People Ex Rel. Townsend v. Porter

90 N.Y. 68, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 355
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 10, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 90 N.Y. 68 (People Ex Rel. Townsend v. Porter) 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. Townsend v. Porter, 90 N.Y. 68, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 355 (N.Y. 1882).

Opinion

Andrews, Ch. J.

It is quite plain that the appointment of a police justice, and the creation of a police court for the police district created by chapter 415, of the Laws of 1881, was an essential part of the scheme of legislation thereby enacted. The jurisdiction conferred upon the police justice was not concurrent, but was exclusive. The ordinary jurisdiction of justices of the peace and of Courts of Special Sessions, in criminal cases within the territory comprising the police district, was taken away and vested in the new officer., The act created new offenses, of which the police justice alone had cognizance. Actions for penalties, whether founded upon violations of by-laws or ordinances of the villages embraced in the new division or given by the act itself, were to be brought before him. The police officers were required to take all persons arrested before the police justice, to be dealt with according to law. The creation of the office of police justice, and the existence of that office, is essential to accomplish the purposes of the act, and to the effective execution of the duties enjoined upon the police force. Without the police justice, the penalties given by the act could not be enforced, the directions to police officers in respect to the arrest of offenders, could not be obeyed, and if the part of the act creating the office of police justice is eliminated, and the other parts remain in force, the result would be that the villages would be *72 left without the power to select a police justice under chapter 514, of the Laws of 1875, because by section 47 of the act in question, the act of 1875, so far as it applies to the villages embraced in the Niagara police district, is repealed. The excision of the parts of the act relating to the appointment and jurisdiction of the police justice, would destroy the harmony of the scBeme, and leave as has been said many of its provisions incapable of enforcement. We cannot assume, under these circumstances, that the legislature would have passed the act, except as a whole, and if the parts relating to the appointment and jurisdiction of the police justice are invalid, the whole act fails.

The constitutional validity of the provisions creating the office of police justice, and prescribing his jurisdiction depends upon the construction of the first clause of section 19, article 6, of the Constitution, which is as follows: Inferior local courts of civil and criminal jurisdiction, may be established by the legislature.” This clause in its present form, was introduced into the Constitution by the amendment of 1869. It was substituted for the provision in the Constitution of 1846 (Art. 6, § 14), that inferior local courts of civil and criminal jurisdiction may be established by the legislature in cities, and such courts, except in the cities of New York and Buffalo, shall have an uniform organization and jurisdiction in such cities.” The question here is, whether the police court created for the Niagara police district, embracing a territory defined by the act and not coterminous with the boundaries of any county, town, city or village, is a local court within the meaning of the Constitution. In determining this proposition it may be assumed that the establishment of courts of justice, in the absence of constitutional restriction, is a part of the power and prerogative of the legislature. While the legislature cannot exercise judicial power, it may, unless prohibited by the express or implied provisions of the Constitution, create judicial tribunals for the whole or any part of the State, and determine their power and jurisdiction in matters of State and local cognizance. This principle was recognized and applied *73 in Sill v. The Village of Corning (15 N. Y. 297), to uphold the constitutionality of an act .of the legislature authorizing the appointment of a police justice for the village of Corning. It was contended in that case that the provision of the Constitution of 1846, in force when the act was passed, authorizing the establishment by the legislature of inferior local courts “in cities,” impliedly prohibited their establishment in villages or other localities, but the majority of the court were of the opinion that such prohibition could not be implied from that provision alone, and resting upon the doctrine of the plenary power of the legislature over all subjects of legislation except where restricted by the Constitution, the court affirmed the validity of the law.

The amendment of 1869 covers the whole subject of legislative power, in creating inferior and local courts, and in ascertaining the validity of a legislative act creating a judicial tribunal for a part of the State, the test is, whether it is an inferior and local court within the meaning of the Constitution. The Constitution does not in terms define the meaning of the word “local” as used in section 19 of article 6. A court established for one or more counties, or for several towns, cities or villages, embracing contiguous territory, or for a part of a town, is undoubtedly a local court within the general and broad meaning of the word “local,” and as distinguished from a court established for the whole State. The question is, whether the word was used in this large sense in the clause of the Constitution authorizing the establishment of local courts. It requires but a very cursory' reading of the Constitution to discover that the separation of the State into counties, towns, cities and villages, for the purpose of local government, is an essential part of the framework of the State government, and that these were the only divisions for the purpose of local government contemplated by the framers of that instrument. The perpetuation of these divisions is essential to many of the arrangements of the Constitution, and then continued existence, and the expansion of the system, is provided for. The power of the *74 legislature to erect new counties and towns is recognized in section 5, article 3, and it made the duty of the legislature, by section 9, article 8, to provide for the organization of cities and villages. The Constitution, for the purpose of representation in the legislature, divides the State into senate districts, some of which embrace two or more counties, and members of assembly are to be elected in districts comprising towns or wards, where counties are entitled to -more than one member. But, we repeat, for the purpose of local government, the Constitution contains no hint of any civil divisions of the State except those we have enumerated^ ^Counties, towns, cities and villages are the localities known to the Constitution. These divisions did not come into existence with the present Constitution. They existedzlong anterior to the organization of the State government/- As early as 1683 the province of New York was,' by an act of the general assembly, divided into counties and towns (2 ¡Rev. Laws, opp.), and the charter of the city of New York, known as the Dongan charter, was granted in 1686. These acts rather recognized divisions already existing than established them. From this time on, during all the changes in government, the civil divisions of counties, towns and cities have continued. Incorporated villages existed from an early period. Laws relating to villages will be found among the earliest statutes of the State (Index to Laws). Almost coeval with the establishment of these local divisions local courts were established for the territory comprised in them.

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Bluebook (online)
90 N.Y. 68, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-townsend-v-porter-ny-1882.