People Ex Rel. Wooster v. . Maher

36 N.E. 396, 141 N.Y. 330, 57 N.Y. St. Rep. 425, 96 Sickels 330, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 1134
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 27, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 36 N.E. 396 (People Ex Rel. Wooster v. . Maher) 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. Wooster v. . Maher, 36 N.E. 396, 141 N.Y. 330, 57 N.Y. St. Rep. 425, 96 Sickels 330, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 1134 (N.Y. 1894).

Opinion

Andrews, Ch. J.

This is a proceeding by mandamus, and the judgment from which the appeal is taken directs the mayor of the city of Albany to give written directions to the city engineer to notify the owner of the building on Pearl street known as the Albany Female Academy to .remove the porch of the building, which the judgment finds projects thirteen feet and four inches into Pearl street, within ten days after receipt of the notice, pursuant to the provisions of section 10, title 13 of chapter 298 of the Laws of 1883, as amended by chapter 398 of the Laws of 1888.

The question whether the porch projected into the street and the extent of the alleged encroachment was litigated oil the trial. If the affirmance of the judgment depended on the question whether in fact the alleged encroachment existed, we should have no difficulty. Hpon the facts found and proved there can be no reasonable doubt that the porch is an unlaw *336 ful obstruction in the street and a public nuisance. Although originally built with the consent of the city, the municipality could not legalize the structure so as to bar the public right, and the user, though long continued, is no obstacle to proceedings for its removal. All the remedies, public and private, for the abatement of encroachments in highways or public streets, are open and unaffected by the colorable authority under which the porch was erected, or by acquiescence in the unlawful user. (St. Vincent's Orphan Asylum v. City of Troy, 76 N. Y. 108, and cases cited.) But the question here is whether, under the provision of the city charter referred to in the judgment, the mayor of the city may he compelled, under the coercion of a writ of mandamus, to direct the city engineer to give the notice therein specified. When such direction is given by the mayor, either voluntarily or by compulsion, the duty imposed on the city engineer is mandatory and imperative. Upon receiving such direction he must give the notice of ten days to the owner, and if the owner neglects or refuses to comply with the notice, he must then cause such removal to be made, in the first instance at the expense of the city, to be reimbursed by an assessment on the property of the owner. The city engineer would have no discretion, but would be bound to act in accordance with the peremptory direction of the statute. Is the authority given to the mayor to initiate these summary proceedings, by^directing the city engineer to give notice to the property owner, also a mandatory duty, or was it the intention of the charter to leave it to his judgment and discretion whether this method of enforcing the public right should be pursued ? The right to proceed against the mayor by mandamus depends upon the answer to this question. There is no dispute as to the rule of law that a mandamus against a public officer, or a municipality, is a proper remedy to compel the performance of a ministerial duty plainly prescribed, and may be invoked in behalf of any party interested in its performance, on the failure of the officer or public body to do the act or thing required. But where the officer or body is clothed with a discretion, and it may do or *337 omit to do the act or thing according to the judgment of the person or body authorized to act, then a mandamus can only issue to compel a decision, in case of a refusal to "decide, and when a decision is made the remedy by mandamus ends. The court cannot on mandamus review the decision made, or compel a decision the other -way, because the court may disagree as to the justice or propriety of the conclusion reached. The broad distinction is between duties mandatory and peremptory and those involving discretion and judgment. In the one case the public agent cannot refuse to act, or to do the tiling required, and in the other the court is not. permitted to substitute its judgment for that of the officer or body clothed by the law with the power to decide. There is sometimes difficulty in determining whether a duty is peremptory or discretionary. Language permissory in form is sometimes construed as imperative in meaning. It is not infrequent that a statute declares that it shall be lawful for an officer or body to do this or that, or that this or that thing may be done, using language which in ordinary acceptation imports permission, and not command, and in many such cases the duty is held to be imperative. It is a question of the real meaning of the legislature to he ascertained from a consideration of the nature of the authority, the character of the public agency, and the public duty involved. For example, it has frequently been held that where authority is given to raise money by taxation for public purposes or to discharge a municipal obligation, the duty to exercise the authority may he imperative, although conferred in permissory language. On the other hand, there are many occasions for vesting in public agencies actual discretion in respect to the exercise of powers conferred, because the legislature cannot always anticipate the circumstances which may call for their exercise, or which may require that they should be held in abeyance. (People ex rel. v. Fairchild, 67 N. Y. 334; People ex rel. Hammond v. Leonard, 74 id. 443; People ex rel. Francis v. City of Troy, 78 id. 33; Dillon on Municipal Corporations, § 98; High on Extraordinary Rem. §§ 24, 42.)

*338 In the light of these familiar principles we are to consider whether the mayor of Albany had a discretion to refuse to issue the direction to the city engineer, which the judgment below requires him to give. It appears by reference to the charter of Albany (Laws of 1883, chap. 298) that the original section relating to the summary removal of buildings projecting into streets is one of the sections of title 13, entitled “ city engineer and surveyor.” This title prescribes the duties-of that officer, and the section as originally passed contained no reference to the mayor, and conferred upon him no authority or duty, but left it to the engineer and surveyor on Ms own motion to institute the proceedings (§ 11). This general and unguarded power might lead to very grave consequences, and jilace upon the city onerous responsibility. The amendment of 1888 (Chap. 398, title 13, § 10) for the first time made the mayor a necessary party to any proceedings instituted for the summary removal of buildings standing upon or encroaching on the streets. The amendment provided that the city engineer “ shall, upon the receipt of written directions from the mayor,” send written notice, etc. It took from the city engineer the power to institute the proceedings independently of the mayor, which he possessed under the original section, and made the preliminary direction of the mayor essential before any action should be taken by the subordinate officer. It is, we think, quite manifest from the history of this provision, as well as from its language, that it was the intention of the legislature to confide to the mayor the determination whether summary proceedings under that section should be commenced in a given case. There was great propriety in this. The city, if it proceeded to tear down buildings under this section, would do so at the hazard of being able to justify the act by showing that the encroachment in fact existed, and to the extent of such interference. The decision of the mayor would not bind the property owners.

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Bluebook (online)
36 N.E. 396, 141 N.Y. 330, 57 N.Y. St. Rep. 425, 96 Sickels 330, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 1134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-wooster-v-maher-ny-1894.