In re New York Juvenile Asylum for a Writ of Mandamus

31 Misc. 445, 65 N.Y.S. 617
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 31 Misc. 445 (In re New York Juvenile Asylum for a Writ of Mandamus) 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
In re New York Juvenile Asylum for a Writ of Mandamus, 31 Misc. 445, 65 N.Y.S. 617 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1900).

Opinion

Leventbitt, J.

The relator asks for a writ of mandamus compelling the commissioner of public charities for this borough, to certify that it has complied with the rules and regulations of the State Board of Charities in the reception and retention of four [446]*446children, voluntarily surrendered to it by their respective parents by duly executed instruments in writing. It has been stipulated that these four children were not surrendered or intrusted to the relator on the ground of destitution. The immediate question here to be determined is whether, under the Constitution and existing legislation, the relator is entitled to payment by the municipality for children voluntarily surrendered or intrusted to it on grounds other than' that of destitution.

The relator was incorporated by act of the Legislature of this State (Chap. 332) on June 30, 1851. By section 2 of its charter (as amended by chapter 387, Laws of 1854), the purposes of incorporation were thus stated: The objects of this corporation are to receive and take charge of such children, between the ages of seven and fourteen years, as may be voluntarily entrusted to them by their parents or guardians or committed to their charge by competent authority, and provide for their support, and to afford them the means of moral, intellectual and industrial education.”

Section 7 makes more specific provision as to what children may be received into the relator’s care and management, and provides for four classes:

. “ 1. Such children as, by the consent, in writing, of their parents and guardians, shall be voluntarily surrendered and entrusted to it;
“ 2. Such children as may be committed to it by order of any magistrate or magistrates of the city and county of New York, under the ninth section of this act;
“ 3. Truant children who may be committed to its charge by the order of any magistrate or magistrates under the thirteenth section of this act;
“ 4. Children deserting their homes or disobedient to their parents or guardians, who may be committed to its charge by the order of any magistrate or magistrates under the fourteenth section of this act.”

It thus appears that, broadly speaking, the charter confers upon the relator the power to receive two classes of children: Those that are intrusted or surrendered, and those that are committed. As to the former, there is no restriction; as to the latter, there is limitation to the three classes of cases provided for by sections 9, 13 and 14. Thus section 9 provides for commitment by a magistrate where children are found destitute in the streets; section 13 for truant children, where the parents have failed to carry out an [447]*447engagement to enforce attendance of the child at school; and section 14, for children who- have deserted their homes, or who keep company with vicious and dissolute characters. A magistrate has thus no power to commit to the relator except for destitution, truancy or desertion and evil associations. The power of the parent or guardian to surrender or intrust voluntarily, however, is larger and is dependent only on the mutual consent of the parties thereto, and on the execution of the formal writing provided for by section 8 of the relator’s charter. Had it been the legislative intent to limit the cases of voluntary surrender, it would have been a very simple matter to express it. As the provision reads, there is no qualification. The respondent urges that by virtue of the Constitution, the rules and regulations of the State Board of Charities, and the provisions of the Greater Few York Charter, subdivision 1 of section 7 of the relator’s charter, has, in effect, been amended to read: Such children as by the consent, in writing, of their parents and guardians, shall be voluntarily surrendered and intrusted to- it on the grounds of destitution.

Before considering the scope of these enactments, it may be well at this point to examine the practical question involved in the proper construction to be given them. By section 28 of the relator’s charter, the board of supervisors were directed in each and every year to levy and collect by tax, and pay over to the relator, $110 per annnm, and proportionately for any fraction of a year, for each child which, by virtue and in pursuance of the provisions of the charter, should “be intrusted or committed to the said asylum.” This section was substantially re-enacted in subdivision 14 of'section 230 of chapter 378 of the Laws of 1897 (The Greater Few York Charter), whereby the board of estimate and apportionment is directed to include annually in its final estimate: “ To the Few York Juvenile Asylum, one hundred and ten dollars per annum, and proportionately for any fraction of a year, for 'each child which * * * shall be entrusted or committed to the said asylum.”

It is obvious that by virtue of the mandatory provision in section 28 of the charter, directing the application of moneys raised by taxation to a per capita payment for each inmate of the institution, a constitutional limitation was placed on the power to claim such payment for surrendered or entrusted children. Independent of specific provision, and without express restriction in the Constitution, there exists, on general principles, the limitation that the [448]*448money to be raised must be required for some purpose that in some sense at least can be said to be public. Bush v. Board of Supervisors, 159 N. Y. 212, 216. Even as to surrendered children, therefore, unless they should have been received on some ground which is the subject of the State’s charitable, reformatory or correctional activities, any payment of public moneys would be unconstitutional. That is, the relator cannot, for any cause sufficient to itself, accept children voluntarily surrendered by their parents and guardians and obtain for them the per capita payment provided for by legislation. The cause must be in some sense public. Beyond this limitation, however, which, while always existing, has, for -cases like those now under consideration, been made more specific perhaps by our present Constitution (Art. viii, §§ 11-14), I am unable to find anything either in that instrument, or in existing legislation, to point to a curtailment of the relator’s rights and powers.

Section 14 of Art. viii of the Constitution provides: “ Payments by counties, cities, towns and villages, to charitable, eleemosynary, correctional and. reformatory institutions, wholly or partly under private control, for care, support and maintenance, may be authorized, but shall not be required by the Legislature. No such payment shall be made for any inmate of such institutions who is not received and retained therein pursuant to rules established by the State Board of Charities.”

Pursuant to this provision the State Board of Charities adopted rules, the first one of which related to the reception of inmates in such institutions. The classes that might be received were enumerated. Those of the relator are, to my mind, embraced in the fourth subdivision, providing for “ Persons who have been received into such institutions as, under special or existing laws or appropriations, are entitled to receive payments of money in gross sum, or for specific purposes, from any county, city, town or village.”

The relator’s inmates were received under existing laws, i. e.,

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Related

People ex rel. New York Juvenile Asylum v. Keller
67 N.Y.S. 1143 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1900)

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31 Misc. 445, 65 N.Y.S. 617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-new-york-juvenile-asylum-for-a-writ-of-mandamus-nysupct-1900.