People v. Roff

3 Park. Cr. 216
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 16, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 3 Park. Cr. 216 (People v. Roff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Roff, 3 Park. Cr. 216 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1856).

Opinion

Birdseye, J.

The thirty-eighth and thirty-ninth sections of the habeas corpus act (2 R. S., 567), make it my duty to “ proceed to examine into the facts contained in the return, and into the cause of the confinement of” the prisoner; and “if no legal cause be shown for such imprisonment or restraint, or for the continuation thereof,” to discharge him from custody.

The prisoner has not denied any fact set forth in the jailor’s return, or alleged any fact to show that his imprisonment is unlawful, or that he is entitled to his discharge, as he might do by section forty-eight of the statute. But he contends that the commitment set forth in the jailor’s return does not show that any crime had been committed, for the reason that the regulation of the board of health of Castleton, set out therein, is illegal and void, as contravening the policy of the law and the provisions of the statute in reference to the quarantine establishment of the state. If this be so, there is “ no legal cause shown for such imprisonment,” and the prisoner is by law entitled to his discharge.

By the Laws of 1850 (ch. 324, p. 691, § 2), it is enacted that “ the supervisor and justices of the peace, or the major part of them, of each town in this state, shall be a board of health for such town for each year, whenever, in the opinion of a majority of such board, the public good requires it.” '

[219]*219The third section of the act prescribes the powers and duties of the board of health thus constituted. That these are very broad and comprehensive will appear from an examination of the several subdivisions of this section, the third and fourth of which are these:

“ 3. To make regulations, in their discretion, concerning the place and mode of quarantine; the examination and purification of vessels, boats and other crafts not under quarantine; the treatment of vessels, articles or persons thereof; the regulation of intercourse with infected places; the apprehension, separation and treatment of emigrants and other persons who shall have been exposed to any infectious or contagious disease; the suppression and removal of nuisances; and all such other regulations as they shall think necessary and proper for the preservation of the public health.
“ 4. To regulate and prohibit or prevent all communication or intercourse by and with all houses, tenements and places, and the persons occupying the same, in which there shall be any person who shall have been exposed to any infectious or contagious disease.”

By section four of the same act, every person who shall willfully violate any regulation so made and published by any such board of health is declared guilty of a misdemeanor, and, on conviction, is made subject to fine or imprisonment, or both, at the discretion of the court, the fine not to exceed $1000, nor the imprisonment two years.

If the board of health of Castleton had the power to make the regulation in question, then the prisoner is clearly enough charged with a crime, and is liable, on conviction, to punishment more severe than many persons suffer on conviction for felonies.

The real question presented for my decision, therefore, is, whether the board of health of the town of Castleton had, [220]*220under the statutes above cited, the power to make a regulation prohibiting all persons from passing from within the quarantine inclosure-into any other part of said town.

It is deeply to be regretted that any such collision should have arisen between this board of health, thus temporarily organized, and the officers whom the state has appointed to take charge of its quarantine establishment. It is the duty of those officers, and the state has given them sufficient powers, to protect the health of the town of Castleton, and the other towns in Richmond county, as well as of the cities bordering on the waters and rivers of the port of New-York. On the due performance of these duties, and the efficient exercise of these powers, may depend the health and lives of vast numbers, not merely in all these towns and cities, but throughout the whole state, and it may be the whole country. While the inhabitants of each town are justly entitled to exercise every lawful power for their own protection, and will be sustained by this court to that extent, it is not less my duty to see that they do not overstep that just limit, and, under the influence of perhaps a natural alarm at the approach of infection and disease, seek their own safety at the expense of the health of the community at large.

Such a conflict has never before disturbed our peace. If the rights and powers of the parties to the present dispute be clearly defined by the law, harmony will be restored, and, it is to be hoped, the wise and beneficent purposes of our health laws permanently secured.

But it is not merely the powers of the board of health thus organized in Castleton, with reference to the quarantine establishment of the state, that renders this case one of importance. If this regulation is valid, every other town in the state may pass a like ordinance. It may prohibit the entrance into any part of the town, not merely of persons from the quarantine establishment of the state, in charge of its health officer, and the other functionaries whom the state has appointed to assist him, but . of persons from any other [221]*221town in the state, even though the board of health of such town may not think that any disease exists within it, or may decide that every case of disease has been cured. What the town of Castleton here assumes to do, towards that institution of the state, may be done towards the same town by every other town in Richmond county, or in Kings, or in any portion of the state.

So far as I discover, by a hasty reference to our statutes, the first law of the state on the subject of quarantine was the “ Act to prevent the bringing in and spreading of infectious distempers in this state,” passed 4th May, 1784, at the seventh session of the legislature. (1 Greenl. Laws N. Y., 117.) By this act, quarantine was to be performed at Bed-low’s Island, or in such other place, and for such time, and in such manner, as the governor—to whom, by the act of March 29, 1784 (id., 69), the island, called Gfovernor’s or Nutten Island, was assigned—or, in his absence from the city of Kew-York, as the mayor thereof should direct and appoint. This act contains the germ of our present quarantine system; and the provision in section three, for the appointment, by the governor and council, of a physician to inspect all vessels which may have on board, or which may be suspected of having on board, any person or persons infected with a contagious distemper, is probably the earliest provision of law in the state for the selection of a person to perform the duties of the present health officer of the port of Kew-York.

This act was amended on the 27th March, 1794 (3 id., 146), and by section five of the amendatory act the governor was authorized to appropriate Gfovernor’s Island for the pur-, pose of erecting buildings, &c., for the reception or accommodation of- any persons infected with any such distemper. On the 1st of April, 1796, another act was passed (id., 305), the first provision of which is: “ That a person practicing physic shall be appointed health officer for the city of NewYorkand extended powers are conferred upon him, most [222]*222of which he possesses to this day.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Park. Cr. 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-roff-nysupct-1856.