary. The policy of the law is indicated by the sections of the charter to which attention has been called. An express contract of a city official with the municipality is expressly prohibited, and this express provision applies to the head of a department, chief of a bureau, deputy thereof, or clerk therein or other officer of a corporation, and no officer, employé, or subordinate of the city or any of said counties can be required to do or perform any services or work outside of his public work or employment.

The plaintiff by accepting the appointment of coroner’s physician became a city officer, and I think his position prohibited! him from recovering any compensation -for any services that he rendered to the city or to the county of New York while holding such position. It might be that the plaintiff could! have refused to perform the services requested as not within the specific duties required of him "by the provisions of law which regulated his office, but having at the request of the district attorney assisted him in the prosecution of these cases, in view of the express policy of law as indicated in these provisions of the charter, there certainly could arise no implied obligation which ■ would impose''upon the municipal corporation a liability to pay the value of the services. We approve what was said in Mullally v. Mayor, 3 Hun, 661, as a statement of the reasons for the establishment of this rule. The same rule was applied in Beebe v. Supervisors of Sullivan Co., 64 Hun, 377, 19 N. Y. Supp. 629, affirmed on opinion below 142 N. Y. 631, 37 N. E. 566. I consider the enforcement of this rule absolutely necessary for the protection of the public, certainly to the extent that no obligation as against a municipal corporation can be implied because one official consults with another public official as to the performance of his duties or in relation to the public service. The enforcement of this rule requires this court to hold that there is no liability of the city to the plaintiff for the performance of the services which he rendered, and I am therefore in favor of the reversal of this judgment.

*719It follows, therefore, that the judgment appealed from must be reversed, and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.

MCLAUGHLIN and SCOTT, JJ„ concur.