Farrington v. Pinckney

208 Misc. 583, 144 N.Y.S.2d 585, 1955 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3784
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 2, 1955
StatusPublished

This text of 208 Misc. 583 (Farrington v. Pinckney) 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
Farrington v. Pinckney, 208 Misc. 583, 144 N.Y.S.2d 585, 1955 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3784 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1955).

Opinion

Schirick, J.

This is a taxpayers’ action brought pursuant to section 51 of the General Municipal Law to restrain the defendants from putting into effect the provisions of chapter 305 of the Laws of 1954, as amended by chapter 864 of the Laws of 1955. The former establishes a uniform jury system for all counties of the State, exclusive of the City of New York. The amendment excludes “ counties having a population of less than one hundred thousand which shall elect pursuant to section five hundred one of article sixteen of the judiciary law to come under the provisions of such article sixteen.” The latter is substantially a re-enactment of the law as it existed prior to 1954.

It appears that there are but fifteen counties of the State, exclusive of New York City, which have a population of 100,000 or more. The mandatory application of the uniform jury system has, accordingly, been reduced by the 1955 amendment from fifty-seven to fifteen.

It is plaintiffs’ contention that, as so amended, the law runs afoul of the prohibition contained in section 17 of article III and subdivision (b) of section 1 of article IX of the Constitution of the State of New York. Section 17 of article III reads as follows: “ The legislature shall not pass a private or local bill in any of the following cases: * * * Selecting, drawing, summoning or empaneling grand or petit jurors. * * * The legislature shall pass general laws providing for the cases enumerated in this section ”. Subdivision (b) of section 1 of [585]*585article IX provides in part: “ The legislature shall provide by law for the organization and government of counties. No law which shall be special or local in its terms or in its effect, or which shall relate specially to one county only, shall be enacted by the legislature unless (a) upon the request of the board of supervisors or other elective governing body of each county to be affected, or, in any county having an alternative form of government providing for an elective county executive officer, upon the request of the board of supervisors * * * with the concurrence of such executive officer of each county to be affected; * * * or (b) upon a certificate of necessity by the governor to the legislature reciting the facts of such necessity existing in the county to be affected and the concurrence of two-thirds of the members elected to each house of the legislature.”

Both constitutional provisions present a single legal issue and that is whether the enactment is general or local in its terms and in its effect. The difficulty of laying down any definite rule to resolve such issue has long been judicially recognized. (See Matter of Henneberger, 155 N. Y. 420, 425, and Stapleton v. Pinckney, 293 N. Y. 330, 334.)

The power of the Legislature to make classifications is beyond dispute. Classification may be, and frequently has been made upon the basis of population. This is not prohibited although only a single municipal corporation or locality may at any given time be affected thereby. (Matter of New York Elevated R. R. Co., 70 N. Y. 327; Ferguson v. Ross, 126 N. Y. 459.) The classification must, however, be “ based on population, or some other condition, which might be recognized as possibly common to a class, or which might permit of classification ”. (Matter of Henneberger, supra, p. 426.)

What the Constitution proscribes is designation masking as classification. The identifying tokens may not be “ so many and particular that classification would find an end and designation a beginning ”. The question needs always be asked “ whether the conditions are so circumscribed and narrow that the class subjected to the statute is one in name and nothing else. If the class in its formation is so unnatural and wayward that only by the rarest coincidence can the range of its extension include more than one locality, and at best but two or three, the act so hedged and circumscribed is local in effect.” (Matter of Mayor [Elm St.], 246 N. Y. 72, 76, 77, 79.)

[586]*586The cases wherein a purported classification has been struck down as repugnant to the constitutional limitations have uniformly presented enactments where language general in its terms has been used to cloak the designation of a particular locality and situation.

In Matter of Henneberger (supra, p. 424), the statute (L. 1897, ch. 286) provided for the condemnation of real property for the improvement of highways in any town “ having a total population of eight thousand or more inhabitants and containing an incorporated village having a total population of not less than eight thousand and not more than fifteen thousand inhabitants, except in the county of Madison, * * * on any highway, which extends within the limits of such town and without the limits of such incorporated village for a distance of at least two and one-half miles ”. The court found (p. 427) in such statute “ a very remarkable combination of restrictions and such as, if not, by the process of exclusion, serving to identify the particular part of the state to be affected by the law, certainly, very markedly localize its operation.” The enumeration of restrictions in the statute, in the words of the court, “ is not only pretty extensive, but very peculiar, and the most casual view suggests a local rather than a general operation for the law. * * * The exception of the county of Madison singularly emphasizes an intention to guard against a possible general operation of the act.”

Matter of Mayor (Elm St.), (supra, pp. 74-75) concerned a statute (L. 1925, ch. 602) which was designed to permit American Express Company to collect a condemnation award which had been barred by the Statute of Limitations. The enactment read as follows: Where an award for damages has been made and confirmed by the Supreme Court in condemnation proceedings to acquire title in fee to real property for the purpose of opening, widening or extending a street in any city and said award has not been paid, but within one year last past has been adjudged by the courts of this state to have been barred by any statute of limitations, a claim for the payment of such award may be again presented and settled and paid, or if not so settled and paid may again be prosecuted and enforced by an action or proceeding in the courts of this state in the same manner as if the same had not been barred by any statute of limitations, and notwithstanding the fact the same was heretofore barred by such statute, provided that such claim be again presented to the proper officer of the city and paid within six months, or if not so settled and paid that an action or proceeding [587]*587be commenced thereon within one year from the date of the passage of this act.” In condemning such statute the court said (pp. 77-78): “ We close our eyes to realities if we do not see in this act the marks of legislation that is special and local in terms and in effect. This group of conditions so unusual and particular is precisely fitted to the claimant’s case, and only by a most singular coincidence could be fitted to any other. If we may not say of such a coincidence that it is literally impossible, at least we may say that one would be surprising, and several would be marvelous.”

Stapleton v. Pinckney (293 N. Y. 330, supra), involved a statute (L. 1944, ch.

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Related

Ferguson v. . Ross
27 N.E. 954 (New York Court of Appeals, 1891)
Matter of Henneberger
50 N.E. 61 (New York Court of Appeals, 1898)
Matter of N.Y. Elevated R.R. Co.
70 N.Y. 327 (New York Court of Appeals, 1877)
Greene v. Dunscomb
22 N.E.2d 365 (New York Court of Appeals, 1939)
Matter of Mayor, Etc., of New York (Elm St.)
158 N.E. 24 (New York Court of Appeals, 1927)
Stapleton v. Pinckney
57 N.E.2d 38 (New York Court of Appeals, 1944)
Clay v. Saunders
184 Misc. 143 (New York Supreme Court, 1945)

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Bluebook (online)
208 Misc. 583, 144 N.Y.S.2d 585, 1955 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3784, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farrington-v-pinckney-nysupct-1955.