People Ex Rel. Metropolitan Street Railway Co. v. State Board of Tax Commissioners

67 N.E. 69, 174 N.Y. 417, 12 Bedell 417, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 1346
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 28, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by158 cases

This text of 67 N.E. 69 (People Ex Rel. Metropolitan Street Railway Co. v. State Board of Tax Commissioners) 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. Metropolitan Street Railway Co. v. State Board of Tax Commissioners, 67 N.E. 69, 174 N.Y. 417, 12 Bedell 417, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 1346 (N.Y. 1903).

Opinion

Vann, J.

These appeals were argued together and the questions of law presented are common to all the proceedings. The only questions peculiar to any case were questions of fact, ■which have been finally disposed of by the concurrent action of the courts below, as they united in adopting the facts as found by the referee. The main discussion at our bar, as well as in the four opinions written in the Appellate Division, related to the question whether the statute under which the assessments were made violates that part of the Constitution which provides for home rule in certain political divisions of the state. In order to answer this question it will be useful to inquire: (1) What does the Constitution prohibit; (2) what does the statute command, and (3) what have the courts held as to the validity of other statutes relating to similar subjects ?

The principle of home rule, or the right of self-government as to local affairs, existed before we had a constitution. Even prior to Magna Charta some cities, boroughs and towns had various customs and liberties which had been granted by the crown or had subsisted through long user, and among them was the right to elect certain local officers from their own citizens and, with some restrictions, to manage their own purely local affairs. These customs and liberties, with other rights, had been so often trampled upon by the king as to arouse deep hatred of centralization of power, and we find among the many grants of the Great Charter that “ the city of London shall have all its ancient liberties and its free customs as well by land as by water. Furthermore, we will and grant that all other cities and burghs and towns * * * shall have all their liberties and free customs.” (Cap. 13.) “ All evil customs * * * shall immediately be enquired into by twelve knights of the same county, upon oath, wrho *432 shall be elected by good men of the same county,” and after inquisition made they shall be altogether destroyed by them, never to be restored, provided this be notified to us before it is done.” (Cap. 48.) After this marvelous statute, rights, which before had rested largely on custom, rested on law, with a guaranty against violation by the amazing covenant of King John that if he refused redress for an excess’committed ” his subjects should be released from their allegiance and at liberty to make war upon him, saving harmless our person and the persons of our Queen and children and when it hath been redressed they shall obey us as they have done before.” (Cap. 61.)

' The lights thus secured after a long struggle and by great pressure, although at times denied and violated by the ruling monarch, were never lost, but were brought over by filie colonists the same as they brought the right to breathe, and they would have parted with the one as soon as the other. The liberties and customs of localities reappear on a novel and wider basis in the town meetings of New England and the various colonies, including the colony of New York. The right of the inhabitants of townships and manors to meet at stated times in public town meetings, elect town officers and transact town business, was well established wliile we were a colony and was recognized by different statutes enacted by the governor, council and general assembly/ (Van Schaack, chaps. 1201, 1224, 1419, 1448, 1454, 1453, 1460, 1499, 1536 and 1562; Livingston & Smith, chaps. 43 and 654.)

The business transacted at the town meeting related to highways, care of the poor, and matters of purely local concern. It was confined to the affairs of a small district and was clearly separated from public matters of interest to the colony at large. The officers elected, generally by viva voce vote, were supervisors, assessors, collectors, constables, commissioners of highways and overseers of the poor. The powers and duties of these officers were regulated by statute, but the right to select them resided in the people of the locality and was stubbornly insisted upon as inviolable.

*433 / Such was the state of affairs when the first ^Constitution was adoptecjf While that instrument organized the state, it granted no rights to the people, but was their own creation, expressing the restraints that they desired to place upon themselves by preserving certain principles and methods o£ government which they wished to remain unalterable. /Thus the Constitution of 1777 recognized local self-government as already existing, and continued and protected it, so that it could not lawfully be departed from without changing the Constitution itself.j/lt provided that “ town clerics, supervisors, assessors, constables and collectors and all other officers heretofore eligible by the people, shall always continue to be so eligible.” (§ 29.) Sheriffs, coroners, loan officers, county treasurers, clerics of supervisors and justices of the peace were to be appointed. (§§ 26, 29.) Thus our earliest Constitution did not create the right to elect the administrative officers of towns, but continued it as it had existed during the history of the colony while it was under the dominion of the English crown. The only local officers mentioned by name as “ eligible by the people ” were town officers, and in fact almost all officers of other local divisions were appointed by central authority.

The second Constitution, framed in 1821, continued the right by the general clause, applicable to county, town, city and village officers, that all officers heretofore elected by the people shall continue to be elected; and all other officers, whose appointment is not provided for by this constitution, and all officers whose offices may be hereafter created by law, shall be elected by the people, or appointed, as may by law be directed.” (Art. 4, § 15.) Sheriffs, coroners and some other county officers were for the first time made elective.

The third Constitution, drafted in 1846, continued the principle and expanded the right by the following provision : “ All county officers, whose election or appointment is not provided for by this Constitution, shall be elected by the electors of the respective counties or appointed by the boards of supervisors, or other county officers, as the Legislature shall direct. All city, town and village officers, whose election or appointment *434 is not provided for by this Constitution, shall be elected by the electors of such cities, towns and villages, or of some division thereof, or appointed by such authorities thereof, as the Legislature shall designate for that purpose. All oth er officers, whose election or appointment is not provided for by this Constitution, and all officers whose offices may hereafter be created by law, shall be elected by the people, or appointed, as the Legislature may direct.” (Art. 10, § 2.) The same provision was carried forward, ipsissimis verbis, into our present Constitution. (Art. 10, § 2.)

(These and other commands of the different Constitutions, when read in the light of prior and cotemporaneous history, show that the object of the people in enacting them was to prevent centralization of power in the state an'd to continue, preserve and expand local self-government, j

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Bluebook (online)
67 N.E. 69, 174 N.Y. 417, 12 Bedell 417, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 1346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-metropolitan-street-railway-co-v-state-board-of-tax-ny-1903.