Johnstown Cemetery Ass'n v. Parker

28 Misc. 280, 59 N.Y.S. 821
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 28 Misc. 280 (Johnstown Cemetery Ass'n v. Parker) 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
Johnstown Cemetery Ass'n v. Parker, 28 Misc. 280, 59 N.Y.S. 821 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

Stover, J.

The plaintiff is an association, organized under the general laws of the state, and this action is brought to recover a penalty of $25 for an allegéd violation of the rules and regulations of the association.

By section 47 of the law governing cemetery associations (Laws of 1895, Chap. 559), it is provided that “ The directors of a cemetery corporation may make reasonable rules and regulations for the use, care, management and protection of the property of the corporation and of all lots, plats and parts thereof in its cemetery; * * * for regulating the introduction and care of plants, trees and shrubs within. such [281]*281grounds; * * * for the conduct of persons while within the cemetery grounds; and for the exclusion of improper persons therefrom and improper assemblages therein. * * * The directors may prescribe penalties to be paid by a person violating any such rule or regulation, not exceeding twenty-five dollars for each violation, which shall be recoverable by the corporation in a civil action.”

Pursuant to this provision, the plaintiff, on the 11th day of May, 1898, adopted the following rule and regulation:

Section 9. The superintendent of the grounds shall have the sole care and superintendence of the grading, and of the care of all lots, including all work done thereon, subject to the direction of the committee on superintendence; and no work whatever shall be performed in the cemetery, or on any lot therein, except by the superintendent of the grounds, or with his consent and under his superintendence.
This section shall not, however, prevent any lotowner from doing any proper work upon his own lot, himself, under the control and subject to the approval of the superintendent of the grounds.
Any person or persons refusing to conform to this regulation may be excluded from the cemetery grounds, and any person violating this regulation shall forfeit a penalty in the sum of $25, to be recovered as provided by law.”

The defendant was employed by several lotowners, some of them widows, having relatives buried upon their lots, to mow the grass and remove weeds from the lots; and in pursuance of this employment, and under the direction of the lotowners, he did cut grass and remove weeds from the burial plats.

It is for these acts that this action is brought, and for the purpose of recovering the penalty for violation of the rule of the association above set forth.

We are confronted at the outset of this case by the question as to the power of the legislature to delegate its authority to the extent and in the manner provided by this statute. It is not my purpose to exhaustively discuss the question of the delegation of legislative power, but to simply call attention to some of the features of this case, presentation of which will disclose to the legal mind the reasons for the conclusions which I have drawn. The central government-may delegate to municipal and other public corporations some portions of its own powers for local purposes. It may clothe a municipal assembly with power to enact ordinances, and to fix [282]*282fines and penalties in the administration of the local government; and generally, it may, within the limits necessary to carry out the police administration of the state, clothe the municipality with power to enact suitable regulations for the conduct of the local government. These regulations, however, must all be reasonable, and within the limits recognized as proper for the administration of government under the police power of the state. The powers delegated must be such as are incidental to the governmental functions of the state or the locality, and must be for a public purpose, and for the regulation of the conduct of the public. A cemetery association organized as the plaintiff is, is not a governmental agency, nor has it the characteristics of a municipal or public corporation, in the sense that it performs any governmental function. It is simply an association of people who have organized for a common interest, affecting only the private individuals, who may happen to be associated together. The powers of government, except to the extent above indicated, cannot be delegated by the legislature. The power of making laws is one involving discretion and responsibility; it can be exercised only by a public body, a municipal organization.

The act in question permits the association to declare an act illegal, and to impose a penalty or fine therefor. It is, in fact it permits a declaration that a person violating its rules or regulations is guilty of a crime and punishable by a fine. It may as well say that any person going upon the grounds of the plaintiff without a certain form of .license shall be punished by a fine. In this instance it is undertaken to show that by entering upon the premises, not of the association, but of the lotowner, a person is subject to the penalty, and any person violating the rule shall be excluded from the grounds. It may go to the extent of excluding a lotowner, who has been guilty of permitting some person to perform labor upon his lot, from going within the cemetery. If it is within the power of the legislature to delegate this authority to a cemetery association, it may delegate it to any private corporation. It may permit a railroad company to make a regulation that a person shall not enter its depots or grounds without certain permission, and a violation of the rule renders them subject to a penalty to be fixed by the corporation. That it is fixed in this instance at $25, which may be considered a small sum, cannot affect the power of the legislature, for if a fine of $25 can be imposed in this way, a fine of any other amount may be fixed. So that it comes to this: If [283]*283this is a valid enactment, the legislature may provide that a private corporation, or mayhap, a private individual, may declare that any person who trespasses upon its or his premises is guilty of a violation of a rule, and subject to a penalty to be fixed by the person owning the premises, to be enforced by an action at law. It would seem, and I am cited to no authority that would uphold such a proposition as this, that the statement of this proposition would be sufficient to indicate invalidity. I am, therefore, of the opinion that the attempted delegation of the right to a cemetery association to fix a fine for the violation of a regulation made by it, is not a valid exercise of legislative power.

But assuming that such was a valid piece of legislation, it must be construed with reference to the other provisions of the statutes and* the surrounding circumstances. They have authority to make only reasonable regulations. The owners of the several lots in question have deeds which grant to them the entire estate in the premises, subject to the rules and regulations annexed to the deeds, which are as follows:

1. The proprietor of each lot shall have the right to inclose the same under the advice and direction of the trustees.
2. Proprietors shall not allow interments to be made on their lots for remuneration.
3. No disinterments shall be allowed without the permission of the trustees.
4.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 Misc. 280, 59 N.Y.S. 821, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnstown-cemetery-assn-v-parker-nysupct-1899.