People ex rel. Croft v. Manhattan State Hospital

5 A.D. 249, 39 N.Y.S. 158
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 5 A.D. 249 (People ex rel. Croft v. Manhattan State Hospital) 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. Croft v. Manhattan State Hospital, 5 A.D. 249, 39 N.Y.S. 158 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Rumsey, J.:

The Manhattan State Hospital is one of the insane asylums which is now under the charge of the State Commission of Lunacy. It was converted into a State hospital and transferred from the control of the city of New York to the State authorities by chapter 2 of the Laws of 1896. By that law it became amenable to the regulations, statutory and otherwise, which had been prescribed by the Legislature and proper authorities for the regulation of other State hospitals. One of those regulations, which is contained in chapter 126 of the Laws of 1890, provides that all superintendents of the poor, or town, county or city authorities, sending a patient to any asylum under the provisions of that act, should, before sending him, see that he is in a state of bodily cleanliness, and has comfortable clothing in accordance with the regulations to be prescribed by the chairman of the [251]*251State Commission of Lunacy. (Laws of 1890, chap. 126, § 6.) In performance of the duty devolved upon the chairman of the State Commission of Lunacy by this provision of the statute, he prescribed certain regulations with regard to the kind and condition of the clothing which must be furnished to each patient before he was sent to a State hospital. The part of that regulation which is. material here, and the only portion which needs to be considered, is the following: Considering the great danger always present of the introduction of contagious or infections diseases into institutions, where large numbers of people are congregated, and to avoid, so far as possible, the introduction of such diseases by means of wearing-apparel, the clothing above provided for must, in all cases, be new.”

On the 2d day of March, 1896, one O’Donohue, who had been regularly adjudged to be insane, was sent to the Manhattan State-Hospital as a patient by the relators, but Dr. McDonald, the superintendent of the hospital, declined to receive him, upon the ground that his clothing was not new. O’Donohue was in a state of bodily-cleanliness, and was respectably and comfortably clothed, and his. clothing, as is alleged in the moving papers and is not disputed, was. clean, and there was no apparent danger of his carrying contagious- or infectious diseases.

Upon the refusal of the State hospital to receive O’Donohue, an. order to show cause why this writ of mandamus should not issue was-granted. Objection having been made that the members of the-State Commission of Lunacy should have been made parties to the-proceeding, it was afterwards amended by bringing them in as. defendants. Upon the hearing of the order to show cause why the-mandamus should not be granted, affidavits were read by the defendants, and upon a consideration of the affidavits and upon an examination of the patient, who was produced in court, the judge at Special Term granted a peremptory writ of mandamus, requiring the officers-of the Manhattan State Hospital to receive O’Donohue, although, his clothing -was not new as required by the regulation in question^ From the final order directing that the writ issue this appeal is taken.

The first objection taken by the appellants is, that the gentlemen; composing the State Commission of Lunacy were not properly joined, as parties to this proceeding, because no relief was asked against [252]*252them, and their presence was not necessary to the final determination of the proceeding. All this is undoubtedly true. The validity of the regulation which was made by the chairman of the State Commission of Lunacy cannot be directly examined in auy proceeding which will lie in the courts. The making of this regulation was not in any sense a judicial proceeding, and, therefore, the writ of certiorari will not lie to review it. It can only be reviewed when it shall come lip collaterally, where it is asserted that the regulation itself is not a reasonable one, but the decision of that question does not call for the presence of the State Commission of Lunacy, and for that .reason the members of that commission are not necessary parties to this jnoceeding. But, in view of the conclusion which we have come to upon the merits of this case, that objection is not important and will not be further considered.

It is claimed on the part of the appellants that the court has no jurisdiction in this proceeding, and that its authority does not extend to a direction by mandamus requiring the officers of the Manhattan State Hospital to receive this patient. This objection goes not only to the power of the court in this particular case, but to the general power and jurisdiction of the Supreme Court to issue a mandamus to any State board or body whatever, whose general authority arises from an act of the Legislature. We are quite clear that the objection is not well taken. Section 5 of chapter 126 of the Laws of 1890 requires that each of the State hospitals for the insane shall receive jiatients from the district in which the asylum is situated. This imposes upon the officers of this hospital a merely ministerial duty as to which they have no discretion whatever, and in every case where a patient has been properly ad judged to be a lunatic it is their absolute duty to receive him, if he comes from the proper district and if he complies in all respects with such requirements as may legally be imposed. That mandamus will lie to a public officer to compel the performance of such a duty is so well settled as hardly to need the citation of authority to sustain it. If, however, one should be curious to see the extent to which the courts have gone in that regard, the rule may be found in High on Extraordinary Legal Remedies (§ 80) and in the 14th volume of the American and English Encyclopaedia of Law, at page 99, and the numerous cases there cited. The mere fact that the person charged with the duty [253]*253has to pass upon the sufficiency of the papers presented to him does not make his duty a judicial one so as to prevent the issue of a writ of mandamus. There is no claim here that the papers were insufficient. That is conceded on all hands. The only objection taken by the defendant was, that the regulation made by the chairman of the State Commission of Lunacy forbade him to receive any person as a patient in the hospital unless that patient was clad in clothing which was entirely new. The question is, therefore, whether that regulation was one which he was bound to obey.

It was clearly made upon a subject which was committed to the authority and to the discretion, of the chairman of the State Commission of Lunacy. It was for him to say, not only that the man should be comfortably clothed, but, within certain limits, of what that clothing should be composed, and any regulation which he made upon that subject was to be obeyed by the officers of the different State hospitals if it was valid. But wherever the Legislature has devolved upon any officer, municipal or otherwise, the duty of making regulations or ordinances with regard to the performance of public duties it is essential to the validity of those ordinances that they should be reasonable, and unless they are reasonable they are not valid and are not enforcible. (City of Boston v. Shaw, 1 Metc. 130.)

Whether the regulation established be a by-law or an ordinance of a municipal corporation or a regulation established by some official board having by authority of the Legislature jurisdiction to make regulations upon a special subject, the rule is the same, and it is laid down that such ordinances or regulations must be reasonable, not inconsistent with the laws or policy of the State and consonant with the purposes of the institution for which they are made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 A.D. 249, 39 N.Y.S. 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-croft-v-manhattan-state-hospital-nyappdiv-1896.