People ex rel. Cotte v. Gilbert

187 A.D. 23, 175 N.Y.S. 106, 1919 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6438
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 19, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 187 A.D. 23 (People ex rel. Cotte v. Gilbert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Cotte v. Gilbert, 187 A.D. 23, 175 N.Y.S. 106, 1919 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6438 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinions

Kelly, J.:

in 1899, pursuant to the provisions of the then existing law, the board of supervisors of Nassau county fixed the first Tuesday in April in odd-numbered years as the day for holding the biennial town meetings and such meetings have accordingly been held on that day to and including the biennial town meeting on April 3,1917. The present Town Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 62 [Laws of 1909, chap. 63], § 40) provides that the electors of a town shall biennially on the second Tuesday in February assemble and hold meetings, but the board of supervisors of any county are authorized by resolution to fix a time when such biennial town meetings shall be held in the county provided the day fixed shall be either between February first and May first, inclusive, or on the. first Tuesday after the first Monday in November of an odd-numbered year. The day upon which this ancient institution, the town meeting, has been held in Nassau county has thus remained as originally designated by the local officials for more than twenty years — since the erection of the county itself — despite an abortive effort in 1901 to change the date. (People ex rel. Smith v. Weeks, 176 N. Y. 194.) The Constitution of the State of New York (Art. 3, § 18) prohibits the Legislature from passing a private or local bill “ providing for election of members of boards of supervisors ” and directs that “ the Legislature shall pass general laws providing for the cases enumerated in this section.”

The history of constitutional reform in this State shows an increasing purpose to stop local measures, and put them under general laws. The Convention of 1867 sought to prohibit local or special laws “ in any case for which provision now exists or shall hereafter be made by any general law.” (2 Lincoln Const. Hist. 400, 437.)

[25]*25In recommending a Constitutional Commission in 1872 Governor Hoffman referred to the numbers of local laws during the preceding twenty years, adding: "Uniformity of the several classes of local governments — counties, towns, and villages — ought to be secured by constitutional guaranty, so as to prevent special legislation with regard to them.” (2 Lincoln Const. Hist. 499; 6 Lincoln Messages from the Governors, 402.)

Accordingly the Commission of 1872 recommended the amendment of the Constitution, now section 18 of article 3, which prohibits inter alia any special or local bill “ providing for election of members of boards of supervisors.”

After this had been adopted by the people, Governor Tilden in his message in 1875 said: “ The section-added to Article III as section 18 requires the passage of general laws providing for the cases in which special legislation is prohibited by that section. Many of these cases are within existing -general laws, and with respect to several others no immediate legislation seems to be required. * * * The provision prohibiting special legislation in the cases specified is the amendment from which the largest benefits have been anticipated.” (2 Tilden’s Writings & Speeches, 29; 6 Lincoln Messages from the Governors, 726.)

Despite the fact that the local legislative body vested with full power to change the date of the town meeting, has not done so, and despite the constitutional prohibition, the Legislature in 1917 enacted chapter 126 of the laws of that year, entitled, “ An act to amend the Town Law, in relation to town meetings in the county of Nassau and to terms of office of town officers heretofore and hereafter elected therein and the filling of vacancies.” The act in question purports to amend the Town Law by inserting therein a new article, to be article 31-a, and which is entitled, “ Town Meetings in the County of Nassau,” the new matter to be contained in an additional section designated section 588, " Time of meetings; special provision as to certain officers heretofore and hereafter elected.” This new section, which of course only applies to the towns in Nassau county, provided that after the biennial town meeting on the third day [the first Tuesday] oí [26]*26April, 1917, all subsequent town meetings shall be held on the general election day in November in every odd-numbered year. The relator contends that the act in question violates the prohibition of the Constitution cited, and has been sustained at Special Term where a writ of mandamus was directed compelling the town clerk to accept and file certificates of nomination for the candidates for the office of supervisor to be voted for on the first Tuesday in April, 1919. (See, also, Laws of 1918, chap. 372, amdg. said § 588.)

If there were any doubt or ambiguity as to the plain meaning of the constitutional prohibition as applied to the facts here before us, we might resolve it in favor of the validity of the legislation attacked, but the language of article 3, section 18, seems to need no interpretation. The supervisors of the various towns in the county constitute the board of supervisors of the county. The act of the Legislature assumes not only to fix the day for their election contrary to the express will of the board, but provides when their terms shall begin and end. It cannot be contended that the act in question is not a local act. It expressly refers to Nassau county of all of the sixty-two counties in the State. Nor can it be said that the act simply fixes the time for the election of supervisors. It does more than that. It provides for their election, directs that they shall be elected ” and prescribes their term of office different from that now existing under the general law. The terms of office of the supervisors * * * to be elected at the town meetings to be held in the towns of such county on the third day of April, nineteen hundred and seventeen, shall expire on the thirty-first day of December, nineteen hundred and nineteen.” We are concerned with the constitutionality of this particular act, chapter 126 of the Laws of 1917. It is not profitable to consider what the Legislature might have done by general law, concerning the composition of the board of supervisors, nor does it help us to know that by other legislation relating to other counties they have assumed to act apparently in contravention of the constitutional prohibition. In this case the interference is with the right of the people of Nassau county to manage their own local affairs under the general Town Law. It is the people of Nassau county who are affected by this legislation.. [27]*27If the act is unconstitutional it is no answer to say that the people of Rockland county or Onondaga county are more complaisant and have not resented similar interference with the home rule ” provisions of the Constitution. In Matter of Henneberger (155 N. Y. 420), Judge Gray, writing for the Court of Appeals, said: “ It is manifest that the purpose of the people, with respect to local governmental measures and to the matters specified in section 18, was to restrict the legislative power and to confine its exercise to the passage of such general statutes as the welfare of the body politic, as a whole, might be deemed to require. The imposition of such a constitutional restriction upon the legislative power was regarded as necessary, in order to put an end to flagrant abuses in its exercise. The provision expressed a fundamental idea in our popular form of government; namely, to commit to local bodies the discharge of functions, which can be as well, if not better, discharged by them.

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194 A.D. 763 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1921)

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Bluebook (online)
187 A.D. 23, 175 N.Y.S. 106, 1919 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-cotte-v-gilbert-nyappdiv-1919.