Gorman v. City of New York

280 A.D. 39, 110 N.Y.S.2d 711
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 11, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 280 A.D. 39 (Gorman 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
Gorman v. City of New York, 280 A.D. 39, 110 N.Y.S.2d 711 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

Bergan, J.

Plaintiffs are policemen and members of the police pension system of the city of New York. The action is maintained against the city and the members of its police pension fund for a judgment declaring Local Law No. 44 of 1951 invalid on constitutional grounds.

The local law in effect requires a notice of thirty days be given by a policeman who has served the required number of years before his election to retire on pension becomes effective. The retirement of such a policeman had formerly been effective immediately upon his election.

The constitutional validity of the statute is attacked by plaintiffs on the ground that the city was without power to enact such a local law; and, even if it had the power of enactment the law would nevertheless be invalid because it is in conflict with another constitutional provision that membership in a pension system is a contractual relationship, the benefits of which cannot be impaired. (N. Y. Const., art. IX, § 12; art. Y, § 7.) The court at Special Term was of opinion that the views of the plaintiffs on these questions were correct and denied defendants’ motion for judgment.

We address ourselves first to the power of the city to enact the local law of 1951. The statute governing the manner of retirement of policemen as it read at the time of this enactment provided in terms that a policeman who had served either of the alternative periods of time specified “ shall be retired ” upon his “ own application in writing

The statute had been enacted in this form by the city of New York as Local Law No. 2 of 1940. It became a law February 13,1940, and it undertook to amend the Administrative Code in relation to the police pension fund “ generally.” The statute provided for many changes and dealt in one way or another with fifty-seven pertinent sections of the Administrative Code.

In the same year the Legislature also undertook to deal additionally with the local law that had thus been enacted by the city. By section 2 of chapter 437 of the Laws of 1940, effective April 1st, the Legislature enacted that Notwithstanding any defect, irregularity or omission ” of any lawful requirement ’ ’ or lack ‘ of statutory authority ’ ’ the ‘ ‘ acts and proceedings ” of the city’s legislative body in enacting Local Law No. 2 “ are hereby legalized and validated.”

[42]*42It' is argued by the plaintiffs that this enactment to which the generic term ‘ ‘ curative statute ’ ’ has sometimes been given judicially (Matter of Tartaglia v. McLaughlin, 297 N. Y. 419, 425) is such a “ law enacted by the legislature ” relating to a pension or retirement system that the city was without power to alter its own underlying local statute (N. Y. Const., art. IX, § 12). The Constitution there excepts from the general legislative power of a city to amend State laws those relating to a pension system enacted on emergency message from the Governor.

Curative or validating statutes had genesis in a purpose to overcome doubts about certain kinds of local public, and even private, proceedings and 'determinations. A good example is the resolution of the Suffolk supervisors in 1934 relating to tax warrants said to have lacked legal authorization, which was validated during the pendency of an attack through judicial proceedings, by a “ curative statute ”. (Bradford v. County of Suffolk, 283 N. Y. 503.)

The practice has been extended to the validation of local laws 1 ¿ even if the local law in itself was not a legitimate exercise of city power ” (Matter of Tartaglia v. McLaughlin, supra, p. 424). There the curative statute itself was examined as to its own constitutional validity and the court was of opinion that it was undoubtedly valid ” (p. 425).

No court has said that a legislative approval or validation of a local law lifts the local law thereafter into a plane beyond ■the reach of local legislative power. It is reasonable to suppose, both from the character of the soil which has nourished the growth of New York’s “ curative statutes ” and from the language which the Legislature used in the enactment of this particular one, that no intention existed either to supersede what the city’s legislative body had done or for the State to occupy the field of local regulation of a local matter. The intent was to add tensile strength to an existing statutory structure to satisfy minds that might be apprehensive of some theoretical weakness.

The interpretation of this statute is to be arrived at in the customary way by looking at its language. The curative statute of 1940 so far as it is addressed to this local law does not deal with pensions explicitly. It deals with the 1 acts and proceedings ” of the city in pursuing its legislative power. It provides that if there be any ” legal infirmity in the city’s enactment of its local law the defect is made good.

[43]*43If the enactment of the local law was on sound ground it is manifest from what the Legislature said that the act of validation was not intended to weaken the ground. It certainly was not designed to affect adversely a valid local law. The Legislature was dealing with the contingency that the local law might in some indefinite sense be held by a court to be invalid and the legislative power of the State was being added to that of the city against such a contingency.

It would grossly distort the intent of the Legislature, as expressed in the language used, to suppose that its statute not only operated adversely against the force of a valid local law, but that it so operated as to diminish the power of the local legislative body thereafter to amend its own statute.

The local law of 1951 neither referred to nor affected in any way what the Legislature had done by its 1 £ curative statute ’ \ It amended the 1940 local law by what the title says is ££ A local law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York ”.

We conclude, therefore, that the curative statute of 1940 was what its term implies, a statute to be called into effect as a prop against infirmity and that it did not place beyond the power of the city the right to amend the local law to which it referred within the constitutional prohibition against local legislative action superseding a State law relating to a pension.

Even if the State law could be regarded as itself a pension act of the Legislature and not merely a ££ curative statute ”, it was not an emergency law within the definition of section 12 of article IX of the Constitution, to which the exception upon local legislative power stated in that section applies.

When all the language of this constitutional section is read together, the exception which contains the limitation is so placed in context in relation to the grant of local power to deal with emergency State laws that the limitation, too, must be deemed related to this kind of State law, i.e., one enacted on emergency message, and chapter 437 of the Laws of 1940 is not one of these.

The Constitutional Convention of 1938 seems to have had this view of what it was doing, and appellants have fully demonstrated that the cities of the State have quite generally felt themselves competent by local laws to deal with pension statutes of the Legislature in the exercise of what they deemed their constitutional powers since 1938. The cumulative effect of these practical constructions of constitutional power has a very considerable force.

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Bluebook (online)
280 A.D. 39, 110 N.Y.S.2d 711, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gorman-v-city-of-new-york-nyappdiv-1952.