Citation Numbers: 33 N.Y.S. 229, 86 Hun 174, 93 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 174, 66 N.Y. St. Rep. 744
Judges: Follett
Filed Date: 4/11/1895
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
By chapter 602, Laws 1892, an “examining board of plumbers” is created in the cities of New York, Brooklyn, and Albany, and an “examining and supervising board of plumbers and plumbing” in all other cities of the state. By the fourth section of the act the powers and the duties of such boards are defined :
“Sec. 4. The several boards of examiners constituted under this act shall have power, and it shall be their duty: (1) Meetings. To meet at stated intervals- in their respective cities; they shall also meet whenever the board of health of such city or the mayor thereof shall, • in writing, request them so to do. (2) Examinations. To have jurisdiction over and to examine all persons desirous or intending to engage in the trade, business or calling of plumbing as employing plumbers in the city in which such board shall be appointed, with the power of examining all persons applying for certificates of competency as such employing or master plumbers or as inspectors of plumbing, to determine their fitness and qualifications for conducting the*230 business of master plumbers or to act as inspectors of plumbing, and to issue certificates of competency to all such pérsons who shall hav.e submitted to and passed a satisfactory examination before such board, and shall be by it determined to be qualified for conducting the business as employing or master plumbers or competent to act as inspectors of plumbing. * * *
“Sec. 5. Any person desiring or intending to conduct the trade, business or calling of a plumber or of plumbing, in any of the cities of this state as employing or master plumber, shall be required to submit to an examination before such board of examiners as to his experience and qualifications in such trade, business or calling; and after the first day of March, eighteen hundred and ninety-three, it shall not be lawful in any city of this state for any person to conduct such trade, business or calling, unless he shall have first obtained a certificate of competency from such board of the city in which he conducts or proposes to conduct such business.
“Sec. 6. On and before the first day of March, eighteen hundred and ninety-three, every employing or master plumber carrying on his trade, business or calling in any of the cities of this state, shall register his name and address at the office of the board of health of the city in which he shall conduct such business under such rules and regulations as the respective boards of health of each of the cities of this state shall respectively prescribe, and thereupon he shall be entitled to receive a certificate of such • registration, provided, however, that such employing or master plumber shall, at the time of applying for registration, hold a certificate of competency from an examining board. * * * And after the first day of March eighteen hundred and ninety-three, it shall not be lawful for any person to engage in or carry on the trade, business or calling of an employing or master plumber in any of the cities of this state, unless his name and address shall have been registered as above provided.”
By chapter 66 of the Laws of 1893, which was passed and took effect February 28, 1893, the word “September” was substituted for the wo'rd “March,” in sections 5 and 6. Otherwise the sections are unchanged. On the 27th of February, 1893, the relator filed a written application with the examining board of plumbers of the city of Few York for a certificate of competency to conduct the business, of a master plumber in that city. This fact is alleged in the application, and is admitted by the return. Among other things, the respondents, in obedience to the writ, returned as follows:
“Third. That thereafter the above-named relator presented himself for examination to these respondents for a certificate of competency, under the provisions of the statute, and thereupon certain questions in writing were propounded to him, a copy whereof is hereto annexed marked ‘B.’ Fourth. That to said questions in writing, so propounded as aforesaid, the said relator made answers in writing, a copy whereof is hereto annexed marked ‘0.’ Fifth. That thereafter, and after a due consideration of the questions propounded and answers given as aforesaid, and the plan for the drainage of a building accompanying the same, which was a part of said examination, and pursuant to the power and authority conferred upon them by the aforesaid statute, these respondents determined, not arbitrarily or capriciously, as alleged by the relator, but in the exercise of their best judgrqent and discretion, and in the manner provided by said statute, that the relator herein was not qualified for conducting the business as employing or master plumber, or competent to act its inspector of plumbing, and thereupon passed the following resolution: ‘Resolved, that the application of Thomas J. Kelly for a certificate of competency be rejected.’ ”
It will be observed that neither the date of the relator’s examination nor the date of the determination by the board is returned, but it is alleged in the application, and not denied in the return,
Twenty questions were propounded to the relator, which are annexed to the return and maked “B.” The relator answered all of the questions in writing, which answers are annexed to the return and marked “C,” but it is not alleged in the return that any of the questions were incorrectly answered. The eighth and ninth questions relate to mensuration:
“(8) How would you determine the area of a pipe 6 in. in diameter and one 3 in. in diameter? Answer of relator: To determine the. area of 6" or a 3” pipe, you must square the diameter, and multiply l,729x.”
