Di Prima v. Wagner

27 Misc. 2d 380, 215 N.Y.S.2d 687, 1961 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2951
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 5, 1961
StatusPublished

This text of 27 Misc. 2d 380 (Di Prima v. Wagner) 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
Di Prima v. Wagner, 27 Misc. 2d 380, 215 N.Y.S.2d 687, 1961 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2951 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1961).

Opinion

Irving II. Saypol, J.

The plaintiff, suing as a taxpayer of the City of New York, pursuant to section 51 of the G-eneral Municipal Law brings this action for a declaratory judgment that chapter 87 of the Laws of 1961, adding a new subdivision 4 to section 20 of the City Home Rule Law and amending subdivision 3 of section 20, is void and unconstitutional and is inapplicable and not binding upon the defendants nor as to the existing charter, ordinances and laws of the City of New York, and to enjoin the defendants from incurring any liability which may be a charge against defendant City of New York or from using any of its funds or from acting in furtherance of the purposes of the new law.

The plaintiff asks for a temporary injunction during the pendency of the action.

The answering defendants oppose the motion and cross-move for dismissal of the complaint for legal insufficiency or summary judgment on the pleadings declaring the challenged legislation constitutional.

The plaintiff has standing to sue. It is held that chapter 87 of the Laws of 1961 is valid insofar as it authorizes the alternative method of naming a charter commission by any of the Mayors of the 62 cities of the State. Controlling precedential authority impels that conclusion on the premise that the law at least in its terms is general in application to all the cities of the State and because no showing has been made that in application its effect is not alike as to the charters of all the cities of the State. On the same basis of controlling precedent, the [382]*382court will not strike down those provisions which invest the Mayors with powers of appropriation of city funds for the use of the Mayor’s commission, after 30 days of inaction by the appropriate officials of the city. The withdrawal of such a request under the law together with the declaration of partial validity (supra), results in a denial of the plaintiff’s motion for a temporary injunction. The defendants’ alternative cross motions to dismiss the complaint or for summary judgment are denied, on the holding that the provisions of newly enacted paragraph (e) of subdivision 4 and the newly added language at the foot of existing subdivision 3 are invalid as an improper delegation of legislative power, for both constitutional and statutory offense. The offending provisions, particularly the first, present a startling innovation with a consequential and inadmissible effect. The newly enacted authorization to a mayor to appoint a charter commission would empower such an official, by the mere stroke of a pen in appointing the commission, completely to nullify and sterilize the usual law-making powers under existing law, State or local, as to any charter change, of any kind, small or large. Immediately upon appointment of a mayor’s new charter commission, all other alternative charter-making processes are stayed. The local legislature is forbidden to legislate in respect to "charter amendment and no other proposal under any other provision of law may be submitted for the vote of the People. No controlling authority or guide for this unusual exclusion is shown. If the mayors of cities are to be endowed with superior, in fact exclusive control of local lawmaking, it should be plainly and clearly and unequivocally expressed and there should be no repealer by implication.

The gravamen of the complaint is that the challenged statute, while speaking as a general law applicable to all cities in the State, is in fact a local and special law designed solely for the purposes of the Mayor of the City of New York. As such, it is pleaded, the request of the Mayor, concurred in by the New York City Council, or a declaration of necessity by two thirds of the elected members of the Council alone, in which event a two-thirds vote of the State Legislature would be required, was necessary for its validity (N. Y. Const., art. IX, § 11).

It is further alleged that on February 14, 1961, a bill was introduced in the City Council, providing for the creation of a New York City Charter Commission, pursuant to the provisions of section 20 of the City Home Rule Law as it then read, before chapter 87 became a law; that on April 5,1961, the Mayor of the City of New York issued a call for a special meeting of the [383]*383Board of Estimate to consider a request from the charter revision commission for an appropriation of $50,000.

Constitutional invalidity of the new law, wholly or partially, is predicated upon alleged violation of sections 8, 11 and 12 of article IX, and section 1 of article III of the State Constitution, and the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution.

The answer, in addition to various general denials, alleges inter alla that chapter 87, as a general law applying in terms and in effect to all cities alike, is constitutional; that the plaintiff has no standing to sue for a declaratory judgment; that there is no waste of city property; that the action is premature, and that the plaintiff is seeking to restrain legislative action.

In an affidavit by the Deputy Mayor of the City of New York, in opposition to the motion for a temporary injunction, he states that three other cities are proceeding under chapter 87. It is further stated that the Mayor of New York City has withdrawn from the calendar of the Board of Estimate his request for a $50,000 appropriation for his charter revision commission.

At the outset, the defendants urge that since the Mayor of this city has withdrawn the request for an appropriation, the plaintiff has no standing to challenge the legislation under section 51 of the General Municipal Law, since no use of municipal funds is contemplated, and so the present suit is premature because'possible waste is not shown.

Apart from the fact that there is no assurance that funds will not hereafter be sought by the commission, because the new law provides, inter alla, that members of the commission shall be reimbursed for the actual or necessary expenses incurred by them in the performance of their duties and also provides for compensation of employees and consultants, the court accepts that it is in the public interest now to decide .the issues on the merits. Clearly, should the Mayor’s commission file a proposed new charter for submission to the electorate, a suit to restrain such submission would then be maintainable (see Matter of Mooney v. Cohen, 272 N. Y. 33), and it is deemed better to clarify the matter at once.

Consideration will be facilitated by a discussion of background, constitutional, statutory and decisional. Home rule as a synonym for autonomy for local governments has become an historical cliché. The essential question is, to what extent shall the people of a particular locality be permitted to rule themselves? It has been agitated, it has raged, sometimes partially settled, since the American Revolution (11 New York State Constitutional Convention Committee, Problems Relating to Home Rule and Local Government, 1938, pp. 1-2).

[384]*384“ Legal tradition vests in the State complete control over its municipalities. Subject only to the provisions of the Federal Constitution, the State may create a local unit or destroy it, give powers to it or take them away. The only limitation which may he put on this power of life and death is by the people of the entire State by constitutional specification ” (op. ait., p. 2).

Ensuing events, at the Constitutional Convention of 1938 and currently, demonstrate how disturbed and how muddied the waters remain.

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Bluebook (online)
27 Misc. 2d 380, 215 N.Y.S.2d 687, 1961 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2951, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/di-prima-v-wagner-nysupct-1961.