
    The People of the State of New York ex rel. Elijah Mosher, Appellant, v. Benjamin I. D. Roosa, as President, and William H. Timmerman and Others, as Trustees, of the Village of Matteawan, Respondents.
    
      Mandamus to determine the relator’s right to a position on a police force—he cannot be required to submit to a physical examination.
    
    A relator who has obtained an alternative writ of mandamus to determine his right to the position of chief of police, or policeman in a village, and who is alleged by the return to the writ to be physically unable to perform the duties of the position, should not be required to submit to a physical examination, at the request of the respondents, where it does not appear that the relator’s disability cannot be established by other available evidence,
    
      iSemble, that in such a case there is no authority to require a physical examination.
    Appeal by the relator, Elijah Mosher, from an order of the Supreme Court, made at the Dutchess County Special Term and entered in the office of the clerk of the county of Dutchess on the 3d day of June, 1899, requiring the relator to submit to a physical examination.
    
      James G. Meyer, for the appellant.
    
      Samuel K. Phillips [George Wood with him on the brief], for the respondents.
   Per Curiam:

The order in this case cannot be sustained. The proceeding is by .alternative writ of mandamus to determine the relator’s right to the office of chief of police or policeman in the village of Matteawan. The issue tendered by the defendants in answer to the writ involves the physical, capacity of the relator to perform the duties of the position for which he is an applicant, the averment in the return to the writ in this regard being that the relator is lame and otherwise physically disabled, and thereby incapacitated to perform the duties of chief of police of the village of Matteawan. In the affidavit, which was made, the basis for granting the order from which the appeal is taken, no oral examination is sought, but simply a physical examination of the person of the relator; nor is it therein stated tkafc the defendants are not informed of the physical condition of the relator or that they are unable to make proof of his physical incapacity, if the same exists, by evidence already available to them. They aver as a fact that the relator is physically disabled, and .from aught that appears in evidence, they can establish such fact without the aid- of a physical examination. It is clear, therefore, that -no case is made which authorized the order, even though authority in law existed for having such an examination. There is, • however, no authority in law for having the examination of the person of the party in such an action. Section 8Í3 of the Code of Civil Procedure applies in terms to actions for the recovery of damages for personal injuries, and does not embrace such a proceeding as the present. If it did, the papers fail to disclose a case entitling-the defendants to such ‘examination, as it may only be had in connection with an oral examination of the person. (Lyon v. Manhattan, R. Co., 142 N. Y. 298.) As no statute authorizes this examination, it may not be had. (McQuigan v. Delaware, L. & W. R. R. Co., 129 N. Y. 50.)

The defendants seek to support the order as the exercise of a. common-law right inherent in the power of the court to grant,, basing such claim upon Devanbagh v. Devanbagh (5 Paige, 554).. This was an action-for divorce upon the ground of impotency. The right is sustained in such cases by virtue of the obligation imposed upon the court to require proof of the fact at the time of" -the marriage, and the exercise of the power is based upon the-ground of the interest of the public in such contracts. There is-neither reason in the defendants’ contention nor analogy between the two classes of cases. (Roberts v. Ogdensburgh & L. C. R. R. Co., 29 Hun, 154.) It is clear that the present order is without the sanction of legal authority, either statutory or otherwise.

It should, therefore, be reversed and the application dismissed...

All concurred.

Order reversed, with ten dollar’s costs and disbursements, and., application denied.  