Hamlin v. Bender

92 Misc. 16, 34 N.Y. Crim. 16, 155 N.Y.S. 963
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 92 Misc. 16 (Hamlin v. Bender) 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
Hamlin v. Bender, 92 Misc. 16, 34 N.Y. Crim. 16, 155 N.Y.S. 963 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1915).

Opinion

Emerson, J.

The defendant is engaged in conducting a moving picture theatre at No. 325 Bleecker street in the city of Utica. The auditorium where the exhibition is held is located on the north side of the street and is back about eighty feet from the sidewalk, the approach being through an alley about twenty feet in width. The seats in the auditorium face to the north and the pictures are reflected upon a screen on the northerly side by means of a cinematograph projector located in the southerly end of the room and operated by a paid employee of the defendant. In connection with the exhibition music is furnished by an orchestra which, with other attendants, are also paid employees of defendant. Near the entrance to the alley and but a few feet from the sidewalk is a box office for the sale of tickets, while bills and posters advertising the pictures to be shown are prominently displayed on the outside of the theatre and on the street.

Bleecker street is one of the main thoroughfares of the city and the defendant’s theatre is in a thickly populated section where people pass in going to and returning from religious services. A short distance westerly [18]*18from defendant’s theatre the street is crossed bj^ John street, and on the southwest corner of Bleecker and John streets .St. John’s Church is located, which is one of the largest churches in the city. 'This church is 316 feet in a direct line from defendant’s theatre and the entrance thereto is plainly visible from one of the main entrances to the church. There are also other institutions in the immediate vicinity of the church which are connected with its administration, such as a convent, a school which is conducted by the Sisters of Mercy, and Assumption Academy, which is a parochial school. St. John’s Church is largely attended and the Sunday services there conducted occupy from time to time practically all of the day.

The defendant had for some time been engaged in conducting this theatre as a place of public amusement where moving pictures were exhibited to people congregated in the theatre and streets and sidewalks adjacent thereto, an admission fee being exacted from each person entering which was paid at the box office located near the street. Prior to Sunday, April 25, 1915, the defendant had perfected arrangements to open up said theatre on that day and to exhibit moving pictures there for which an admission fee was to be charged and, to that end, had advertised the same as a Sunday show, and threatened and intended on that day and thereafter on Sundays to do the same.

The plaintiff, who is the commissioner of safety of .the city of Utica, acting under the provisions of the statutes applicable to said city, thereupon brought this action and asks the judgment of the court enjoining ,and restraining the defendant from so operating and conducting said theatre on Sundays.

It is strenuously urged by defendant’s counsel that the acts above set forth 'which defendant proposed to do are not a violation of the Sunday laws of our state, [19]*19and the ease of People v. Hemleb, 127 App. Div. 356, is pressed upon my attention as a controlling authority to that effect. In the Hemleb case the Appellate Division, second department, held that the mere act of conducting a moving picture show was not of itself a violation of the Sunday laws. It was said in that case that the statute, in prohibiting all shooting, hunting, fishing, playing, horse-racing, gaming and all other public sports, exercises or shows, referred to open air sports and exhibitions and, hence, an exhibition given in an enclosed building was not within its condemnation. This decision was made by a bare majority of the court, two judges concurring in the opinion and two judges uniting in a very strong and vigorous dissent .to that proposition. I am frank to say that this decision does not appeal to my good judgment, as it seems to me that it is based on entirely erroneous premises. I should suppose that an exhibition to which the public was invited and to which one and all were admitted indiscriminately upon payment of an entrance fee thereto was a public exhibition, whether held in an open field in an enclosed space or in a room in some building, and that the mere fact that it happened to be given in an enclosed building did not make it a private exhibition and, therefore, remove it from the' prohibition of the statute. Furthermore, the opinion in that case completely ignores the violation of the laws in relation to Sunday labor, which must necessarily result from the operating of a moving picture show on that day and which, it would seem, would subject the party to punishment. People v. Lynch, 156 App. Div. 601.

The decision is also at variance with the conclusions at which Justice Foote arrived in Moore v. Owen, 58 Misc. Rep. 332, and which, it seems to me, involves a correct exposition of the Sunday laws. The rule of [20]*20stare decisis is, however, firmly imbedded in onr law and, while the decisions of other special terms are by no means controlling, it is held to be the duty of a judge at special term to follow a decision made by the Appellate Division of another department until his own Appellate Division or the Court of Appeals pronounces a contrary rule of law. Burt v. Powis, 16 How. Pr. 289; Malan v. Simpson, 20 id. 489, 490; Loring v. United States Vulcanized Gutta Percha Co., 30 Barb. 644; Hardenburgh v. Crary, 50 id. 32.

Bowing, therefore, to the above rule, I must hold that the Ilemleb case is decisive as to the facts there involved and that the mere act of conducting a moving picture show in an enclosed room is not in and of itself alone a violation of the Sunday laws. But it needs no argument to show that what may be lawful under some circumstances may become unlawful when performed under other circumstances and conditions, and, so far as judicial precedents are concerned, they largely lose their value where an essentially different state of facts is involved. Crane v. Bennett, 177 N. Y. 107. Thus, as an example, it will be observed that the justice who wrote the prevailing opinion in the Hemleb case, decided in People v. De Mott, 38 Misc. Rep. 171, that Sunday baseball playing was not in and of itself a violation of the Sunday laws, while in the case of People v. Poole, 44 Misc. Rep. 118, the same justice held that such a game was unlawful where an admission fee was charged to witness the same. In othei words a business may be innocuous of itself and yet be conducted in such a manner and occasion such results that it would be unlawful as creating a nuisance. The rule in this regard is clearly stated in Doellner v. Tynan, 38 How. Pr. 176, where it is said that if a trade or business, otherwise lawful, is carried on in such a manner as to render the enjoyment of life and prop[21]*21erty uncomfortable, it is a nuisance. The rule of the common law, that a man shall so use his own as not to interfere with others, extends-to every act as well as to every use, and the mere lawfulness of a trade or calling will not excuse an interference with the comfortable enjoyment of his property by another.

It is said that the whole doctrine of nuisances is based upon the great law of Christian morality, which requires every man to do to others as he would have others do to him. Sic utere tuo ut alienum non Icedas is the maxim of the law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 Misc. 16, 34 N.Y. Crim. 16, 155 N.Y.S. 963, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamlin-v-bender-nysupct-1915.