Judges: Mereell
Filed Date: 5/15/1912
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
This is an application for a writ of peremptory mandamus requiring the municipal civil service commission of the city of Oswego to convene and enter the name of the relator in its roster as a fireman at the- new water pumping station in said city, and by appropriate resolution that said commission direct its secretary to certify to the city chamberlain of the city of Oswego the pay-rolls heretofore certified by the department of water of said city containing the name of said relator.
The facts pertinent here are, briefly, as follows:
On December 31, 1906, the relator, an honorably discharged soldier of the ¡Spanish-American war, was duly appointed pumping engineer at the pumping station of the municipal water plant of the said city of Oswego. The relator’s appointment was made from the eligible list certified by the municipal civil service commission of said city, he having theretofore passed the required examination and been found qualified to discharge the duties of such position. Thereafter, and from the time of his appointment, the said relator performed his duties as such pumping .engineer, at a compensation of fifty dollars per month, down to the 9th day of August, 1911, at which time the said position of
Since the appointment of the relator to the new position as fireman it appears from the evidence submitted that he has satisfactorily performed his duties as such fireman. The municipal civil service commission, however, has refused to certify to the city chamberlain the pay-rolls containing the relator’s name, and this application is made to compel such certification.
The provision of the Oivil Service Law invoked by the relator is contained in section 22, which provides as follows: “ If the position so held by any such honorably discharged soldier (Spanish-American War veteran), sailor or marine or volunteer fireman shall become unnecessary or be abolished
The municipal civil service commission of Oswego questions the right of appointment of the relator to the position of fireman- for the reason that his name was not upon any ■ eligible list for such position.
It appears that the position of fireman at the new pumping station was in the competitive class, and, I think properly, was so recognized by the civil service commission and an examination of applicant! for the position held and an eligible list duly certified. The duties to be performed as fireman were quite foreign to those previously performed by the relator, and the examination given by the civil service commission was entirely different, covering other and 'different qualifications of the applicant, than that proposed for the position-of engineer. It seems to me that the relator was not entitled to be transferred to the position of fireman without having first passed the examination to the position to which he was so transferred.
By section 14 of the Civil Service Law, relating to the competitive class, the statute provides that such class shall include all positions for which it is practicable to determine the merit and fitness of the applicants by competitive examination, not only all positions then existing but thereafter created, the statute providing as follows: “ Ho person shall be appointed or employed under any title not appropriate to the duties to be performed, and no person shall he transferred to, or assigned to perform the duties of, any position subject to competitive examination, unless he shall have previously passed an open competitive examination equivalent to that required for such ■position, or unless he shall have served with fidelity for at least three years in a similar position.”
Again, by section 16, the legislature enacted as to the transfer of á person in the civil service that no person should “be promoted or transferred to a position for original entrance to which there is required by this chapter or the rules an examination involving essential tests or qualifications different from or higher than those required for original' entrance to the position held by such person, unless he shall have parsed the examination or attained a place upon the eligible list for such higher position.”
It appears that the examination and tests involved as imposed by the civil service commission were far different in the two positions. I therefore conclude that the application, of the relator must be denied; that when he was transferred by the water board of the city of Oswego to the position of fireman it was not a position which he was “ fitted to fill ” as contemplated by section 22, which, it seems to me, clearly contemplates a civil service fitness, to be ascertained in accordance with the plain requirements of sections 14 and 16 above quoted by a competitive examination. I think the legislature intended, when, by section 22, it forbade the veteran’s discharge from the public service in the event his position was abolished, that he should remain on the eligible list to be appointed to a similar position to which he had by competitive examination demonstrated his fitness. Seétion 22 must be read in connection with sections 14 and 16. Any other construction, it would seem to me, would nullify
The case of Matter of Grilfillan, 127 App. Div. 846, arising in this department, is somewhat similar to the case before us, and as to the right to the relator in that case to be transferred Judge Kruse, writing for the court, says: “ Certainly, the duties of bookkeeper are not similar to the work done by the relator, and besides, the position of bookkeeper is in the competitive class of the civil service
I, therefore, am of the opinion that the relator cannot insist upon his appointment or the emoluments of the office until he has by competitive examination demonstrated his fitness for the position of fireman.
• Application denied, with costs.