Dutchess Sanitation Service, Inc. v. Town of Plattekill

417 N.E.2d 74, 51 N.Y.2d 670, 435 N.Y.S.2d 962, 1980 N.Y. LEXIS 2779
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 22, 1980
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 417 N.E.2d 74 (Dutchess Sanitation Service, Inc. v. Town of Plattekill) 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
Dutchess Sanitation Service, Inc. v. Town of Plattekill, 417 N.E.2d 74, 51 N.Y.2d 670, 435 N.Y.S.2d 962, 1980 N.Y. LEXIS 2779 (N.Y. 1980).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Fuchsberg, J.

A duly enacted Town of Plattekill ordinance broadly forbids anyone other than those who reside or conduct an established business in the town from depositing within its boundaries any “garbage, rubbish or other articles originating elsewhere than in the Town”. The principal question we reach on this appeal is whether the ordinance, as applied, violates the interstate commerce clause of the United States Constitution (art I, § 8).

This case is a sequel to one by which, in 1976, the town successfully sought to permanently enjoin the plaintiff, Dutchess Sanitation Service, Inc., from accepting refuse in violation of the ordinance. Dutchess, a State-licensed commercial carting and sanitary landfill company, until then *673 had continued to operate a lawfully zoned 74 acre tract at which the now forbidden substances had long been received without regard to whether these emanated from in or out of the town. 1 In the 1976 litigation Dutchess’ challenge to the ordinance’s constitutionality was overruled (Town of Plattekill v Dutchess Sanitation, 56 AD2d 150, affd 43 NY2d 662).

However, when, some three years later, the United States Supreme Court, in Philadelphia v New Jersey (437 US 617), invalidated a New Jersey statute prohibiting the importation into that State of most out-of-State wastes, the appellant instituted the present suit. Its request for relief is cast in terms of vacatur of the existing injunction insofar as it affects refuse originating outside the State of New York.

On cross motions for summary judgment, in the main Dutchess demonstrated the existence of admissible evidence sufficient to establish that out-of-State refuse carting firms, especially ones from neighboring Connecticut and New Jersey, were desirous of patronizing its landfill. This showing was not controverted. Special Term, though perceiving no principled distinction between the Plattekill ordinance and the invalidated New Jersey statute, and though voicing the opinion that the one imposed as constitutionally impermissible a burden on interstate commerce as did the other, nevertheless felt constrained to deny Dutchess’ motion on the ground of res judicata. Concordantly, it granted the town’s motion to dismiss. For its part, the Appellate Division, rejecting the res judicata rationale, and so reaching the merits, reasoned that the exclusion of “all wastes from out-of-town sources” was an “evenhanded ban”. On that basis, it affirmed (73 AD2d 300). While we agree that the-prior decision is no bar to the present action, in our view the application of the ordinance offends constitutional requirements.

Preliminarily, it should be made clear that the earlier determination does not dictate the result in this case. Notwithstanding its denomination as “permanent”, a rela *674 tive term in law as in life, when there has been a change in the conditions that originally justified the issuance of a continuing injunction, settled principles do not leave a court of equity without power to determine that the injunction’s survival, in all or in part, is no longer warranted (see People v Scanlon, 11 NY2d 459, 463). It is also recognized that such an alteration in circumstances may be grounded on a change in the interpretation of applicable law (State of Pennsylvania v Wheeling & Belmont Bridge Co., 18 How [59 US] 421; Western Union Tel. Co. v International Brotherhood, 133 F2d 955, 957). If, then, the injunction here demanded obedience to legislation whose constitutional validity is found to have been undermined by subsequent authoritative adjudications, vacatur or modification may be in order.

Turning then to Dutchess’ contention that the town’s ordinance is repugnant to the commerce clause, we begin with by then Justice Cardozo’s oft-quoted observation, made in the context of a commerce clause case, that the Constitution “was framed upon the theory that the peoples of the several states must sink or swim together, and that in the long run prosperity and salvation are in union and not division” (Baldwin v G.A.F. Seelig (294 US 511, 523). To that end, the clause has been read to assure that the basic economic unit is the country at large, that in matters of interstate commerce there are no State lines and that no State may thwart these concepts by placing itself in economic isolation. The credo is that the future of our Nation depends not on how certain parts of it fare but on how it does as a whole.

These interpretations hearken to the pragmatic political philosophy which guided the formation of our Nation. So fundamental is this unadorned and unqualified grant of Federal authority — “The Congress shall have Power * * * To Regulate Commerce * * * among the several States”— that the Supreme Court has taken the pains recently to reiterate that the clause not only invites Congressional regulation, but, even when the power to do so goes unexercised, it nonetheless restricts State regulation (Hughes v Oklahoma, 441 US 322, 326; Philadelphia v New Jersey, 437 US 617, 621-623, supra). Indeed, history takes any element of surprise out of these declarations. For, as is true of the *675 privileges and immunities clause as well (US Const, art IV, § 2), the commerce clause was a primary tool in the framers’ conversion of the weak and failing central government the parochially oriented former colonies had maintained under the Articles of Confederation into a strong and united Nation under the Constitution (see Salla v County of Monroe, 48 NY2d 514, 520-521; Hood & Sons v Du Mond, 336 US 525, 533-534; Gibbons v Ogden, 9 Wheat [22 US] 1, 209; Madison, The Federalist Nos. 41, 42; Tribe, American Constitutional Law, p 319; Hall, Constitutional Law, p 288; Kibble, State and National Power Over Commerce, pp 30-31).

The product of this background is a broad definition of interstate commerce. Thus, in Philadelphia, the Supreme Court expressly rejected a “two-tiered definition of commerce” which, while advocating “ ‘a very sweeping concept’ ” of commerce when supported by Congressional legislation, would have applied a narrower one where the clause itself was invoked to overturn a State enactment. At issue there was whether, in the absence of a Federal statute, the movement and deposit of refuse was commerce. The court’s reply was that commerce had but one definition under the clause: “Just as Congress had power to regulate the interstate movement of these wastes, States are not free from constitutional scrutiny when they restrict that movement” (Philadelphia v New Jersey, 437 US 617, 621, 623, supra). This maxim as a guide, two salient principles emerge from the cases.

One is that the clause protects against offending activities though, because these are carried out entirely within one State, their imposition on interstate commerce is only “indirect”. Thus, in Fry v United States (421 US 542, 547), wage increases “even for employees of wholly intrastate operations” were held to affect interstate commerce. Similarly, in

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417 N.E.2d 74, 51 N.Y.2d 670, 435 N.Y.S.2d 962, 1980 N.Y. LEXIS 2779, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dutchess-sanitation-service-inc-v-town-of-plattekill-ny-1980.