People ex rel. Cumisky v. Wurster

14 A.D. 556, 43 N.Y.S. 1088
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 14 A.D. 556 (People ex rel. Cumisky v. Wurster) 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. Cumisky v. Wurster, 14 A.D. 556, 43 N.Y.S. 1088 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

, Bradley, J. :

The • motion for a peremptory writ of mandamus requiring the defendant to grant , a first-class theatrical license to the Surf Athletic Club in the city of Brooklyn was founded ilpon the affidavit of the relator to the effect that he was secretary of the club, which was duly organized for the encouragement, promotion and cultivation of athletic exercises, gymnastic and physical culture, and all lawful [557]*557sporting purposes; that the clubhouse was located at Coney Island ; that the club' proposed to give exhibitions and contests, and that for such purpose and in conformity to law the club, by its secretary, on or about June 19, 1896, duly made application to the license department of the city of Brooklyn for a first-class theatrical license, which application was refused.

In opposition to the motion was read the áffidavit of the person who was the private secretary of the mayor, to the effect that he was familiar with the application made by the Surf Athletic Club, and the action taken by the mayor on such application; that an investigation was made, and the information which the mayor obtained was that the only purpose which the club had in view in applying for such license was to have prize fights carried on in public at the house for which the license was desired. He also states in such affidavit that notices of such fights were published in the newspapers, and that the mayor was unable to ascertain that the club had any other purpose in view than such unlawful proceedings, and that, therefore, he, in the exercise of his lawful discretion, refused to issue the license.

Also, the affidavit of a person who states that he is acting district sergeant of the Brooklyn police force attached to the precinct located at Coney Island; that he is familiar with the building for which such first-class theatrical license was applied; that in size it is about 100 by 150 feet, having a seating accommodation for about 8,000 persons ; that it is not arranged like a theater, but has a stage or platform in the center about three feet high and twenty-four feet square, and that he saw a certain poster, annexed to his affidavit, upon the wall of a hotel near by the clubhouse, advertising performances there consisting of stated numbers of rounds between persons whose names and weight were mentioned. It is urged on the part of the relator that the affidavits, ánd especially the latter one, are not available to the mayor, because it does not appear by expressions in them, to that effect, that they were made in his behalf or with his. knowledge, and that he does not-himself answer the application made for the writ. It must be assumed that the affidavits were used upon the motion in behalf of the defendant, and with his knowledge, and that they were made for such purposes. If the-, mayor was permitted to exercise his judgment, the affidavits tended to show the existence of a state of facts which may have been [558]*558deemed by him such as to show that the license was not arbitrarily and without reason refused. The main question is whether the mayor was without any discretion on the subject, and when application was made to him for the license his power in the matter1 was merely ministerial, and his duty to grant it imperative. Such is the contention of the learned counsel for the relator. Generally speaking, the duties of a mayor of a city are executive and administrative. His powers, however, are dependent upon the statute ' and by-laws passed pursuant to it. • When powers .are conferred on the mayor in general terms, as incidental to his powers are his right and duty to exercise his judgment when the matter in which he is called upon to act, and the propriety of the action sought, are properly the subject for consideration.

Thé city charter provides that the administrative power shall be vested in the mayor, etc. (Laws of 1888, chap. 583, tit. 3, § 1.) Although the statute does not in direct terms provide by whom licenses shall be granted, it clearly contemplates that they will be granted by the mayor, as is seen by reference to the provision that the city clerk shall “ countersign all licenses granted by the mayor.” (Id. tit. 2, § 6,)

The. board of aldermen, known as the .common council, being vested with the .legislative power of ■ the city (Id. tit. 2, § 1) were given the power to make ordinances, rules and regulations and bylaws “to prohibit or regulate and license all places of public amusement ” (Id. § 12, subd. 8) and for other specified purposes. Among the ordinances of the common council was that of section 1 of article 2 of chapter 1, which provides that “ The mayor shall grant licenses for the purposes authorized by section 13 of title 2 of the city charter, to expire on the first Monday of April thereafter, to such residents .of the city of the age of twenty-one years, duly qualified according to the ordinances of the common council, as he may deem proper, unless the common council shall otherwise desig- . nate, and may revoke the same at pleasure.” There is no express reference to any licenses in section 13 of title 2 of the charter, and although power is given to the common council in that section to make, establish, alter, modify, amend! and repeal all such ' other ordinances, rules, police, health, excise^ fire and building ¿regulations as they may deem necessary to carry into effect the powers confer[559]*559red by the act, etc., there is in that section the absence of any express provision about licenses, and it does not appear by the language there employed that ordinances for granting licenses were within the contemplation of the provisions of section 13, yet it may not be said that no ordinances of that character could have the support of its provisions. But the matter of licenses, for which the common council was expressly authorized to provide by ordinances, is the subject of section 12 of article 2 of the charter and not elsewhere. It would, therefore, seem that the apparent intent of the common council was to refer to that section in the ordinance above mentioned, and that the reférence was so made to section 13 by inadvertence. It was not the province of the common council to grant licenses, but in the exercise of its legislative functions to make provision for the granting of them by the mayor.

The rules of interpretation of statutes are alike applicable to municipal ordinances. When it is evident, in view of the purpose of a statute, that by a strict and literal interpretation it fails to express the legislative' intent, such interpretation will not be adhered to ; the portion which is false and inappropriate may be rejected and the legislative intent be observed. (Watervliet Turnpike Co. v. M'Kean, 6 Hill, 616 j The People v. Utica Ins. Co., 15 Johns. 358; Spencer v. Myers, 150 N. Y. 269.)

The rejection by interpretation of the allusion to section 13 from the ordinance would permit its reference for support to any provisions of the charter which expressly confer power upon the common council to make ordinances for granting of licenses. If this is a correct, view of the construction and effect of that ordinance, the mayor was not denied the power to exercise his judgment as to the propriety of granting the license applied for by the relator for his club, unless there is something further limiting his official powers in that respect.

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Bluebook (online)
14 A.D. 556, 43 N.Y.S. 1088, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-cumisky-v-wurster-nyappdiv-1897.