Darlington v. Mayor of New York

28 How. Pr. 352
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 28 How. Pr. 352 (Darlington v. Mayor of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Darlington v. Mayor of New York, 28 How. Pr. 352 (N.Y. 1864).

Opinion

Denio, O. J.

I am of opinion that the act of the legislature under consideration did not require the presence of three-fifths of the members elected to each house in order to become a law. The constitutional provision on which reliance is placed, is in these words : “On the final passage in either house of the legislature of every act which imposes, continues or revives a tax, or creates a debt or charge, or makes, continues or revives an appropriation of public or trust money or property, or releases, discharges or commutes any claim or demand of the state, the question shall be taken by ayes and noes, which shall he duly entered on the journals, and three-fifths of all the members elected to either house, shall, in all such cases, be necessary to constitute a quorum therein ” (Const. Art. 7, § 14). The article of which the section is a part, relates to the state finances, and taken together it constitutes the financial system of the state, so far as relates to constitutional restraints.

The affairs of cities and counties so far as they are regu[354]*354lated by the constitution, are treated in other provisions (see The People agt. The Supervisors of Chenango, 4 Seld. 317). This act of 1855 does not impose a tax of any kind either state or municipal. Its provisions may and no doubt will lead to the necessity of local taxation, and the same thing may be-.said of every act of legislature under which an-expenditure for general or local purposes.may in any contingency be required. If a local tax in a city or village is within the scope of the section, it will be sufficient to have the requisite quorum present when the law shall come to be voted. The act does not create a debt or claim. If no person should suffer damage by a riot or mob, no money would be required, and no debt or charge would ever be created, and until such an event shall occur, no debt or claim will be called into existence.

The legal principle which imputes the act of an authorized agent to his principal, does not apply to the rioters contemplated by the statute, whose wrongful act might lead to the incurring of a debt. They would not be in any sense the agents of the legislature. The constitution relates to legislative acts, which of themselves, or by their immediate and necessary consequence create a debt or claim. Nor is the act an appropriation bill, in the sense of this provision. No public or trust moneys were disposed of or set apart for the purpose of being expended ; it could not be known when, if ever, any payment of money would be required to be made, or in what county or city it would be required; and none of the public moneys of the state were to be expended in consequence of any of the provisions of the act. The other purposes included in the section are still more remote from, and indeed, have no relation to any provision of the act in question. Some of these positions were adjudged in the case referred to, and the others seem to be sufficiently plain.

The other objection is, that by force of the act, if it shall be executed, what is termed the private property of the [355]*355city, may be taken for a public use without due .process of law, and without a provision for compensation. It cannot be doubted but that the general purposes of the law are within the scope of the legislative authority. The legislature have plenary power in respect to all subjects of civil governments, which they are not prohibited from exercising by the constitution of the United States, or by some provision or arrangement of the constitution of this state. This act proposes to subject the people of the several local divisions of the state, consisting of counties and cities, to the payment of any damages to property in consequence of any riot or mob within the county or city. The policy on which the act is framed may be supposed to be, to make good at the public expense, the losses of those who may be so unfortunate, as without their own fault to be injured in.their property by acts of lawless violence of a particular kind, which it is the general duty of the government to prevent; and further, and principally, we may suppose, to make it the interest of every person liable to contribute to the public expenses to discourage lawlessness and violence, and maintain the empire of the laws established to preserve public quiet and social order. These ends are plainly within the purposes of civil government, and, indeed, it is to attain them that governments are instituted; and the means provided by this act seem to be reasonably adapted to the purposes in view. If this were less obvious, the practice of the country from which we derive so many of our legal institutions, would leave no doubt on the subject. Laws of this general character have existed in England from the earliest period. It was one of the institutions of Canute, the Dane, which was recognized by the Saxon laws, that when any person was killed, and the slayer had escaped, the ville should pay forty marks for his death; and if it could not be raised in the ville, that the hundred should pay it. “ This irregular provision,” says an able author, “ it was thought would engage every one [356]*356in the prevention and prosecution of such "secret offences” (1 Reeve’s History of English Law, p. 17). Coining down to the reign of the Norman kings, we find in the statute of Winchester (13 Ed. 1, ch. 1), a provision touching the crimes of robbery, murder and arson—that if the country, i. e., the jury would not answer for the bodies of the offenders, the people dwelling in the county were to be answerable for the robberies and the damages sustained, so that the whole hundred where the robbery was committed, with the franchises thereof, should be answerable. It is upon this statute that the action against the hundred for robberies committed therein, of which so many .notices are met with in the old books, is grounded. (Reeve, Vol. 1, p. 213; Second Ins. ch. 17, p. 569.)

Passing by the statutes of subsequent reigns, and particularly several in the reign of Elizabeth, in which this remedy has been somewhat modified while its principle is steadily adhered to, we come to the 7th and 8th, Geo. IV, ch. 31, which was an act for consolidating and amending the laws of England, relative to remedies against the hundred. It repeals several prior acts providing remedies against the hundred for the damages occasioned by persons violently and tumultuously assembled, and • enacts a' series of provisions very similar in effect with, and in some respects more extensive in their scope than those of the statute under consideration. As the hundreds were not corporations, the action was to be brought against the high cqnstable, and on judgment being rendered, the sheriff was to draw his warrant on the county treasurer for the amount of the recovery. Ultimately, the money was to be collected by local taxation in the hundred made liable. These provisions have no direct bearing upon the present case, but are referred to to show that the action in ques-. tion is based upon a policy which is coeval with the laws of England, and one which has been constantly acted on. [357]*357In that country, and hence that it very clearly falls within the general powers of the legislator.

As, however’, the objection of the defendant arises out of a constitutional restraint, substantially identical with one of the provisions of Magna Carta (ch.

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18 Abb. Pr. 369 (New York Supreme Court, 1865)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 How. Pr. 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darlington-v-mayor-of-new-york-ny-1864.