If this question calls for the rule for determining the area of pipes the diameters of which are known, an incorrect answer was returned. The arithmetical rule is: “Multiply half the diameter by half the circumference, and the product is the area; or, which is the sáme thing, multiply the square of the diameter by .785398, and the product is the area.”
“(9) What are the cubic contents of a tank 6 ft. long, 4% ft. wide, and 2% ft. high? How much water in gallons would said tank hold, and what would water weigh? Answer of relator: Cubic contents of a tank 6 ft. long, 4% wide, 2% high. The tank will hold 5047 2/77 gall. The tank will be 81 cubic ft. The weight of it is 5,062% lbs.’’
A tank of the dimensions given contains 67-|- cubic feet, but it holds 50472/77 gallons, as stated in the answer. The number of gallons being correctly stated, it may well be that the relator’s figures were misread. Under our statute, a wine gallon of distilled water contains *231 cubic inches, and weighs 8.355 pounds avoirdupois, which would make the total weight of 50472/7t gallons 4,218,732 pounds. The weight of a gallon of undistilled water is more. The question is indefinite, in not defining the kind of gallon referred to, whether imperial or statutory, or whether the weight is to be computed upon the basis of distilled or undistilled water. The answer given seems to be as accurate as the question is definite.
“(20) Why does a pump draw water, and how far can it be drawn? Answer of relator: (20) Pump draws water by the action of the piston, causing a vacuum, the vacuum causing a siphon, and the water runs through. A pump can draw 34 feet, but, for practical use, 24 or 25 ft. is enough.”
We assume that the question relates to the common or suction pump, and, if it does, the answer is approximately correct. The height to which such a pump will raise water depends upon the altitude above the level of the sea at which it is operated, and it is stated in scientific works to be 32 feet (12 Ency. Britan. 8th Ed., 174), 33.8 feet (14 Am. Cyc. 82), and at not more than 34 feet (Wells, Nat. Ph. 182; Avery, Nat. Ph. 176).
The other questions relate to the mode of doing plumbing, and, as before stated, it is not asserted that any of the answers are incorrect. When the determination of a board as to the qualifications of an applicant, founded on answers to questions relating
. Among other allegations, the relator’s petition contains the following :
“(4) That said members, composing said board or a majority of them, did not exercise their judgment and discretion upon examination and evidence, but refused to exercise their discretion on deponent’s application, for the alleged reason that deponent had no place of business, which was contrary to the fact, and said members composing said board, or a majority of them, acting, not judicially, but arbitrarily, and upon illegal grounds and principles,- to the prejudice of deponent, denied, without good or valid reasons therefor, deponent’s application for such certificate of competency. * * * (5) That deponent has never received an official notification in writing of said board’s determination in his case, although frequently demanded, and deponent has lost thousands of dollars by having been forced by said board to give up his plumbing business, and has been boycotted by said board. (6) That Joseph O’Brien, one of the members composing said board, told deponent, after deponent applied as aforesaid for said certificate: T will vote against your obtaining a certificate of competency, because you interfere with my plumbing business, and secure my customers for yourself. I know you are a qualified and competent plumber, but I will see to it that you do not obtain a certificate from the board, and the supreme court has no power to interfere with the board’s action in refusing you or any other plumber a certificate, no matter how well qualified you or they may be.’ <7) That John McKenna, another of the members composing said board, told deponent: T will vote against your obtaining a certificate of competency, because you have refused to employ men from my society, the New York Journeymen Plumbers’ Benevolent and Protective Association, and because you have refused to join the Master Plumbers’ Association.’ (8) That George D. Scott, chairman of said board, told deponent: T know nothing about the merits of your application. I will leave Messrs. McKenna and O’Brien to decide whether the board will grant you a certificate. They can settle the matter as they please.’ ”
The board in its return denies that it acted “arbitrarily or capriciously, as alleged by the relator,” and denies that a certificate was refused the applicant because “he had no place of