Hoey v. . Gilroy

29 N.E. 85, 129 N.Y. 132, 41 N.Y. St. Rep. 181, 84 Sickels 132, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1151
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 1, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 29 N.E. 85 (Hoey v. . Gilroy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoey v. . Gilroy, 29 N.E. 85, 129 N.Y. 132, 41 N.Y. St. Rep. 181, 84 Sickels 132, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1151 (N.Y. 1891).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

The plaintiff brought this action as president of the Adams Express Company, an unincorporated association composed of more than seven persons, to enjoin the defendants from removing an awning or structure in front of the place of business used by the plaintiff’s company, in the city of Hew York. The defendants are the public officers of the city, having power to remove obstructions unlawfully *136 placed or kept in the public streets of the city. The Special Term sustained the action and enjoined the defendants from removing or interfering with the structure, but the General Tenu has reversed the judgment. It appears from the findings that the Adams Expi'ess Company occupy a building at the comer of Broadway and Gi’eat Jones stx-eet, in the city of Mew Y ork, for the transaction of their business. The building is forty feet wide on Bi’oadway, and one hundred and thirty feet deep on Great Jones street. The company had erected and maintained, for some time pxior to the commencement of this action, in fx’ont of its premises on Great Jones street, a permanent iron structure, one hundred and ten feet in length and nineteen feet in width, covering the whole sidewalk and extending over the curbstone about twelve inches. The roof was constracted of light corrugated iron, supported by iron columns about three and a half inches in diametei’, placed about twelve feet apai’t and next-to and along the inside of the curbstone, the lowest point of the x’oof being about ten feet above the sidewalk, the iron columns being imbedded in the soil of the stx’eet. The authoxit-ies of the city having charge of the streets notified the company to remove the stmcture, and on the neglect or refusal of the company to comply with the notice, the defendants were about to remove it when they were enjoined in this action. The learned judge, who gave the opinion of the couxi at Genei’al Tenn, has very clearly shown that,-according to the general rules of law, this stracture constitutes an encroachment upon the street, and is, as to the public at least, an obstruction. But the question here is whether it is an authorized or an illegal structure.

The legislature, by virtue of its general control over public streets and highways, has the power to authorize structures in the streets for the convenience of business that, without such authority, and under the principles of the common law, would be held to be enci’oachments and obstmctions. This power it may delegate to the -governing body in a municipal cox-poration, and the most important question in this case is whether the power to authorize this structure has been so conferred *137 upon the authorities of the city of New York. That depends upon the construction to be given to that part of the Consolidation Act which enumerates and specifies the powers conferred by the legislature upon the common council in that regard. That portion of the act which is material to the question now under consideration is as follows:

§ 86. The common council shall have power to make ordinances, not inconsistent with law and the Constitution of this state, and with such penalties as are prescribed in the last section, in the matters and for the purposes elsewhere especially granted, namely: * * *

“4. To prevent encroachments upon and obstructions to the streets, highways, roads and public places, not including parks, •and to authorize and require the commissioner of public works to remove the same; but they shall have no power to authorize the placing or continuing of any encroachment or obstruction upon any street or sidewalk, except the temporary occupation thereof during the erection or repair of a building on a lot opposite the same, but may authorize the temporary occupation of a portion of a street, during the night-time only, by trucks belonging to or habitually driven by actual residents of the city of New York. * * *

“ 8. To regulate the use of streets and sidewalks for signs, sign-posts, awnings, awning-posts, horse-troughs, urinals, telegraph-posts and other purposes.”

Effect must be given to this statute according to the intention of the legislature. It will not do to say that because the legislature in general words declared that the common council “ shall have no power to authorize the placing or continuing of any encroachment or obstruction upon any street or sidewalk,” and in the same statute specifically authorized them to regulate awnings, the prohibition and the specific power are so contradictory and inconsistent that one or the other must be rejected. Courts in construing statutes aim to reconcile apparent contradictions and to give effect, if possible, to every part of the enactment.

It cannot be doubted that the power to regulate awnings *138 carried with it the power to authorize their erection and maintenance upon compliance with the rules adopted upon that subject. It is just as clear that the legislature intended to authorize the common council to permit the construction of awnings as it is that it intended- to prohibit them from permitting encroachments upon or obstructions in the streets. An awning was an obstruction that was intended to be excepted from the general prohibitive words, or perhaps it would be better to say that the legislature did not intend that the general words should cover that particular case. When a statute contains two distinct provisions, one°being specific with precise directions to do a particular thing or permit it to be done, and the other general, prohibiting certain acts which, in their general sense include the particular thing authorized by the direction, the general prohibitive clause does not control the specific authority. When a general intention is expressed and also a particular intention incompatible with the general intention, the particular intention is to be considered in the nature of an exception. (Churchill v. Crease, 5 Bing. 178; People ex rel. v. McClave, 99 N. Y. 83, 89.)

Having in view these general rules of construction we have no doubt that the common council had power to authorize the erection and maintenance of the structure in question, and it remains only to see whether this power has been exercised.

On the 10th of May, 1886, the board of .aldermen and common council of the city passed a general ordinance, after it had been returned by the mayor without his approval, “ to regulate the erection of- awnings extending across sidewalks * "* * in the city of Hew York,” the material part of which is as follows:

“ Section 1. Awnings of tin or other light metal or canvass may be erected across the sidewalks of any of the streets of the city of Hew York, except Broadway, Fifth avenue, Lexington avenue and Madison avenue, provided any and every such awning shall not be higher than the floor of the second story of the building, the first floor being the ground floor, but in no case to be covered with wood; and every awning or *139

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.E. 85, 129 N.Y. 132, 41 N.Y. St. Rep. 181, 84 Sickels 132, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoey-v-gilroy-ny-1891.