New Colonial Ice Co. v. Woolley

181 Misc. 473, 41 N.Y.S.2d 662, 1943 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1884
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 5, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 181 Misc. 473 (New Colonial Ice Co. v. Woolley) 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
New Colonial Ice Co. v. Woolley, 181 Misc. 473, 41 N.Y.S.2d 662, 1943 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1884 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1943).

Opinion

Pecora, J.

Plaintiff brings this action as a taxpayer under section 51 of the General Municipal Law to enjoin defendant Woolley, as Commissioner of Public Markets (hereinafter referred to as Commissioner) and the City of New York from carrying out the terms of a lease covering the ice plant in the power-house building in the Bronx Terminal Market. Plaintiff seeks further to restrain the lessee, the defendant Tursellino, from operating the demised premises for the manufacture and sale of ice, and asks for a decree adjudging the lease to be null and void and in violation of the New York City Charter (1938) and the Agriculture and Markets Law. Finally, plaintiff asks that defendant Tursellino be compelled to account to the City of New York for profits earned by him in the use and occupation of the plant.

Soon after defendant Woolley was appointed as Commissioner of Public Markets on January 26, 1942, he ascertained from a survey made for him that the ice plant in the power house of the Bronx Terminal Market had been idle for about fifteen years, and that it could be put in operation at a total cost to the City of about $31,000 per annum. It thus appeared that if the plant could be rented for more than that sum, the excess would represent a profit to the City. The Commissioner thereupon leased the ice plant and its equipment to defendant Tursellino for a term of one year, commencing May 15, 1942, with an option of renewal for an additional two-year period. The rent reserved was $40,000 per annum for the first year plus water charges, and as to any renewal the rental was to be agreed upon between the tenant and the Commissioner. Failing such agreement the rental was to be fixed by the Mayor whose determination was to be binding upon the parties. Under the lease, the City further agreed to furnish the tenant with such electricity as the tenant needed in the conduct of the ice business at the leased premises, but the tenant agreed to pay for all electric current so furnished to him in excess of $28,000 per year.

As was said in Campbell v. City of New York (244 N. Y. 317, 328) respecting taxpayers’ actions, Their right of action as taxpayers is measured by the statute (General Municipal Law, § 51). They must show an illegal act or waste of public property. * * * Another form of contract might be more expedient or cheaper. The courts do not sit in judgment upon questions of legislative policy or administrative discretion. The taxpayer must point to illegality or fraud.”

[476]*476Plaintiff attacks the legality, of the lease upon the ground that the Commissioner had no power to assume the responsibilities provided in the lease, and that in any event there could be no lease of the ice plant without competitive bidding. It is true that section 384 of the New York City Charter (1938) provides that no real property of the City may be leased except with the approval of the Board of Estimate “ unless such power is expressly vested by law in another agency(Italics supplied.) That section further provides that “ Except as otherwise specifically provided by law,” the disposition of the property must be by competitive bidding. However, section 833 of the Charter gives to the Commissioner of Markets all the powers of a commissioner of public markets under the Agriculture and Markets Law, with the exception of the construction and repair of structures, which duties are to be performed by the Department of Public Works.

Under section 261 of the Agriculture and Markets Law, the Commissioner of Markets is vested with the power of the maintenance and management of all public markets and of all buildings, structures and facilities thereon. In subdivision 2 of said section, the Commissioner is given the power Of fixing fees for services, licenses and privileges and of renting space therein and entering into leases therefor We find here, then, an exception specifically provided by law which removes leases of market property from the restrictions of section 384 of the Charter. Thus the Commissioner of Markets, and not the Board of Estimate, has the power to enter into leases of property in public markets. There is no requirement for public letting contained in section 261 except in subdivision 7 thereof.' That subdivision was added by chapter 485 of the Laws of 1933. It is clear that it was passed to give power to lease the entire Bronx Terminal Market as one unit, and has no application to situations such as are presented in the instant litigation.

Furthermore, under rule 1 of the Bules and Begulations for the Bronx Terminal Market, approved by the Board of Estimate on October 9, 1939, the Commissioner of Markets is authorized to make leases of space and buildings in the Terminal Market for periods from one to ten years. There is no provision for public letting in said Bules and Begulations. It follows that if approval of the Board of Estimate were necessary it could be spelled out from the provisions of the Buies and Begulations governing the Bronx Terminal Market.

Plaintiff urges that the lease is illegal because the property leased was not rented for a market purpose, i. e., that the manu[477]*477facture of ice is not a market purpose. Section 259 of the Agriculture and Markets Law, in defining a market, does not purport to describe what products are to be sold in a public market. The definition is solely for the purpose of indicating what property should come within the jurisdiction of a commissioner of markets. The power house involved herein is unquestionably a physical part of the Bronx Terminal Market. In fact it is an important part of the market, since it furnishes refrigeration to the storage warehouse and all other buildings in the Bronx Terminal Market. This court is of the opinion that the manufacture of ice serves “ some public or quasi-public market purpose ”, (Eith v. City of New York, 165 Misc. 18, 28.) Different types of related businesses must be contained within the area of a large public market. For example, in the Bronx Terminal Market there are now a restaurant, a burlap-bag business, a dormitory, a milk-pasteurization plant, et cetera. In Grill v. City of New York (N. Y. L. J. April 28, 1939, p. 1956, affd. 258 App. Div. 793; revd. on other grounds 282 N. Y. 471), it was held that the leasing of a building in Wallabout Market for a paper and twine business was for a proper market purpose. The case of Bird v. Grout (106 App. Div. 159) is not applicable here. There are no restrictions with respect to the Bronx Terminal Market comparable to the limitations contained in the deed conveying the Wallabout Market property to the City of Brooklyn. That case turned upon the restrictions contained in the deed of the market grounds, as well as the probable violation of the Sanitary Code. Furthermore, it was decided long before the enactment of section 261 of the Agriculture and Markets Law, which defines the powers of a Commissioner of Public Markets.

Another specification of illegality presented by plaintiff is that the City is selling electric power in furtherance of a commercial enterprise. The evidence shows that the City operates the refrigeration and ice-making machines, and that the City furnishes such refrigeration to the lessee as well as to other merchants in the market. The cost of such power consumed in furnishing the refrigeration service to the lessee was, under the terms of the lease, not to exceed $28,000. If it did, the tenant was to pay any additional cost.

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Bluebook (online)
181 Misc. 473, 41 N.Y.S.2d 662, 1943 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1884, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-colonial-ice-co-v-woolley-nysupct-1943.