People Ex Rel. Moskowitz v. . Jenkins

94 N.E. 1065, 202 N.Y. 53, 1911 N.Y. LEXIS 992
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 25, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 94 N.E. 1065 (People Ex Rel. Moskowitz v. . Jenkins) 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. Moskowitz v. . Jenkins, 94 N.E. 1065, 202 N.Y. 53, 1911 N.Y. LEXIS 992 (N.Y. 1911).

Opinion

Cullen, Oh. J.

The relator was arrested for conducting a transient retail business in the city of G-lens Falls for the sale of goods represented and advertised as a bank- *55 rapt stock without having obtained a license as required by section 85 of the General Municipal Law. Thereupon he sued out a writ of habeas corpus which, after a hearing on the return day, was dismissed and the relator remanded to custody. On appeal this order was affirmed at the Appellate Division by a divided court. The sole question in the case is the constitutionality of the statute and the validity of the action of the city authorities thereunder.

The section of the law is as follows : “No person whether acting as principal or as agent for another, shall conduct a transient retail business in any store in any city of the third class, village or town of this state for the sale of goods which shall be represented or advertised as a bankrupt stock, or as assigned stock, or as goods damaged by fire, water or otherwise, or by any such like representation or device, without first taking out a license therefor from the mayor of such city, president of such village or the supervisor of such town. The amount of the fee for such license in any city shall be fixed by resolution duly passed by the board of aldermen or common council, and in a village by resolution duly passed by the board of trustees of such village; and in a town by resolution of the town board of such town. Such fee shall not be less than twenty-five dollars nor more than one hundred dollars per month in a city or an incorporated village, and not less then ten dollars nor more than fifty dollars per month in a town. No such license shall be issued for a less period than one month and it shall be renewed monthly during the continuance of such business. The sum paid as license fees shall, in a city or village, be paid to the treasurer of such city or village, and in a town to the supervisor thereof, to be used for city, village or town purposes. Any person as principal or agent conducting a transient retail business' as described in this section, without obtaining a license therefor, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction thereof shall be fined a sum not less than *56 one hundred dollars nor more than two hundred dollars, and in default of the payment thereof shall be imprisoned for a period of not more than sixty days.”

Acting under this provision, the city of Glens Falls, which is one of the third class, passed an ordinance fixing the license fee at $100 a month. If the statute can be sustained as an exercise either of the police power or of the power of taxation, the decisions below are right and must be affirmed. We think it can be upheld from neither point of view and shall first consider it as enacted under the police power. Of course I shall not attempt to define either the extent or the limits of that power, as that is a task that has thus far not been successfully essayed. Nor shall I refer to many of the decisions which have passed upon the validity or invalidity of legislative enactments as within or extending beyond the limits of the police power. The only branch of that power under which it is contended that the present statute can be upheld is for the prevention of fraud. If it is reasonably, though mistakenly, directed to that object, it is good. It seems to me, however, to have no such purpose. It is said that the representation that the goods in question are a bankrupt or damaged stock induces customers to believe that they are of a high grade or quality aifd will be sold cheap, and for much less than their original cost, while as matter of fact they are of an inferior grade. That the representation may induce customers to believe that they can get a bargain may be assumed, but the representations enumerated in the statute have no relation to the quality and character of the goods, or, if any, certainly not to enhance or exaggerate such character. It can be readily seen how a statement that a stock of goods had not been damaged by fire, water or otherwise might constitute a fraudulent representation as to their character or condition, but it is not easily perceived how a statement that they had been damaged could constitute such. But even though a statement that the goods had been damaged would be held an *57 immaterial allegation in an action at law for fraud, I concede that no vendor has a right to tell a falsehood as to his goods, be it material or immaterial, and that the legislature may properly pass laws to prevent or punish false statements. The legislation before us does nothing of the kind. If the man pays his license fee he may sell the goods without penalty, though his statement that they are damaged or bankrupt stock is entirely untrue. He may utter any falsehood concerning his goods other than those mentioned in the statute, and he may sell without license fee. But a vendor may own goods which have been purchased at a sale of a bankrupt or damaged by fire, and he has the unqualified right to sell them and the unqualified right to tell the truth about them. He cannot under the exercise of the police power be prohibited from enjoying both these rights. “The right to buy, sell, barter and exchange property is a necessary incident to its ownership, and, subject to reasonable regulations, is as much protected by this provision of the constitution as is the ownership itself.” (City of Carrollton v. Bazzette, 159 Ill. 283.) In that case an ordinance enacted by the city authorities, under a statute which empowered the trustees to license, tax, regulate, suppress or prohibit itinerant merchants and transient vendors of merchandise, fixed the license fee for itinerant merchants at §10 a day. It was held unreasonable and void ; that as the city had no power to prohibit or suppress directly the business of the defendant, it had no power to do so indirectly by the imposition of unreasonable and oppressive burdens. If the statute provided that the transient trader should, as a condition of obtaining the license, make proof to the local authorities that the facts stated as to his stock of goods were true, and thereupon be subjected to a reasonable license fee covering the expense to which the municipality had been put, the statute would be upheld. But the exaction of §100 as a license fee for a month or for less than, a month in villages and cities of the third class (and *58 this statute is confined to such municipalities and towns) — a sum exceeding the monthly rent of the majority of stores in such villages or cities — is too exorbitant to be upheld as a license fee in the strict sense of that term. These features of the statute plainly show its purpose, which was not to safeguard customers against fraud, but local shopkeepers from competition. The statute is of the same kind as that condemned by this court in People v. Gillson (109 N. Y. 389). There the defendant was prosecuted under a statute making it a misdemeanor for the vendor of an article of food to make sale of the same upon any inducement that anything would be delivered as a premium, prize or gift to the purchaser. The statute was held void on the authority of Matter of Jacobs (98 N. Y. 98) and People v. Marx (99 N. Y. 377).

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Bluebook (online)
94 N.E. 1065, 202 N.Y. 53, 1911 N.Y. LEXIS 992, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-moskowitz-v-jenkins-ny-1911.