Matter of Townsend

88 N.E. 41, 195 N.Y. 214, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 1009
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 27, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 88 N.E. 41 (Matter of Townsend) 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
Matter of Townsend, 88 N.E. 41, 195 N.Y. 214, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 1009 (N.Y. 1909).

Opinions

Werner, J.

The “ Liquor Tax Law ” provides that traffic in liquor, under subdivision 1 of section 11 of the act, shall not be permitted “ in any building, yard, booth or other place which shall be on the same street or avenue and within two hundred feet of a building occupied exclusively as a church or schoolhouse.” (Section 24, subd. 2.) The prohibition contained in this section is followed by certain exceptions, which *217 have no application to the case at bar, in favor of specified places in which the liquor traffic had been lawfully carried on prior to the enactment of the statute and was being continued at that time.

Subdivision 1 of section 11 above referred to relates to the traffic in liquors “ to be drunk upon the premises where sold, or which are so drunk, whether in a hotel, restaurant, saloon, store, shop, booth or other place, or in any outbuilding, yard or garden appertaining thereto or connected therewith.” This last quoted provision of the statute applies to this case, for it was under that section and subdivision that the appellant applied for his liquor tax certificate. The statute requires the applicant for such a liquor tax certificate to make a written application, signed and sworn to by him, which must specify, among other things, the number of “ buildings occupied exclusively as dwellings there are, the nearest entrance to which is within two hundred feet measured in a straight line, of the nearest entrance to the premises where the traffic in liquors is intended to be carried on, and whether the applicant intends to traffic in liquors under the certificate applied for in any building, yard, booth, or other place, which is on the same street or avenue and within two hundred feet of a building occupied exclusively as a church or schoolhouse.” (Section 17, subd. 5.)

The statute further provides that _ “ when the nearest entrance to the premises described in said statement as those in which traffic in liquor is to be carried on is within two hundred feet, measured in a straight line, of the nearest entrance to a building or buildings occupied exclusively for a dwelling, there shall also be so filed simultaneously with said statement a consent in writing that such traffic in liquors be so carried on in said premises during a term therein stated, executed by the owner or owners, or by a duly authorized agent or agents of such owner or owners of at least two-tliirds of the total number of such buildings within two hundred feet so occupied as dwellings, and acknowledged as are deeds entitled to be recorded.” (Section 17, subd. 8.) This subdivision also con *218 tains exceptions similar to those set forth in subdivision 2 of section 2é in favor of places where the liquor traffic had been lawfully carried on prior to the enactment of the statute and was being lawfully continued thereafter.

The revocation and cancellation of liquor tax certificates are also provided for in cases where the applications therefor contain material false statements, or where the applicant has failed to file the properly acknowledged consents of the owner or owners, or their duly authorized agent or agents, of at least two-thirds of the total number of buildings occupied exclusively as dwellings within two hundred feet of the place in which the traffic in liquor is to be carried on.

The record discloses that when the appellant made his application for the liquor tax certificate above referred to, the New York Hospital owned and maintained what is known as a training school for nurses at No. 6 West 16th street, within two hundred feet of the building in which the appellant intended to engage in the business of trafficking in liquor. The main question presented upon this appeal is whether the building in which the training school was conducted" is a “ schoolhouse ” within the meaning of the statute. This training school building was' a seven-story structure, containing recitation rooms, study rooms and sleeping rooms for women taking the prescribed course. It was, in fact, separate from the other hospital buildings, although connected therewith by a door leading into the administration building from which there were convenient avenues of access to the main hospital building which contained the wards for patients. The institution was registered by the regents of the university under article 12 of the Public Health Law (L. 1893, cli. 661, as amended by L. 1903, cli. 293), which requires the students in such institutions to be over twenty-one years of age at the time of entrance, and authorizes the issuance of licenses or certificates which entitle the holders to practice as registered nurses. Pursuant to this law the hospital authorities adopted rules prescribing a two years’ course in such studies as would fit the students to be trained nurses, and that none but women *219 at least twenty-three years of age should be admitted to the course.

The question which we are called upon to decide is not free from difficulty. It appears to be one of first impression, for neither the industry of counsel, nor our own research, has discovered any decision bearing directly upon it. The definitions of the lexicographers do not help us because, as applied to the subject under consideration, it means nothing to say that a “ schoolhouse is a building in which a school is conducted.” (Standard dictionaries.) The nearest approach to a legal definition of the noun schoolhouse ” is to be found in the cases dealing with the statutes exempting from taxation certain educational institutions, and these are more illustrative than authoritative, for they relate to laws wholly different in purpose from the one now under consideration. Just a few citations will serve to mark the distinction, rather than the resemblance, between such cases and the case at bar. In Chegaray v. Jenkins (5 N. Y. 376) this court expressed the opinion that the term “ schoolhouse,” as used in an exemption statute, meant a building devoted to a subordinate school as distinguished from a “ college, incorporated academy or other seminary of learning.” In the later case of Chegaray v. Mayor, etc., of N. Y. (13 N. Y. 220) it was held that a building used for a private school was not exempt from taxation and that the statute embraced only the public common schools. In Gordon v. Cornes (47 N. Y. 608, 616) this court considered that part of the Constitution of 1846 which related to the distribution of the common school fund, and decided that normal schools were not common schools because they were “ not intended for the education of the children of the inhabitants of the districts where they are to be located, but for the training of teachers for all the common schools.” In the case of Merrick v. Inhabitants of Amherst (12 Allen, 500), a taxpayer’s suit to restrain the raising of money under a Massachusetts statute which authorized the establishment of an agricultural college, the constitutionality of the statute was assailed upon various grounds, one of them being that it was *220 in contravention of the provision “ that all moneys raised by taxation * * * for the support of public schools * * *

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Bluebook (online)
88 N.E. 41, 195 N.Y. 214, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 1009, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-townsend-ny-1909.