People v. Parelli

93 Misc. 692, 158 N.Y.S. 644
CourtNew York Court of General Session of the Peace
DecidedFebruary 15, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 93 Misc. 692 (People v. Parelli) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of General Session of the Peace primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Parelli, 93 Misc. 692, 158 N.Y.S. 644 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1916).

Opinion

Mulqueen, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of Magistrate House convicting the defendant on a charge of violating a city ordinance by selling news[693]*693papers on the west side of Broadway adjoining Greeley Square park, without a permit. The magistrate imposed a fine of twenty-five dollars, or in default of payment of the fine directed that he be imprisoned for a period of fifteen days.

The ordinance in question is section 12, chapter 17: “ No person shall expose any article for sale or exhibition, nor perform any personal service for hire, nor take any photograph in any park or parkway except under a permit to be issued by the commissioner. ’ ’

The appellant maintains that this judgment should be set aside for three reasons: First, that the matter was res adjudicata; second, that the act of the defendant was not a violation of the ordinance; and, third, that the magistrate had no jurisdiction to dispose of the case.

There is no merit in the third point. There is no doubt that the Magistrates’ Court has summary jurisdiction in such cases.

As to the first point it appears that prior to the fourteenth of June the defendant had on two occasions been charged with a violation of the same ordinance in the same place and under the same circumstances; that is, selling newspapers at the same place without a permit, and that on the two prior occasions Magistrate Murphy had decided that the act complained of was not a violation of the law.

I am of the opinion that the decision of Magistrate Murphy was an adjudication which was binding on Magistrate House, and that the latter magistrate had no authority to reverse the decision of Magistrate Murphy. The case presents the anomaly of one, Magistrate House, imposing a severe penalty on the defendant-appellant for doing an act which Magistrate Murphy had twice declared was entirely proper. Such conflicting decisions would certainly tend to confusion [694]*694and would not promote respect for the acts of our magistrates.

I am also of the opinion that the second point taken by appellant’s counsel is well founded. I believe defendant had a right to sell newspapers at the place indicated without any permit from any one.

In support of the judgment it has been shown that in April, 1894, the following resolution was passed by the board of aldermen of the city and approved by-the mayor:

“Resolved, that the area bounded by the south side of 32nd street, the north side of 34th street, the east side of Broadway, and the west side of Sixth avenue,be and it shall hereafter be known as Greeley Square, provided the street number shall not be changed on any thoroughfare mentioned, except as shall be hereafter authorized by the common council.”

It is contended that under section 612 of the charter, Laws of 1908, the park commissioner had jurisdiction over this square.

“ Subject to such general rules and regulations as shall be established by the board, each commissioner shall have charge of the management and be responsible for the care of all such parks, parkways, and public places as are situated in the borough or boroughs over which he has jurisdiction and of the streets and avenues immediately adjoining the same. * * * Subject to the general rules and regulations established by the board, and excepting as otherwise provided in section 612 of this charter, each commissioner'shall have power to authorize and regulate the projections on and determine the line or curb and the surface construction of all streets and avenues lying between any park, square or public place within his jurisdiction, or within a distance of three hundred and fifty feet from the outer boundaries thereof.”

[695]*695In Greeley Square there is a small triangular grass plot one hundred and forty-four one-thousandths acre in area. It is enclosed by railing. At the northerly corner of the triangle there is a public comfort station, at the southwesterly corner, within the railing, is a statute of Horace Greeley, and at the southeasterly corner of the triangle — at the corner of Bradway and Thirty-second street — there is an entrance to the so-called McAdoo tunnel. This triangular space is • bounded on the south by Thirty-second street,, on the east by Broadway, and on the west by Sixth avenue. This avenue and these streets had been established as such long before 1894. In fact, Sixth avenue was legally opened as far as Broadway in the year 1828. Thirty-second street was legally opened from Fifth avenue to Tenth avenue on June 13, 1838, and Broadway was so opened from Twenty-fifth street to Forty-fifth street on May 15, 1846.

Prior to 1894, the park commissioner had no jurisdiction over these streets. His only title to authority over them is derived from the ordinance passed in that year.

The origin of the park itself, the one hundred and forty-four one-thousandths of an acre lying inside the railings, is not entirely clear.

The learned assistant corporation counsel has stated that by chapter 890 of the Laws of 1869 it was provided that the commissioners of the Central Park shall also have power to make that part of Broadway between Thirty-second and Thirty-fifth streets, and that part between Forty-second and Forty-seventh streets, or any part or parts thereof of a greater width or widths than one hundred feet, and to prescribe and direct what part of the open spaces between said streets caused by the intersection of Broadway with one of the avenues of the said city shall be included [696]*696as part of Broadway. The said commissioners shall cause duplicate certificates to be made out and certified, in such manner as they may direct, defining and describing the easterly and westerly lines of the part of Broadway aforesaid as located and established by them. * * * The said part of Broadway as laid out and established by the said commissioners shall be a part of one of the streets of the city of New York in like manner and with the same effect as if the same had been so laid out as a public street on the m.ap or plan of the said city by the commissioner so appointed.”

The map showing the easterly and westerly lines of that part of Broadway between Thirty-second and Thirty-fourth streets was filed on September 16, 1869. By said map it appears that the easterly line of Broadway between Thirty-second and Thirty-fourth streets is the present easterly line thereof, but that the westerly line of Broadway between said streets is the pres-ent westerly line of Sixth avenue; so that, as a matter of fact, between Thirty-second and Thirty-fourth streets, Sixth avenue, as such, does not really exist, and this is borne out further by the fact that the houses on the westerly line of what is apparently Sixth avenue, between Thirty-second and Thirty-fourth streets, bear Broadway numbers. So that it is clear that not only is the present westerly side of Broadway a street, but that the alleged park within the railing was legally declared to be a street.

The learned assistant to the corporation counsel has also informed me that he cannot clearly ascertain when this triangular plot was set aside for park purposes. He states that the minutes of the board of aldermen disclose that John H. Starin, in July, 1869, was given a five months ’ extension of contract to complete parks at this point by enclosing same with an [697]*697iron railing.

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Bluebook (online)
93 Misc. 692, 158 N.Y.S. 644, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-parelli-nygensess-1916.