Filed Date: 6/16/1982
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Joel Jay Flick, Esq. Village Attorney, Haverstraw
You have asked whether your village board of trustees may appoint you, the village attorney, to serve as the acting village justice.
In the absence of a constitutional or statutory prohibition against dual-officeholding, one person may hold two offices simultaneously unless they are incompatible. The leading case on compatibility of office isPeople ex rel. Ryan v Green,
There are two subsidiary aspects of compatibility. One is that, although the common law rule of the Ryan case is limited to public offices, the principle equally covers an office and a position of employment or two positions of employment. The other is that, although the positions are compatible, a situation may arise where one has a conflict of interest created by the simultaneous holding of the two positions. In such a situation the conflict is avoided by declining to participate in the disposition of the matter. If such situations are inevitable as opposed to being possibilities, there is an inherent inconsistency in the positions.
There is no statutory prohibition against one person holding two appointive village offices. (See Village Law §
We note that in 1971 Op Atty Gen (Inf) 78 we said that:
"an assistant county attorney may be obliged to represent the county in a civil action brought by or against the county in a village court * * * in which, if he were the acting village justice, he would act as judge in the absence or inability to act of the village justice * * *.
"Although as a practical matter such a situation may be unlikely, the general principle remains and I must, therefore, conclude that neither a county attorney nor any of his assistants should, at the same time, hold either of the offices of village justice or acting village justice."
We think that the "general principle" is not applicable if, as seems to be true here, the inconsistency is not only "unlikely" but its rare occurrence can be avoided. Compare our Opinion No. 81-16, copy enclosed, in which we said that an assistant county attorney assigned exclusively to Family Court matters and not authorized to assume the duties of the county attorney could also hold the office of town or village justice.
We conclude that a village board of trustees may appoint the village attorney to serve as acting village justice if the board arranges matters so that the village attorney does not appear in the village court representing the village.
The Attorney General renders formal opinions only to officers and departments of the State government. This perforce is an informal and unofficial expression of views of this office.