Good Humor Corp. v. City of New York

264 A.D. 620, 36 N.Y.S.2d 85, 1942 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4220
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 6, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 264 A.D. 620 (Good Humor Corp. v. City of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Good Humor Corp. v. City of New York, 264 A.D. 620, 36 N.Y.S.2d 85, 1942 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4220 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Close, J.

On December 29, 1941, the mayor of the city of New York approved Local Law No. Ill of the year 1941, enacted by the common council of that city. This law amended the Administrative Code of the City of New York by adding thereto a new section designated 435-14.0, which provided that “ It shall be unlawful for any person to peddle, hawk, vend or sell any goods, wares or merchandise on any of the streets of the city.” Persons operating or maintaining a pushcart or other vehicle under an open air market license, licensed war veterans or their widows, licensed blind persons, sellers of newspapers and periodicals, and those owning and operating farms in the city and who sell on the streets of the city produce grown on such farms, are exempted from the proscription of the local law.

Plaintiff Good Humor Corporation, engaged in the business of manufacturing and selling ice cream directly to consumers at retail, by merchandising its products from refrigerated motor cars, foot-propelled tricycles and hand carts, and plaintiff Frank Pfister, a licensed peddler and an employee of the Good Humor Corporation, commenced this action to restrain the defendants The City of New York and the Police Commissioner of that city from enforcing said local law. The other plaintiffs, likewise affected by the law prohibiting itinerant peddling, were permitted to intervene. The plaintiffs were awarded judgment declaring the local law unconstitutional on the ground that it constituted an improper and invalid exercise of the police power and restraining the defendants from enforcing or attempting to enforce said local law against the plaintiffs or their employees.

The end toward which a proper exercise of the police power must be directed is the health, safety or welfare of the public generally rather than the protection of particular individuals. The means used to accomplish the purpose for which the police power is exercised must be reasonably necessary to effect that end and not unduly oppressive upon individuals. (Lawton v. Steele, 152 U. S. 133.) An inference may be drawn from the pleadings in this action that the object of the Local Law No. Ill,-as reported to the common council by its committee on general welfare, was to prevent unfair competition by itinerant peddlers with storekeepers who pay rent and various taxes. If such be the true purpose of the law rather than the welfare of the public generally, it would be legislation of the kind characterized and condemned by the Court of Appeals in People v. Gillson (109 N. Y. 389) and would be invalid [622]*622as an improper exercise of the police power in favor of a special class. (City of Buffalo v. Linsman, 113 App. Div. 584; People v. Kuc, 272 N. Y. 72.) However, on the trial of the action defendants offered evidence tending to prove that some itinerant peddlers were guilty of abuses adversely affecting the public health, that some were guilty of fraudulent practices, and that in congested areas of the city the presence of itinerant peddlers obstructed the free flow of traffic and created hazardous conditions of varying degrees. The defendants did not claim that the plaintiffs in this action were guilty of such abuses nor that there was anything .inherently immoral or dangerous to the public welfare in the business of itinerant peddling.

The evils existing in a legitimate business by reason of the manner in which some of its participants conduct it will not warrant the exercise of the police power to the extent of prohibiting the business entirely. (People ex rel. Moskowitz v. Jenkins, 202 N. Y. 53; Adams v. Tanner, 244 U. S. 590.) Where a business is not essentially inimical to the public welfare, the prohibition of such business can be sustained as a valid exercise of the police power only when the business is attended with certain admitted evils that cannot be prevented otherwise than by the absolute prohibition of the business. (Murphy v. California, 225 U. S. 623.) In Booth v. Illinois (184 U. S. 425, 429) it was stated: A calling may not in itself be immoral, and yet the tendency of what is generally or ordinarily or often done in pursuing that calling may be towards that which is admittedly immoral or pernicious. If, looking at all the circumstances that attend, or which may ordinarily attend, the pursuit of a particular calling, the State thinks that certain admitted evils cannot be successfully reached unless that calling be actually prohibited, the courts cannot interfere, unless, looking through mere forms and at the substance of the matter, they can say that the statute enacted professedly to protect the public morals has no real or substantial relation to that object, but'is a clear, unmistakable infringement of rights secured by the fundamental law.” In the present case the defendants claim that the evils involved in itinerant peddling cannot be successfully reached unless itinerant peddling be actually prohibited. However, as noted in Booth v. Illinois (supra), it is the duty of the court to look through the mere form and at the substance of the matter and in so doing the defendants’ assertion that the evils of itinerant peddling cannot be successfully reached will be found to be gratuitously presumed from the alleged inability of the city authorities to regulate peddling. The defendant police commissioner testified that this alleged inability to regulate applied only to the unlicensed peddlers and that [623]*623it was relatively easy to regulate licensed peddlers. It appears that licensed peddlers, who were relatively easy to regulate, might have their licenses suspended or revoked by the department of markets for violation of regulations; whereas the unlicensed peddlers were subject to criminal proceedings before city magistrates. The inability of the authorities to regulate the unlicensed peddlers Is blamed on the failure of the city magistrates to impose fines or terms of imprisonment sufficient to deter them from repeating their offenses. Facilities for remedying the evils complained of are to be found in existing statutes dealing with licensing, in the sanitary laws and regulations, and in the traffic ordinances. Whatever evils exist in itinerant peddling can be successfully reached by recourse to existing laws and by the enforcement of those laws by the police and the courts having jurisdiction of the subject-matter. This local law prohibiting itinerant peddling, considered in relation to its objective, as stated by the common council’s committee on general welfare, of preventing unfair competition with storekeepers, is discriminatory; and considered in relation to the means employed to effect its purported object, namely, the public welfare, absolute prohibition is not reasonably necessary to destroy the evils of itinerant peddling, for it has not been shown that such evils are beyond the successful reach of existing laws when properly enforced.

We have been referred by the defendants to the case of Town of Green River v. Fuller Brush Co. (65 F. [2d] 112), in which an ordinance of the town of Green River, Wyo., prohibiting peddlers and hawkers from soliciting orders for the sale of goods by going in and upon private premises, was upheld as a proper exercise by the town of its police power. Some jurisdictions have followed the Green River case, while others have refused to follow it.

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Bluebook (online)
264 A.D. 620, 36 N.Y.S.2d 85, 1942 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/good-humor-corp-v-city-of-new-york-nyappdiv-1942.