In re Patterson

3 Liquor Tax Rep. 326, 43 Misc. 498, 89 N.Y.S. 437
CourtNew York County Courts
DecidedApril 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 Liquor Tax Rep. 326 (In re Patterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York County Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Patterson, 3 Liquor Tax Rep. 326, 43 Misc. 498, 89 N.Y.S. 437 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

Searing, J.:

This is an application for cancellation of a liquor tax certificate issued to one William Byrne by the county treasurer of Cayuga county on June 26, 1903, allowing him to traffic in liquors at No. 292 Genesee street, in the city of Auburn.

It is alleged that William Byrne, in his application for such certificate, incorrectly and falsely stated that he had the consen is of the owners of two-thirds of the buildings used exclusively as dwellings located within 200 feet of the entrance to the saloon, the place where liquors were to be sold under said certificate.

On or about May 1, 1903, one C. August Koenig, owning large brewery interests in the city, became the owner of the house and premises known as Nos. 292 and 294 Genesee street, evidently for the purpose of establishing a saloon on the premises. The immediate neighborhood is occupied mostly for residential purposes, the only exception being that the building, upon the corner of Genesee and South Division streets, besides being occupied as a residence-, is occupied in part by a grocery and meat market.

The premises owned by Mr. Koenig are located on the south side of Genesee street, between South Division and Van Patten streets, and are sixty-nine feet front and rear, and seven rods deep. In the center of this lot, east and west, and near the street, is located a double dwelling-house; the west half thereof is occupied by William Byrne and his family as a residence, and the east half is occupied by him as a saloon, under the certificate in question. It does not appear by the evidence whether William Byrne occupies the premises as a tenant, or by some other arrangement with Mr. Koenig, the owner; but it is fair to assume that he is a tenant of that portion of the premises occupied by him for residence and saloon purposes.

After Mr. Koenig became possessed of the premises, he attempted by personal solicitation, and through the aid of other persons, to procure the consent of the owners of the buildings within the limit occupied exclusively as dwellings' as required by law, that the traffic in liquors might be carried on on the said premises, but without success, all such persons refusing.

At about the same time and shortly after, William Byrne also personally, and with the aid of other persons, attempted to procure such consents to enable him to obtain a certificate to sell on the premises of Mr. Koenig. In this he also was unsuccessful. Failing to obtain such consents, Mr. Koenig endeavored to purchase the properties of the owners of such buildings used as [328]*328residences, within 200 feet, but he was unable to effect a purchase of any of them. Having thus failed, he then caused to be erected across the rear end of his lot and premises a wooden building about sixty-three feet long, east and west, and about sixteen feet wide, north "and south. The building was set on posts driven or set in the ground, with no other underpinning or foundation. The outside was covered with matched boards running up and down; the roof being constructed with rafters, roof-boards, and shingled in the ordinary way. Two floors were laid of matched lumber, one for the ground floor, and one above, which floors ran the whole length of the building. The building was then divided into seven equal parts, by running wooden partitions through the building north and south, and when so divided each part was about eight and one-half feet wide. On the north end of each division of the building was one door and a window, and one window in the rear. There was constructed in each part narrow open stairs, leading to the upper part of the division. This upper part was divided by a board partition into two rooms about eight feet square. In the rear of each division, and upon the outside of the building, was set on a bracket a tile chimney for the use of that division. At the time of the application for the certificate, the building had not been painted, but has been since painted. The inside of the building was sealed with Georgia pine, no lath or plaster being used in any part of the building. The cost of the building as testified to by the contractor was $1,185, or $169.43 for each of the seven parts. The building was completed at the close of the day of the 25th day of June, 1903.

On the morning of the next day, at about ten o’clock, William Byrne made the application for the certificate, which was granted at about 10:15 o’clock. Between ten o’clock a. m., and noon of that day, people, all, or mostly Italians, with some household effects moved into the building, and occupied some portions. The building has been more or less occupied from that time down to the submission of the case. The witness Puro, who procured the occupants of the building, testifies that he got them for Mr. Koenig, who hired him for that purpose, and that he obtained two men with their wives to occupy certain portions, and the other occupants (twenty-one in number) were single men, some of whom boarded, while others did their own cooking in the portions of the building which they occupied. The occupancy of the several portions has changed frequently, persons moving in for a short [329]*329time and then vacating, while portions have remained unoccupied during some or all of the time since.

The claim of petitioner is that this structure was erected for the purpose of overcoming the effect of the refusal of the neighbors to sign consents for Byrne to run a saloon at No. 292 Genesee street, and that the structure so erected and divided does not constitute seven buildings, and that they are not occupied bona fide as seven separate dwellings. It is evident that in the erection of the building, the intention was to make a sufficient number of dwellings on the premises Nos. 292-294 to overcome the effect of the refusal of consents by the owners of other dwellings within the prescribed limit.

From an examination of the application of Byrne for a certificate, and of the evidence, it appears that there were four buildings occupied exclusively as dwellings, other than the Koenig buildings, within the prescribed limit, the owners of which had refused to give their consents. To overcome these it was necessary to have the consent of the owner or owners of at least eight other buildings occupied as dwellings in order to meet the requirement of the law, which provides that the applicant for a license shall file consents of at least two-thirds of the owners of such buildings.

In this emergency the portion of the building on Mr. Koenig’s property, known as No. 294 Genesee street, now occupied by Byrne as a dwelling, was counted as one such building (which I think fairly comes within the law, and should be counted and allowed). The other seven buildings relied upon were the seven divisions of the building constructed upon the rear of the premises. To sustain the certificate, it is necessary to hold that this structure, divided by partitions into seven parts, each eight and one-half' feet wide, constitutes seven distinct buildings, each occupied exclusively as a dwelling; in other words, that it is a “block” of seven buildings, each a “dwelling-house” within the meaning of the' law. In Matter of Lyman v. Garrison, 24 Misc. Rep. 552, the court in deciding an application to revoke a certificate upon the same grounds as claimed in this case, says: “This law, like any other, should receive a fair interpretation.

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Related

In re Clement
101 N.Y.S. 447 (New York Supreme Court, 1906)

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Bluebook (online)
3 Liquor Tax Rep. 326, 43 Misc. 498, 89 N.Y.S. 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-patterson-nycountyct-1904.