The relator, on the twenty-first day of January, 1897, was appointed a patrolman on the police force of the city of New York, and after the new charter went into effect, on the first day of January, 1898, he continued to serve in that position as a member of the police force of the present city. On the first day of June, 1900, the police board, by a resolution duly passed and approved by the mayor, promoted him from the position of patrolman to that of roundsman because of meritorious and heroic conduct in the performance of his duties as such patrolman. The heroic or meritorious act for which this promotion was made was exhibited on the *Page 446 occasion of the fire which destroyed the Windsor Hotel on the seventeenth of March, 1899. It appears from the moving papers that on that occasion he went to the second floor of the burning building and rescued four women who were imprisoned in the fire escape; going up to the fifth story he met a man with his clothes on fire and extinguished it and then passed the man down the ladder to the street. Next he found a woman on the fifth floor of the hotel helpless and badly burned, and with the assistance of a brother officer he placed her upon his back and at the risk of his life carried her to the second floor and then down a burning staircase in safety to the street.
It may be assumed that the determination of the police board, promoting the relator by reason of this meritorious and heroic conduct in the performance of his duty, is a promotion from a lower to a higher grade in the police force, at least in the sense that the relator became entitled, if the promotion was legally made, to a larger salary. It appears from the moving papers that the treasurer of the police department refuses to pay the relator the salary of roundsman without a certification by the respondents as commissioners constituting the municipal civil service commission of the city of New York on the ground that such a certificate is required by section nineteen of chapter three hundred and seventy of the Laws of eighteen hundred and ninety-nine. The court at Special Term upon the relator's application granted a peremptory writ of mandamus commanding the respondents to forthwith certify upon the payroll of the relator that he was promoted to the position of roundsman according to law and the rules made in pursuance of law, and was entitled to pay as a roundsman from the first day of June, when promoted, at the rate of fifteen hundred dollars per annum. The Appellate Division, by a divided court, reversed the order, and from that decision this appeal has been taken.
The question in the case involves the construction of various statutes existing prior to the enactment of the new charter, some of the provisions of the charter itself and at least one *Page 447 general statute subsequently enacted. It is quite possible that a very strict construction of these numerous statutes would justify the decision of the court below. But we think that the system of statute law upon which the relator's rights depend should not be subject to any narrow or illiberal construction. The various statutes should receive a fair construction, and the intention of the legislature when ascertained should, of course, control. It is clear beyond dispute that at the time the relator entered the service as a policeman, and for many years before, the police board possessed and exercised the power of promoting individual policemen for special and exceptional acts of heroism in preserving human life. The board attempted to exercise that power in this case upon a state of facts as to which there is no dispute and leaves no doubt as to the character and merit of the service which the relator performed. The policy of the statute in conferring power upon the police board to promote a member of the force for special and particular acts of heroism was to furnish inducements for the performance of duty even when confronted with great personal danger. The possibility of obtaining such rewards and honors was held out to every individual entering the service as a means of promoting its efficiency. It is analogous in some sense to the inducements which the government furnishes to the soldier who, in the discharge of his duty, is distinguished for bravery or some particular heroic act. When a policeman or a soldier has by his conduct earned the promotion or the reward, he ought not to be deprived of the benefits by any narrow or literal construction of the law governing the case. There is at least one important point involved in the controversy that is clear beyond any dispute, and that is that formerly the police board, with the approval of the mayor, was clothed with the power to do all that it has done in this case; that is, to determine that the relator merited promotion by reason of his conduct on the occasion referred to and to award the promotion.
The only other question involved is, whether this power has been abolished or modified in such a way that the police board *Page 448 is disabled from acting except in conjunction with the municipal civil service commission, or has the power which it formerly exercised been taken away or divided between the board, the mayor and the civil service commission? If it has, then it was necessary that the relator, in order to obtain the promotion and the increase in his salary, should have satisfied, not only the police board and the mayor, but also the civil service commission, that he was entitled to the promotion. But a special and local statute conferring power upon the police board to promote a policeman for particular and exceptional acts of gallantry is not to be deemed repealed or modified by a subsequent general law relating to the civil service generally. The various statutes with respect to promotions in the civil service are no broader than the Constitution itself. That enacts that appointments and promotions in the civil service shall be made when practicable upon competitive examination. The fact is clearly recognized that in some cases where promotion is merited a competitive examination would be impracticable; and it is very evident that this is such a case, since it is obvious that no examination could be devised which would present the conditions to furnish a test of the comparative heroism of a policeman engaged in the attempt to rescue persons from a burning building. In this case the right to promotion depended upon some meritorious or heroic act. That act alone is the only test which is practicable to apply to the relator's right to promotion. It may be that in such cases the applicant would not be able to meet any educational test whatever, but that circumstance ought not to interfere with the right of promotion which the law held out to him at the time that he entered the service as a reward for acts of exceptional courage or bravery in the performance of duty. We do not think that either the Constitution or the various statutes regulating appointments and promotions in the civil service has any application to this case. The general legislation on that subject was not intended to affect or modify a statute which authorized the police board to promote the relator as a reward for his conduct on the occasion of the burning of the *Page 449 hotel. It is well settled that a special and local statute, providing for a particular case or class of cases, is not repealed or modified by a subsequent statute, general in its terms, provisions and application, unless the intent to repeal or alter is manifest although the terms of the general act would, but for the special law, include the cases provided by the latter. (Matter of Commissioners of Central Park, 50 N.Y. 493;McKenna v. Edmundstone, 91 N.Y. 231; Davis v. SupremeLodge K. of H., 165 N.Y. 159.) This principle would control this case even if the subsequent statutes regulating appointments and promotions in the civil service were general and sweeping in the language employed and contained no exceptions or reservations applicable here. But in all the statutes regulating the civil service is to be found an important exception which, it seems to me, takes this case out of their operation and leaves the law with respect to the power of the police board to promote the relator substantially where it was originally. The last of these enactments is to be found in section ten of chapter three hundred and seventy of the Laws of eighteen hundred and ninety-nine. That section, after providing for the classified service in cities, contains the following provision: "The authority by this section conferred shall not be so exercised as to take from any policeman or fireman any right or benefit conferred by law, or existing under any lawful regulation of the department in which he serves." The city charter contains a provision substantially identical. These provisions of the general law regulating the civil service disclose an intention on the part of the legislature to except from the general rules therein enacted just such a case as this. All rights or benefits conferred by law referred to were not necessarily such rights as had vested in the individual, but the language is broad enough to embrace rights or benefits not then in possession or enjoyment, but in expectancy under any law which entitled him to special honors or rewards for some particular meritorious act while in the service. The power of the police board to make promotions for such exceptional conduct is not at all inconsistent with the general *Page 450 scope and purpose of the civil service regulations. Both enactments can stand and each can be made to perform the office which the legislature intended in enacting it. The subsequent legislation does not affect the original law conferring the power of promotion upon the police board and the mayor in such cases, since the latter statutes do not, in terms, or by any reasonable implication, interfere with that power. On the contrary, these statutes disclose an intention on the part of the legislature to make such a case as this an exception to the general rule, and, hence, it is not within the general scope or purpose of the civil service regulations. These views are confirmed by an examination of a recent case in the Supreme Court. (People ex rel. Schelpp v. Knox, 48 App. Div. 477.) In that case the various statutes relating to the question were considered, and the conclusion of the court commends itself to us as a fair and reasonable exposition of the law.
It follows that the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, with costs, and that of the Special Term affirmed.