Filed Date: 6/8/1977
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
HUGH A. LAVERY JR., ESQ. Village Attorney, Ossining
We acknowledge receipt of your letter in which you state that the Village of Ossining is a charter village, the charter being Chapter 667 of the Laws of 1910 (with some subsequent amendments) and that pursuant to section 10 of the charter the village justice is a village officer who, pursuant to section 140, is an appointive officer having a three-year term of office commencing on May 1 of the year of appointment and terminating on April 30 of the last year of the term. You state that no village justice has been appointed for the term which commenced May 1, 1977, but that an acting village justice has been appointed and is serving. You state that the village contemplates the abolition of the office of village justice and of the village court. You inquire whether that can be done under the provisions of Village Law §
The New York Constitution, Article
"b. The legislature may * * * discontinue any village * * * court * * *."
The New York Constitution, Article
The Court of Appeals, construing the former Village Law in the case of Greene v. Dunscomb,
The present Village Law §
"§ 23-2202 Exceptions
"This chapter shall not be deemed to repeal or otherwise affect the provisions of any special or local law or ordinance of any county, city or village charter, or other special form of government, it being the intention of the legislature that the same shall continue in full force and effect until and unless otherwise duly amended, repealed or affected." (Emphasis supplied.)
In our opinion, the provisions in the special act constituting the Charter of the Village of Ossining relating to the office of village justice in the Village of Ossining have not been superseded by the general provisions of the Village Law relating to that office; therefore, the provisions of the New York Constitution, Article