People Ex Rel. Board of Commissioners v. Banks

67 N.Y. 568, 1876 N.Y. LEXIS 438
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 22, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by91 cases

This text of 67 N.Y. 568 (People Ex Rel. Board of Commissioners v. Banks) 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
People Ex Rel. Board of Commissioners v. Banks, 67 N.Y. 568, 1876 N.Y. LEXIS 438 (N.Y. 1876).

Opinion

Allen, J.

The act upon which the relators base their claim of right to demand the issue by the defendant and appellant, as the mayor of the city of Albany, of the corporate bonds of the city (Laws of 1876, chap. 445) is mandatory, and as it is conceded that all the conditions and provisions of the law to entitle the relators to the relief demanded have been complied with, if the law is in form and substance a valid and constitutional exercise of legislative power, the writ of mandamus was properly granted by the Supreme Court, and the order must be affirmed.

The legislative power over the general subject-matter of the act is not denied, but that it has been constitutionally exercised is denied upon several grounds.

First. The first objection is that the title is defective, and does not express the “subject” of the act as required in respect to all private and local bills, by section 16, of article 3 of the Constitution. The act is entitled “An in relation to a portion of the Great Western Turnpike road,” particularly described in the title and in the body of the act. The act authorizes a conveyance by the turnpike company, and an acceptance of the same by the relators, of a portion of its turnpike road described, and empowers the latter to improve the same as an approach to the Washington park.

The other parts of the act make provision for the improvement and ornamentation of the portion of the road so author *572 ized to be conveyed, and for the payment of the cost of such improvement, and the keeping the same in repair.

The whole act “ relates ” solely to this portion of the turnpike road, and to no other subject or matter. The purpose and object of the act is confined to this one subject, and it is not claimed that the act embraces more than this one subject.

The allusion to Washington parkis incidental, and that was not the subject of the legislation embodied in the act.

The complaint is, that the title does not, with sufficient distinctness, “express” or indicate the “subject” of the act. If by this is pieant that the title does not disclose or shadow forth the character of the proposed legislation, its full object and purpose, and make known the several interests which may be directly or indirectly affected by it, so as to attract attention, and gives notice of all that was to be accomplished by the proposed “ act,” this will be conceded. But the Constitution does not require, this full declaration and statement in the title of a private or local bill. This has been repeatedly, held.

It is not allowable, for the purpose of invalidating a law, to sit in judgment upon its title, to determine with critical acumen whether it might not have been more explicit, and so drawn as more clearly and definitely to indicate the nature of the legislation covered by it. The legislature is not subject to judicial control in respect to the form or mode in which the “subject” of a bill shall be “expressed.”' If it is expressed, the Constitution is satisfied.

The provisions of the act are consistent with the title, and the whole act does “ relate ” to the “ subject,” that is, the portion of road described. The title does not mislead, as was the case of the assessment of lands in Flatbush, Kings county (60 N. Y., 398), and The People v. Commissioners, etc., in the Matter of C. (52 Barb., 70). It does declare the subject, viz., the described portion of the road as that which is treated of in the bill, and to be acted upon by the legislature, and in some way affected by the act.

This particular provision of the Constitution has been so *573 frequently before the courts that an extended discussion of the effect to be given to it, and the extent and limit of its requirements, would be out of place.

The title of the act under review must, within the well-considered decisions of this corn’t, and of the other courts of the State, be held a sufficient compliance with the Constitution, and to hold otherwise would subvert very many cases which are binding upon us as authorities.

In the following cases the titles were held sufficiently expressive of the subject of the several acts called in question for non-compliance with this clause of the Constitution.

By an act entitled “An act in relation to the fees and compensation of certain officers in the city and county of Hew York,” salaries were given to four city officers in lieu of fees, and they were required to pay the fees named into the treasury of the city. (Conner v. Mayor, etc., 1 Seld., 285.)

In the Matter of Volkening (52 N. Y., 650) the petitioner challenged the validity of a statute transferring the power' before then vested in the common council of the city in relation to assessments, and the confirmation thereof to certain officers created by the act into a board called a board of revision, under the title of “An act relative to contracts by'the mayor, aldermen and commonalty of the city of Hew York.”

An act entitled “An act in relation to certain local improvements in the city of Hew York,” under which an assessment for a sewer was levied, was sustained in the case of Morgan (50 N. Y., 504). The question in The People v. Briggs (id., 553) was upon a statute entitled “An act to amend the several acts in relation to the city of Bochester,” and by which, among other things, power was conferred upon the water commissioners to contract with the villages through which they might bring water for the city of ¡Rochester for a supply of water to such villages.

In Brewster v. The City of Syracuse (19 N. Y., 116) the title of the act was “An act for the relief of James Ley & Son,” and authorized an assessment upon a portion of the city of Syracuse, to satisfy a claim of the individuals named in *574 the title against the city for a local improvement constru.cted.by them. (See also Matter of Astor, 50 N. Y., 363.) Within the principles of these cases and others which might be cited, the title of the act -under consideration must be held sufficient.

Second. It is next objected that the act is in conflict with section 18 of article 3 of the Constitution, forbidding the passing by the legislature of any private or local bill “ laying out, opening, altering, working or discontinuing roads, highways or alleys.” This provision was designed to prevent any interference with the general highway system of the State, or with the keeping of the ordinary highways and public roads in repair under that systein, and the supervision of the officers designated, and in the use of the means and the labor provided by law. The act under review does not, in any of its provisions, provide for the altering, opening, or working of a highway, in the sense which those terms were used in the statutes of the State, regulating highways and public roads, or the Constitutional provisions now invoked.

The portion of the road which was the subject of the legislation was at the time a public highway, but was the property of a private corporation, and was kept in repair by the tolls levied -upon the public using it. The public easement was subject to the payment of the toll.

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Bluebook (online)
67 N.Y. 568, 1876 N.Y. LEXIS 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-board-of-commissioners-v-banks-ny-1876.