People v. Ndiaye

26 Misc. 3d 212
CourtCriminal Court of the City of New York
DecidedOctober 16, 2009
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 26 Misc. 3d 212 (People v. Ndiaye) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Criminal Court of the City of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Ndiaye, 26 Misc. 3d 212 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Robert M. Mandelbaum, J.

Charged with the unlicensed sale of costume jewelry on a public street, defendant contends that prosecution here violates her First Amendment right to free speech. Because New York City’s licensing scheme constitutes a reasonable time, place or manner restriction on defendant’s otherwise unfettered right to vend her merchandise, the motion to dismiss must be denied.1

L

New York City Administrative Code § 20-453 (the License Law) provides that

“[i]t shall be unlawful for any individual to act as a general vendor without having first obtained a license . . . except that it shall be lawful for a general vendor who hawks, peddles, sells or offers to sell, at retail, only newspapers, periodicals, books, pamphlets or other similar written matter, but no other items required to be licensed ... to vend such without obtaining a license therefor.”2

A “[g]eneral vendor” is a person who, in a public space, “hawks, peddles, sells, leases or offers to sell or lease, at retail, goods or services, including newspapers, periodicals, books, pamphlets or other similar written matter,” other than food, pedicab services, or the shining of shoes (Administrative Code of City of NY § 20-452 [b]; see also Administrative Code of City of NY § 20-452 [a]; § 17-306 [c]; § 20-229).

Characterizing her jewelry as “wearable sculpture,” defendant argues that New York City’s licensure requirement [214]*214unconstitutionally impinges on her right to free expression.3 In essence, defendant asks this court to proclaim, as a matter of law, that the jewelry she seeks to sell is “art,” and therefore exempt from the licensing scheme generally applicable to sellers of merchandise on the public streets. But because art is “a famously malleable concept the contours of which are best defined not by courts, but in the proverbial ‘eye of the beholder’ ” (Mastrovincenzo v City of New York, 435 F3d 78, 90 [2d Cir 2006]), the court declines to assume the mantle of art critic (see also Bery v City of New York, 97 F3d 689, 696 [2d Cir 1996] [“the matter does not lend itself to judicial determination”]; but see People v Saul, 3 Misc 3d 260, 265 [Crim Ct, NY County 2004] [playing cards bearing photographic images of military and political figures associated with the war in Iraq are not “artistically noteworthy” and therefore “do not qualify as art”]).

Contrary to defendant’s contention, Bery v City of New York does not require that the court inspect the items seized at the time of her arrest — or, even less appropriately, other items that defendant maintains are similar to those she is actually charged with selling — before making a determination that the License Law may constitutionally be applied to her. Neither the Constitution nor the case law demand an in camera inspection or pretrial hearing on defendant’s motion (but see People v Chen Lee, 19 Misc 3d 791 [Crim Ct, NY County 2008]).

In Bery, the court, in granting a preliminary injunction prohibiting enforcement of the License Law against the plaintiffs, held that certain visual artists were likely to prevail on the merits of their claim that they were entitled to sell their paintings, photographs and sculpture on the streets of New York City without the need to obtain a license. In reaching its conclusion, the court opined that visual art was “entitled to full First Amendment protection” (Bery, 97 F3d at 695), and concluded that the licensing requirement did not satisfy constitutional criteria for a permissible time, place or manner restriction on speech (see id. at 697-698). Rather than “contesting this preliminary determination in a trial on the merits” [215]*215(Mastrovincenzo, 435 F3d at 86), New York City consented to a permanent injunction (the Bery injunction) prohibiting enforcement of the licensing law against vendors of “paintings, photographs, prints and/or sculpture” (permanent injunction on consent dated Oct. 21, 1997, Bery v City of New York, US Dist Ct, SD NY, 94 Civ 4253 [MGC], Oct. 30, 1997).

In 2006, the Second Circuit in Mastrovincenzo rejected a similar challenge to enforcement of the License Law — this time brought by graffiti artists who painted on clothing. After recounting the history of the Bery litigation, the Mastrovincenzo court noted that Bery’s analytic framework had been the subject of criticism (see Mastrovincenzo, 435 F3d at 93; see also White v City of Sparks, 341 F Supp 2d 1129, 1139 [D Nev 2004] [“Applying such a blanket presumption of protected status (as did Bery) would not only be unnecessary . . . but would also be out of step with . . . the First Amendment’s fundamental purpose — to protect expression”], affd 500 F3d 953 [2007]; State v Chepilko, 405 NJ Super 446, 464-465, 965 A2d 190, 201-202 [App Div 2009] [agreeing with criticism of Bery’s holding that any business activity involving the taking and sale of photographs automatically qualifies for First Amendment protection]; Genevieve Blake, Comment, Expressive Merchandise and the First Amendment in Public Fora, 34 Fordham Urb LJ 1049, 1071 [2007] [“Bery effectively removed expressivity from the analysis of paintings, photographs, prints, and sculpture, even as it vaunted the expressive potential of those media. Centuries of aesthetic scholarship and discourse are flattened to a legal presumption” (citations omitted)]).

Indeed, the language used throughout its opinion seems to indicate that the Mastrovincenzo court was itself deeply skeptical of the correctness of its earlier holding in Bery (see Mastrovincenzo, 435 F3d at 85 [“Despite a suggestion” in Bery]; id. [“the Bery court offered the following faint consolation”]; id. at 87 n 6 [“the question presented is broader than that suggested by” Bery]; id. at 92 [“notwithstanding, we are instructed, the ‘myopic’ perspective of those philistines who recognize art only in its ‘conventional shapes and forms’ ” (quoting Bery, 97 F3d at 695)]; id. at 93 [the Bery court “airily noted”]; id. [“Whatever may be said of Bery’s analytic framework”]; id. [“the ‘difficult’ assignment left for us by the Bery Court”]; id. at 94 [“the difficult circumstances created by our open-ended ruling in Bery”]; id. at 99 n 16 [“We now resolve (an) ambiguity,” which was expressed in “dicta” in Bery]; id. at 101 [“Although we sug[216]*216gested in Bery”]; id. at 102 [“We are not bound here by our conclusion in Bery”]). Nevertheless, in the end the Mastrovincenzo court felt constrained by its earlier holding, noting that “it remains the law of the Circuit until and unless it is effectively superseded by decisions of the Supreme Court or formally revisited by the Court sitting en banc” (id. at 93).

A New York court is, of course, not bound by the interpretation of a federal constitutional question by the lower federal courts, although such interpretation “may serve as useful and persuasive authority” (People v Kin Kan, 78 NY2d 54, 60 [1991]; see also Flanagan v Prudential-Bache Sec., 67 NY2d 500, 506 [1986]).4 5But even applying the Second Circuit’s analysis, it is clear that defendant’s claim must fail.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 Misc. 3d 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-ndiaye-nycrimct-2009.