Fifth Avenue Coach Co. v. City of New York

58 Misc. 401, 111 N.Y.S. 759
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 58 Misc. 401 (Fifth Avenue Coach Co. v. City of New York) 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
Fifth Avenue Coach Co. v. City of New York, 58 Misc. 401, 111 N.Y.S. 759 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1908).

Opinion

Levehtbitt, J.

—The plaintiff seeks to enjoin municipal interference with the advertising signs displayed on the exterior of its "stages, hut it fails to establish that clear legal right the existence of which is a condition indispensable to equitable relief.

•The defendant insists that the signs constitute a public nuisance. Although not bearing upon the ultimate disposition of the controversy, it may not be amiss to discuss this subject as a preliminary to the main questions presented.

Prior to July, 1907, the plaintiff operated along Fifth avenue stages propelled by horse power, and during that month automobile stages were substituted. The latter stages contain an upper deólc with transverse seats accommodating eighteen passengers. A staircase leads from the body or platform of the stage to the upper deck, which is surrounded by a wire screen, about three feet high, extending around the top of the stage and down the stairway.

In May, 1905, the plaintiff entered into an agreement with the Railway Advertising Company whereby it leased to that company the exclusive right to maintain advertising signs on the interior of its stages, coaches or omnibuses when employed as “public carriers;” also the right to maintain four advertising flags on the roofs of the stages “for the purpose of advertising or displaying thereon announcements of events of public interest or amusement calculated to attract passenger travel to the coach company’s line.” Two of these flags were to be “used by the coach company, as occasion may require, for displaying announcements of public interest ” such as did not conflict with the advertising company’s rights. The contract provided for the regulation of the size and character of the signs to be displayed, but prohibited exterior advertising.

In May, 1907, a second agreement was entered into by the plaintiff with the Railway Advertising Company granting “ the exclusive right and privilege of maintaining advertising signs upon the exterior of each and every coach or omnibus.”

The plaintiff reserved the right to cancel the agreement upon thirty days’ notice “ if at any time any order or judgment of a court having jurisdiction in the premises shall be [404]*404entered, or any act of the Legislature of the State of Few York shall he passed, or any ordinance or resolution of the city of Few York or of any branch of the city government shall be adopted which forbids the use of the exterior of said vehicles for advertising purposes.”

Prior to July, 1907, the advertising signs on the exterior of the plaintiff’s stages consisted of the four flags, which were supplemented after May, 1907, by a few small signs on certain of the stages calling attention to points of interest on or near the route. Simultaneously with the substitution of the automobile stages the exterior signs were enlarged. To the sides of each stage were afBxed signs thirteen feet long and over two feet high, extending along and from the floor of the upper deck in an upright position; a sign was placed on the front over the hood, running from one side of the stage to the other; a sign was placed over the hood at the back of the stage; a sign, eight feet long and about twenty inches high, followed the course of the staircase leading from the platform to the roof; a sign was also placed under the staircase and one on the riser of each of the steps and on the back of each seat on the roof of the stage. These signs advertised in various glaring colors and appropriate legends divers articles — at first “Duke’s Mixture Smoking Tobacco,” then “Bull Durham Smoking Tobacco,” and at. the present time and since. December, 1907, “ Helmar Turkish Cigarettes.” The signs now in use will serve to illustrate the general character of the exterior advertising since July, 1907. The signs on the sides of the stage represent a scene in an Eastern country. At the left of the picture is a stone wall painted in a dark color, with the legend “ Helmar Turkish Cigarettes ” in white with black shading around the letters. The wall is about four feet long; the first letter of the word “ Helmar” is about twelve inches high and the last about nine inches. The words “ Turkish Cigarettes ” appear in smaller letters under the word “ Helmar.” At the right of the picture are painted the figures of two pack camels and three men in Oriental costumes of various colors. Behind the camels and nearer the extreme right of the picture are columns, and to the [405]*405right of these appears a package of cigarettes, twenty inches long by sixteen inches in width, with the word Helmar ” near the top and the words Turkish Cigarettes ” in smaller letters near the bottom. The picture also contains the head and bust of a woman. The remaining signs earned are of the same general character. The colors used — green, dark blue, white, light blue, yellow, drab and various brilliant shades of red —■ are contrasted so as to attract attention and are not blended so as to produce a harmonious or an artistic effect, and the resulting painting constitutes a disfigurement rather than an ornament.

These signs are not a public nuisance. "Under no definition recognized in this State can they be so held. Offensive to the eye though they may be; crude, inartistic and unsightly though they are, they cannot be condemned as a nuisance.

Section 385 of the Penal Code reads as follows:

“A public nuisance is a crime against the order and economy of the state, and consists in unlawfully doing an act, or omitting to perform a 'duty, which act or omission:

“ 1. Annoys, injures or endangers the comfort, repose, health or safety of any considerable number of persons; or

“ 2. Offends public decency; or

“ 3. Unlawfully interferes with, obstructs, or tends- to obstruct, or renders dangerous for passage, a lake, or a navigable river, bay, stream, canal or basin, or a stream, creek or other body of water which has been dredged or cleared at public expense, or a public park, square, street or highway; or

“ 4. In any way renders a considerable number of persons insecure in life or the use of property.”

And section 1229 of the Greater Few York Charter' declares:

“ The word nuisance, as used in this act, shall be held to embrace public nuisance, as known at common law or in equity jurisprudence; and it is further enacted that whatever is dangerous to human life or detrimental to health; whatever building or erection, or part or cellar thereof, is overcrowded with occupants, or is not provided with ade[406]*406quate ingress and egress to and from the same, or the apartments thereof, or is not sufficiently supported, ventilated, sewered, drained, cleaned or lighted, in reference to their or its intended or actual use; and whatever renders the air, or human food or drink, unwholesome, are also severally in contemplation of this act, nuisances.”

In Wood on Nuisances (3d ed., § 801, p. 1177) we find this definition: “ In all cases, in order to warrant an injunction for a nuisance resulting from noise, smoke, noisome smells, etc., where there is no serious injury to property, but the application for the injunction is predicated upon the discomfort produced thereby, the discomfort must be shown to be physical, and not such as depends on taste or imagination. It must be offensive physically to the senses, and by such offensiveness as makes life uncomfortable.”

In Bohan v. Port Jervis Gas Light Co., 122 N. Y. 18,32, the term

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City of Birmingham v. Holt
194 So. 538 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1940)
City of New York v. Fifth Avenue Coach Co.
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276 P. 629 (California Court of Appeal, 1929)
Edberg v. Johnson
184 N.W. 12 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1921)
American Ice Co. v. Fitzhugh
97 A. 999 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1916)
Fifth Ave. Coach Co. v. . City of New York
86 N.E. 824 (New York Court of Appeals, 1909)
Fifth Avenue Coach Co. v. City of New York
126 A.D. 657 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1908)

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Bluebook (online)
58 Misc. 401, 111 N.Y.S. 759, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fifth-avenue-coach-co-v-city-of-new-york-nysupct-1908.