Daily Register Printing & Publishing Co. v. Mayor

6 N.Y.S. 10, 59 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 542, 23 N.Y. St. Rep. 577, 52 Hun 542, 1889 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 374
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 6 N.Y.S. 10 (Daily Register Printing & Publishing Co. v. Mayor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daily Register Printing & Publishing Co. v. Mayor, 6 N.Y.S. 10, 59 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 542, 23 N.Y. St. Rep. 577, 52 Hun 542, 1889 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 374 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1889).

Opinion

Barrett, J.

The main question presented by the demurrer in this case is whether the power of designation conferred upon the judicial officers specified in chapter 656 of the Laws of 1874 is or is not continuous. The plaintiff insists that such power was exhausted by a single exercise, while the defendants contend that the power is continuous. Both parties concede that the act in question contemplates a permanent system. There is in fact nothing transient in its character,—nothing suggestive of a temporary exigency. It is entitled “An act in relation to the publication of judicial proceedings and legal notices in New York city and county.” It provides for the publication in a designated law journal, without limit as to time, of all the calendars of our courts of record, with such particulars as the judges may require. The expense of this publication, within the limit of $15,000 per annum, is charged upon the city. There is a further provision that every notice or advertisement in legal proceedings which may be required by law to be published in one or more newspapers in the city or county shall also bepu Wished in the designated law journal. There are still other details indicative of an enduring sys[11]*11tem, such as the proviso limiting the annual subscription price of the designated journal to $10, the condition that no greater sum shall be paid for advertising therein than that allowed by law, and the exclusion from the general mandate, witli regard to the publication of legal notices, of all matter included in other permanent systems, city and state. It seems to me that this bare outline of the objects and purposes of the act is conclusive of the present question, for it is entirely well settled that, where a definite public policy with regard to the administration of justice is inaugurated by a remedial statute like the present, there is a clear implication that a granted power, requisite to the execution of the system and essential to prevent its failure, was intended to be continuous. Weed v. Tucker, 19 N. Y. 422. And this is the rule, although the act fails to provide in terms for the repeated exercise of the granted power. The converse of this rule applies where the authority is conferred to provide for a temporary exigency, (see People v. Woodruff, 32 N. Y. 369,) or where a particular question is to be decided by a single exercise of judgment, (Cox v. Mayor, 103 N. Y. 523, 9 N. E. Rep. 48,) or where a single act is to be performed within a specified time, especially when the act is required to be so performed by a particular person then in office, (Bergen v. Powell, 94 N. Y. 591.) So, too, as to private grants, or to grants of the public property or of franchises for the emolument of individuals or private corporations. Weed v. Tucker, 19 N. Y. 432.

The crucial question, then, in the case at bar, is whether the power to designate a law journal from time to time is essential to the maintenance and preservation of the permanent system provided for by the act. It is difficult to perceive how there can be any doubt upon this head. The designated law journal may fail in its duty, or it may cease publication. As was said by Denio, J., in Weed v. Tucker, (page 429:) “ The act is to be. regarded as a permanent measure to secure the publication of the legal notices; not temporarily for the life of one man, or of d single firm of business men, or the continuance .of a particular business enterprise, but as an arrangement which was to exist in perpetuity.”

What, then, becomes of the system, if the power to designate is exhausted by a single exercise? The journal may die. In that case, if the power is exhausted, the system dies with the journal. If the system is to live, plainly the designation must be repeated. .Iu follows, therefore, that the power exists; and if it exists it may be exercised whenever, in the sound judgment of these judicial officers, the occasion demands. The renewed exercise of power must be as free and untrammeled as was its original exercise, and the judgment of the officers vested with this continuous authority is no more subject to review with regard to the second designation than it was with regard to the first. If the po wer exists for any purpose, or under any circumstances, the officers in question are the sole judges of when and how it shall be exercised, and their judgment as to the necessity or propriety of a fresh designation must necessarily be conclusive. There is no distinction in principle between this case and the case of Weed v. Tucker, nor is there any material difference between the respective acts. Whatever difference there is in the phraseology of the two acts favors and strengthens the claim of continuous power in the case at bar. Here there is a designation, and there there was a contract. The same purpose precisely was effected in a slightly different manner. There the board was required to “enter into contract.” But that amounted practically to nothing more than the designation of a state paper, to be thereupon governed by the terms of the statute. Indeed, the act was entitled “An act to designate a state paper.” The contract was the form whereby the designation was to be effected. Its terms were the statutory provisions. The board, it is true, took upon itself to contract for four years. But it might just as well have contracted for four days or for forty years, or, as recognized by Judge Denio, (bottom of page 435,) during its pleasure. The statute in [12]*12that case was silent regarding the contract term, just as here it is silent as to the designation term. The judicial officers here might have designated for four years with as much reason and authority as the board there “entered into contract” for four years. The judges deemed, however, that a designation— to quote again the language of Judge Denio— “during the pleasure of the appointing power would best comport with the intentions of the legislature,” and accordingly no term was expressed. I cannot but think that in this respect they were right.

In neither of the acts—1854 or 1874—did the legislature confer authority, in express terms, to contract or designate for any definite term. These acts simply create a continuing system for the publication of legal notices at a statutory price, with discretion as to the vehicle for such publication. This discretion is vested in certain officials, to be evidenced in the one case by a form of statutory contract; in the other, by a form of statutory designation. How, whether the work is done under a statutory designation, with clear provisions as to resulting compensation, or under a statutory contract, with similar provisions as to compensation, the substance of the arrangement is the same. The rule laid down in Weed v. Tucker, therefore, does not depend upon the incident of the termination of the contract by the lapse of the contract term, but upon the implication of continuous power essential to the support of the system. If the contract term had there been indefinite, the contract would have ended at the will of either party; in other words, it would have been a contract during the pleasure of the contracting board and of the newspaper proprietors, and, upon its being thus ended, a new contract, under the principle enunciated, could at once have been made by the board. If this were otherwise, then the original contract, because of the failure to" specify its duration, might have operated, at the pleasure of one of the parties, against the will of the other, as a perpetuity in enjoyment.

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6 N.Y.S. 10, 59 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 542, 23 N.Y. St. Rep. 577, 52 Hun 542, 1889 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daily-register-printing-publishing-co-v-mayor-nysupct-1889.