Griffin v. City of Gloversville

67 A.D. 403
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 67 A.D. 403 (Griffin v. City of Gloversville) 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
Griffin v. City of Gloversville, 67 A.D. 403 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Chase, J.:

The city of Gloversville was incorporated by chapter 55 of the Laws of 1890, and, pursuant to the charter, ordinances and by-laws were duly made and established, by which the boundaries of what is known as the fire limits of said city were specified, and it was also therein provided: “ That within that part of said city bounded by the aforesaid limits there shall not be erected or placed any building of wood, or of wood with brick or metal veneer, and all buildings erected within said limits shall be made or constructed of stone, brick or metal with partition wall of like material and with fire proof roofs, and all. cornices and eaves troughs thereon shall be of brick, stone or metal. * * * That within that part of said city bounded by the aforesaid limits, there shall not be made to any building any repairs or addition of wood or of wood with brick or metal veneer, except upon permission granted by resolution of the common council as provided in and by section 5 of title VIII of the city charter.”

It is also therein provided that a violation of such ordinances and by-laws shall subject the offender to a fine of twenty-five dollars for each offense, and the further sum of twenty-five dollars for each and every week any building or structure erected, placed or repaired in violation thereof shall be continued.

And said ordinances and by-laws further provided that “ Evéry building or other structure erected contrary to the provisions of this by-law is hereby declared to be a common nuisance and shall be abated and removed as such.”

By chapter 275 of the Laws of 1899 an act was passed revising the charter of the city of Gloversville. Section 148- of said act provides : “ The fire limits as now established in the city of Gloversville and the provisions regulating the erection of buildings within such limits shall remain in force under this act subject to the power of the common council to alter, enlarge, or repeal the same, and the said common council for the purpose of guarding [407]*407against calamities by fire shall have and hereby are vested with the power to prescribe from time to time by ordinance the limits in said city within which either wooden buildings or buildings constructed of wood with brick or metal veneer shall not be erected, placed, or repaired without the permission granted by resolution of the common council, and to prohibit and prevent the erection, placing or repairing of any such building or structure therein. * * * ”

Section 149 of said act provides: “ Every building or other structure erected contrary to the provisions of the last section or to an ordinance made by the common council in pursuance thereof is hereby declared to be a common nuisance and may be abated and removed as such. * * * ”

The ordinances and by-laws above quoted are expressly recognized by such revised charter, and having been made and enacted pursuant to express provisions of said original charter, and so recognized and approved by the revised charter of the city of Gloversville, had and have the same force and effect as an act of the Legislature. ( Village of Carthage v. Frederick, 122 N. Y. 268; City of Buffalo v. N. Y., L. E. & W. R. R. Co., 152 id. 276.) The ordinances and by-laws quoted were specifically authorized and do not depend upon general or implied authority.

The said ordinances and by-laws also provide: “ These by-laws being intended to form permanent regulations, are not subject to be abrogated, changed or suspended without the unanimous consent of the common council present at a meeting, unless the proposed alteration has been presented and held under consideration by a resolution of the common council at least two weeks before the final vote be taken thereon.” There is no claim that the said ordinances and by-laws were ever legally abrogated, changed or suspended.

The permission given by the common council to the-plaintiff to remove said building to the new location if iron or steel siding was put on said building was in direct opposition to an ordinance and by-law binding upon the common council as well as the plaintiff. Such permission, therefore, was nugatory and did not authorize the plaintiff to do any act condemned by such ordinance and by-law.

The common council had authority to give the plaintiff permission to repair and build an addition of twelve feet to the storehouse as granted by them March 28, 1899.

[408]*408Were-plaintiff’s acts within such permission? It may be assumed . that for the purpose of upholding this judgment we should assume that the trial court has found that everything done by the plaintiff was included in the term “ repairs.” Such finding, however, if made, would, in our judgment, be against the weight- of evidence.

It is unnecessary here to determine whether the changes made in the old building apart from its -removal could be fairly included in the terms of the permission given, but taking such changes in connection with the fact that the entire structure was removed to a new foundation some distance away, it could not be upheld without substantially nullifying the good to be effectuated by the statute and ordinances.

If the plaintiff could move the building to a new foundation sixty Or seventy feet away, what could prevent its removal at any time to any other part of the fire district ?

The ordinance and by-law is not alone directed against the erection Of a wood or wood with brick or metal veneer building within the fire district, but against the. placing of such building in such district. Apart from what had been done to the building in April, the act of August twenty-eighth alone was within the prohibition. ( Wadleigh v. Gilman, 12 Maine, 403.)

The plaintiff claims, and the trial court held, that the defendant did not establish a defense to the action by reason of the fact that it did not show that the building was a common nuisance. It has been repeatedly held that where a particular thing is declared to be a common nuisance by statute, ordinance or by the resolution of a subordinate body the correctness of such conclusion can be assailed in any action relating thereto. ' In such cases the mere fact that such particular thing is declared a common nuisance does not make it so, and if" a public official or any one attempts by summary means to abate the alleged nuisance he does so at the peril of being liable for damages if he fails to establish his contention, if the owner calls him to account for the destruction of his property.

Where the Legislature or a municipality duly authorized enacts a general statute or ordinance prohibiting certain erections within a prescribed territory, and declaring an erection in violation of such statute. or ordinance a public nuisance, the reasonableness of the prohibition is not thereafter open to question.

[409]*409The question here considered has been fully discussed in the Court of Appeals in Fire Department of New York v. Gilmour (149 N. Y. 453), in which case the court say: There can be no doubt of the power of the legislature to enact regulations for the protection of cities or villages against the serious dangers from con.flagrations. It is one of the subjects to which the police power of the state extends, and there is no one in the wide range of this power upon which the legislature has more frequently acted.

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Bluebook (online)
67 A.D. 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffin-v-city-of-gloversville-nyappdiv-1901.