
    Supreme Court—Special Term, New York.
    April, 1902.
    THE PEOPLE v. GEORGE E. MURRAY.
    (37 Misc. 687.)
    Public) Officer—Wilful Neglect of Durr bt Inspector of Combustibles.
    The Greater New York Charter vests the whole government, management and direction of the fire department in the fire commissioners as the one responsible head and executive officer who should have power to select heads of bureaus and assistants who should be under Ms control, and an indictment accusing an inspector of combustibles, the head of a bureau, for having wilfully omitted to use proper and reasonable means to restrain the violation of the laws of the State relative to the storage and keeping of dynamite and other combustibles, and of having wilfully permitted -unlawful quantities' of dynamite and other explosives to he kept on Park avenue in said city, is demurrable as not stating facts constituting a crime, there being no allegation in the indictment that this was part of the duty assigned to defendant.
    Demurrer to indictment.
    Dittenhoefer, Gerber & James (A. J. Dittenhoefer, of counsel), for demurrer.
    William Travers Jerome, District Attorney, for People, opposed.
   Lyon, J.

The indictment accuses the defendant of having wilfully omitted, as inspector of combustibles, to perform the duty imposed upon him by law of using proper and reasonable means to have inspected places within the city of ¡New York where blasting was being done and explosives were being kept, and of having wilfully omitted to use proper and reasonable means to restrain the violation of the laws of the State relative to the storage and keeping of dynamite and other combustibles, and of having wilfully permitted unlawful quantities- of dynamite and other explosives to be kept on Park avenue in said city.

The defendant demurs to- the indictment upon the ground (1") that the facts stated in the indictment do not constitute £ crime; (2) that the indictment does not conform snhsantiallj to the requirements of sections 275 and 276 of the Code od Criminal Procedure.

The defendant does not question the correctness of the state ment in People v. Herlihy, 66 App. Div. 534, that every publh officer upon whom a duty is imposed is hound to perform tha duty, and that for a wilful omission so to do an indictment wil lie, but the defendant bases his first ground of demurrer upon the claim that the law imposed upon him no such duty as the indictment charges him with having wilfully omitted - to perform.

The Greater ¡New York charter provides (section 720) for the appointment of a fire commissioner who shall be the head of the fire department, and who (section 724) “ shall possess and exercise full and exclusively all powers, and perform all duties for the government, management, maintenance and direction of the fire department of the city, and the premises and property thereof.” The charter also provides (section 727) that “ The fire commissioner shall have power to organize the fire department in such bureaus, as may be convenient and necessary, for the performance of the duties imposed upon him. One bureau shall be charged with the duty of preventing and extinguishing fires and of protecting property from water used at fires, the principal officer of which shall be called the chief of department.’ Another bureau shall be charged with the execution of all laws relating to the storage, sale and use of combustible materials, the principal officer of which shall be called inspector of combustibles.’ ” Another bureau shall be charged with the investigation of the origin and cause of fires, etc.

The charter also provides (section ’728) : The fire commissioner shall have power to select heads of bureaus and assistants . . . and they shall at all times be under the control of the fire commissioner, and shall perform such duties as may be assigned to them by him, under such names or titles as he may confer,” and (section 731) authorizes, empowers and especially charges the fire commissioner with the duty of enforcing the several provisions of chapter 15 of the charter, title 3 of which relates in part to the manufacture, sale and storage of explosives.

The charter further provides (section 771) that the fire commissioner and his officer or agents, under the direction of the commissioner, are empowered at any and all times- to enter into and examine all buildings . . . and places where any merchandise,' gunpowder ... or other .combustible materials may be lodged, for the purpose of ascertaining all violations of any provisions of the charter, and upon finding that any of them are defective or dangerous, or that a violation of the charter exists, may deliver a written or printed notice to remove the same, and in case of neglect or refusal of the occupant or possessor of such combustible materials to remove the same in the manner directed by the said commissioner in such notice, the party offending shall pay a- fine.

From the foregoing references- to the charter it appears that it was the intention upon the reorganization of the fire department by the Greater Few York charter to vest the whole government, management and direction of the fire department in the fire commissioner as the one responsible head and executive officer who should have' power to select heads of bureaus and assistants, who should at all times be under the control of the fire commissioner and who should perform such duties as might be assigned to them by him.

The law which authorized the creation of the bureau and charged the bureau with the execution of all laws relative to- the storage, sale and use of combustible materials limited the defendant to the performance of such duties of the bureau as he should be assigned to perform by the fire commissioner.

It is not claimed, and there is no allegation in the indictment to the effect that the duty assigned to the defendant by the fire commissioner was that of inspecting places in the city where blasting was being done and explosives were being kept, and of using means to restrain the violation of the laws of the State relative to the storage and keeping of explosives. For aught that appears the duty assigned to the defendant by the fire commissioner may have been clerical only, while the duty of such inspection and of restraining the violation of the law as to the storage and use of explosives may have been assigned to one or more assistants. In fact, it may well be claimed in the absence of an allegation that the defendant failed to carry out the directions of the fire commissioner, or to perform the duties assigned to him by the fire commissioner, that he did in fact perform all the duties assigned to him by the fire commissioner, and that the duty of such inspection and of restraining the violation of law as to the storage and use of explosives was not among such duties.

I conclude, therefore, that as to the first ground stated the demurrer should be allowed, but, being of the opinion that the objection on which the demurrer is allowed may be avoided in a new indictment in case the duty was assigned to the defendant by the fire commissioner of inspecting places within the city of Hew York where blasting was being done and explosives were being kept, or of restraining the violation of the laws of the State relative to the storage or keeping of dynamite or other combustibles, I direct that the district attorney may resubmit the ease to another grand jury.

In view of the allowance of the demurrer upon the ground first stated, it is unnecessary to pass upon the sufficiency of the indictment upon the ground that the indictment does not conform substantially to the requirements of sections 275 and 276 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. It is, however, proper to observe that this indictment is substantially in the form of the indictment in the People v. Herlihy, above cited, which was held to be not defective. The demurrer is allowed.

Demurrer allowed.  