Hoffman v. Schultz

31 How. Pr. 385
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 31 How. Pr. 385 (Hoffman v. Schultz) 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
Hoffman v. Schultz, 31 How. Pr. 385 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1866).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.

An injunction was -granted in this case restraining the defendants from removing, tearing down, or in any way interfering with the stands or stalls attached to and forming a part of Washington market. The defendants move to dissolve the injunction. Several questions were discussed before me on the argument, which I propose to notice so far as I consider them applicable to the decision of the motion. .

As to the rights of the plaintiffs to maintain this action, although it would, perhaps, have been better if the corporate authorities who own the fee of the market, and who, bylaw, were authorized to establish it, had been joined with the plaintiffs, I am of opinion that they have a sufficient interest, as commissioners of the sinking fund, to maintain this action. They are, by virtue of the statute, authorized to collect and apply to the payment of the city debt the proceeds of rents, &c., from the public markets, and, as such trustees, they have a right, and it is their duty, to protect the property [394]*394from destruction from which such rents accrue, and to see that they are properly applied to the payment of the public ' debt.

The ordinance of the common council places all the revenues from the public markets in them charge, and by a subsequent statute that ordinance was recognized and no alteration therein could be made without the assent of the legislature.

For these reasons, I think the plaintiffs have a sufficient interest in and title to the revenues from this market, to warrant them in bringing this action.

The question then arises, whether the defendants under the statutes giving them existence as" the board of health, and the amendatory act, have any authority to order the market or any part of it to be removed ?

The statute under which this board was organized, was evidently intended solely for the purpose of preserving and promoting the public health—such is plainly shown by its title, and such are all the provisions contained in the act (Chapter 74 of 1866). The 12th section expressly declares their powers to be for the greater protection and security of health and life in the metropolitan district, and the powers taken from the corporate body and conferred upon this board, are those which relate to the preservation and protection of life or health. Tn the amendatory act (chapter 686), there is nothing showing any intent to depart from the great object which led to the formation of the board of health, unless something can be found in the third section of the amended act to which I will refer hereafter. I will here add, however, that the wording of that section, which is intended as amending the 12th section of the original act, also continues the limitation “ to be for the purpose of preserving or protecting life and health or preventing diseaseand the powers conferred are to be exercised for the greater protection and security of health and life in said district, &c.; and by that section the powers so conferred were to be construed to include the removal of any obstruction, matter or thing in the public streets, sidewalks or places which should be in [395]*395their opinion liable to lead to results detrimental to the public, or dangerous to life or health, the prevention of accidents by which life or health may be endangered, and generally the abating of all nuisances. There can be no doubt in adopting the principle, that the powers conferred by these acts were all intended as powers necessary to_ the preservation of the public health and of life; and that this was the object for which the statutes were passed. H so, then in ascertaining what powers were conferred, we must be governed solely by the inquiry, whether they relate to the object which the legislature had in view in passing the laws, and if so, the authority to remove obstructions’or other matters in the public streets, sidewalks or other public places, is only to be considered as granted with a view to carry into effect the general purposes of the acts under consideration. It was not pretended on the argument that this action of the board of health, in removing any portion of the market was necessary to the preservation of the pulic health or the protection of life; but, as I understood the counsel, the objection to the stalls sought to be removed, was upon the suggestion that such stalls were an obstruction upon a public street, and a nuisance in the opinion of the board of health detrimental to life. Such, too, is the allegation in the answer in setting out the entry in its records on this subject; but what that entry was, is not particularly stated in the answer, except as the general conclusion. If it was intended to rely oil the fact of' the stalls being injurious or dangerous to life or health, the records for such a conclusion should be stated, so that it might appear that the board had before them evidence upon which such a decision could be formed. There is a report from the officers of the board stating that in their opinion the stalls impeded ventilation.

I shall, however, consider the powers of the board as exercised in this matter upon the ground stated, that the stalls were either an obstruction upon the public street or a nuisance.

I have already stated that in my judgment the act is to be construed as applicable only to such obstructions as were [396]*396dangerous to life or health, and, if not of that chachacter, that it did not apply.

That it would be a nuisance, if it was an unlawful obstruction of a public street, must be conceded, and when that is the case, it does not need the power of a board of health to remove it. Any citizen has a right to abate a public nuisance in a street, if he does it in a proper manner, but it must be a nuisance which the law holds to be such, and not one merely declared so by any board or individual. It must be a nuisance as adjudged to be such by law. It may well be doubted whether the legislature can delegate to any body of men the power to declare what is or what is not a nuisance. Such power would be equal to a power to declare what should be a criminal act; because it is a crime to maintain a public nuisance, and if the legislature can delegate to individuals the power to define a nuisance, they can delegate to them the power to make acts. criminal which are not so by law. Such a power cannot be delegated to others by the legislature. They may authorize boards of health to pass ordinances necessary for the objects of their creation, but they cannot delegate to them the power to define what shall be a nuisance, or make acts criminal, which the law holds to be Innocent.

The ground which was declared for holding these stalls to be a nuisance, was that they were obstructions in the public streets. Whether they are unlawful obstructions is not by any means free from doubt. The power to keep markets in the city was given by the Dongan charter, and afterwards in the charter of 1730, the power to the common council to establish markets was more fully granted, so as to authorize markets to be held in the public streets, which were named as they then existed, and with authority to have, hold and keep such and so many other markets at such places in the city, as shah from time to time be ordered, established, erected and appointed by the common council. 1

Under this authority the corporation frequently erected markets in the public streets. It is not beyond the memory of many of the inhabitants, to call to mind the markets in [397]

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Related

Craig v. Commissioners of the Sinking Fund
208 A.D. 412 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1924)
People Ex Rel. Copcutt v. . Board of Health
35 N.E. 320 (New York Court of Appeals, 1893)
Metropolitan Board of Health v. Heister
37 N.Y. 771 (New York Court of Appeals, 1868)

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Bluebook (online)
31 How. Pr. 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoffman-v-schultz-nysupct-1866.