People v. . Kaye

106 N.E. 122, 212 N.Y. 407, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 885
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 14, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 106 N.E. 122 (People v. . Kaye) 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 v. . Kaye, 106 N.E. 122, 212 N.Y. 407, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 885 (N.Y. 1914).

Opinions

Ouddeback, J.

The defendant has been convicted of a misdemeanor for violating an order made by the fire commissioner of the city of New York, which required*him (the defendant) to install “ a separate and distinct system of automatic sprinklers ” upon his premises, used for manufacturing purposes, at Nos. 30-34 West Twenty-sixth street, borough of Manhattan. The order was made under section 775, title 3, chapter 15 of the city charter (L. 1901, ch. 466). Section 775 was added to "the charter by an amendment contained in chapter 899, Laws of 1911. The amendment, among other things, empowered the fire commissioner to

(3) Eequire, in writing, the installation as prescribed by any law or ordinance in any building, structure or inclosure of automatic or other fire alarm system or fire- *411 extinguishing equipment, and the maintenance and repair thereof, or the construction, as prescribed by any law or ordinance, of adequate and safe means of exit.

First.- The defendant’s main defense is that there is no law or ordinance requiring the installation in any building of automatic sprinklers as called for by the order.

Section 762, title 3, chapter 15 of the charter, as it was in force in 1897 (L. 1897, ch. 378), and as it was continued in force, in the way that will be explained, by the present charter (L. 1901, ch. 466), provided that the owners and proprietors of all manufactories, hotels, tenement houses and other buildings particularly mentioned “shall provide such means of communicating alarms of fire, accident or danger, to the police and fire departments, respectively, as the fire commissioner or police board may direct, and shall also provide such fire hose, fire extinguishers, buckets, axes, fire hooks, fire doors and other means of preventing and extinguishing fires as said fire commissioner may direct.” Section 773 of the same title makes it a misdemeanor not to obey any such direction.

The defendant, applying- to these provisions the doctrine of ejusdem generis, argues that the words italicized, namely, “ other means of preventing and extinguishing fires,” include only things of the same kind as fire hose, fire extinguishers, buckets, axes, fire hooks and fire doors. That seems a narrow interpretation of the statute.

It is said in Halsbury’s Laws of England (Vol. 27, p. 145), “As a rule, general words following specific words are limited to things ejusdem generis with those •before enumerated, although this, as a rule of construction, must be controlled by another equally general rule, that statutes ought, like wills or other documents, to be construed so as to carry out the objects sought to be accomplished by them.”

In Schouler on Wills (3rd ed. § 514) it is said that the rule of ejusdem generis “is after all but a rule of presumption as we should bear carefully in mind * * *. *412 In fine, courts at the present day decline to he hampered by any rule which would sacrifice the testator’s true meaning out of undue regard for the association of words of limited scope with broad generic terms. ”

The court said in Given v. Hilton (95 U. S. 591, 598), speaking of the rule of ejusclem generis : “ This rule of construction rests on a mere presumption, easily rebutted by anything that shows the larger subject was in fact in the testator’s view.”

In Matter of Robinson (203 N. Y. 380, 386) the testator gave to his executors and trustees a fund to provide shelter, necessaries of life, education, general or specific, and such other financial aid as may seem to them fitting and proper to such persons as they shall select as being in need of the same.” The court said: 1 ‘In construing the will now under consideration the words such other financial aid ’ must be read with the words that precede them * * * and as so read, the preceding words not being exhaustive, such comprehensive words should be held to refer to financial aid of the same general character and purpose as that included in such preceding words.”

The cases on which the defendant relies are mostly those which involved bequests of property or penal laws enumerating crimes, or were cases where the particular things mentioned were the essential features of the subject-matter before the court. In a bequest, it is his property, and the objects of his bounty, which the donor has in mind, and in penal laws, the principal thing is the definition of crime. But in section 162 of the New York charter, the legislature was not dealing with special reference to the particular articles therein enumerated, viz., fire hose, fire extinguishers, buckets, axes, fire hooks and fire doors. The main object in view was the prevention and extinguishment of fires. That is, perhaps, sufficient to distinguish this case from those cited by the defendant, and to rebut the presumption that the general words of the statute are limited by the particular words preceding them.

*413 But the case is rather within the doctrine of Matter of Robinson (supra). The words of section 762, which speak of certain kinds of fire extinguishing apparatus, are not exhaustive, and the comprehensive words other means of preventing and extinguishing fires” which follow, should he held to include other means of the same general character and purpose as those particularly enumerated. (Ib.) Now, automatic sprinklers, though they may cost a little more than the articles specifically mentioned in the section, are of the same general character, and are intended for the same purpose as those articles..

This liberal construction has been placed on section 762 in every case where it has come before the courts. It was held by the Appellate Term of the Supreme Court in New York (Lantry v. Hoffman, 55 Misc. Rep. 261 — 1907) that the section authorized the fire commissioner to require the installation of perforated pipes on and along the ceiling, and connected with a valve outside the building, located above the curb level in a position accessible for the use of the fire department. This decision was affirmed by the Appellate Division (124 App. Div. 937). In Waldo v. Christman (72 Misc. Rep. 349 —1911) it was held that section 762 empowered the fire commissioner to require the installation of a separate and distinct system of automatic sprinklers of practically the same character as that required in this case.

The question is asked, why, if section 762 in the charter already included automatic sprinklers, was it deemed necessary to mention them particularly in section 775 of chapter 899, Laws of 1911 ? A consideration of the act will show that the legislature intended to confirm the construction which the court in the cases cited had theretofore put on section 762, and authorized the city to extend the requirements of the section to all buildings.

The act of 1911 added eleven sections (774-778c) to title 3, chapter 15 of the charter.

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Bluebook (online)
106 N.E. 122, 212 N.Y. 407, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 885, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-kaye-ny-1914.