Robertson v. Zimmermann

196 N.E. 740, 268 N.Y. 52, 1935 N.Y. LEXIS 905
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 28, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by74 cases

This text of 196 N.E. 740 (Robertson v. Zimmermann) 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
Robertson v. Zimmermann, 196 N.E. 740, 268 N.Y. 52, 1935 N.Y. LEXIS 905 (N.Y. 1935).

Opinion

Htjbbs, J.

This is a taxpayer’s action to secure a permanent injunction restraining the Mayor of the city of Buffalo from appointing a Board to be known as “ Buffalo Sewer Authority ” and from taking any other action pursuant to chapter 349 of the Laws of 1935 upon the ground that the act is unconstitutional.

The act in question creates a body corporate, to be known as “ Buffalo Sewer Authority,” composed of five members, all residents of the city of Buffalo, to be appointed for specified terms by the Mayor of the city, *57 subject to confirmation by the Common Council. Its corporate existence is limited to five years, and thereafter until all its liabilities have been met and its bonds have been paid in full or such liabilities or bonds have otherwise been discharged.” Upon the expiration of its corporate existence all its rights and properties are to pass to the city of Buffalo. It is given complete jurisdiction, control, possession and supervision of the existing sewer system and all facilities for disposal of storm water and sewage of the city of Buffalo, authority to construct such additional sewers, disposal or treatment plants and other appliances and structures as will in its judgment “ provide an effectual and advantageous means for relieving the Niagara river, Buffalo river and Lake Erie from pollution by the sewage and waste of the city,” and upon completion of the project to establish sewer rents to be collected from all real property served by its facilities. Such sewer rents are to constitute a hen upon the real property served, to have the same priority and superiority as the hen of the general tax of the city, which hen may be foreclosed by action in the same manner as a tax hen. It is given authority to issue bonds which are not to constitute a debt of the State or of the city but are to be payable only from funds of the sewer authority.

The enactment of chapter 349 of the Laws of 1935 is a result of an order of the State Commissioner of Health made on or about March 22, 1935, after a pubhc hearing directing the city of Buffalo to proceed with necessary sewage and sewage disposal plant construction to elimi-. nate sewage pollution contributed by the city to Niagara river and Lake Erie. The Common Council of the city favored its enactment for the reason, as stated in a resolution adopted by that body, that the city because of its constitutional debt limitation cannot finance this undertaking by bond issue.”

Laws of 1935, chapter 349, section 8, subdivision 1, reads in part:

*58 “ 1. It is hereby found and declared that the creation of the authority and the carrying out of its corporate purposes is in all respects for the benefit of the people of the state of New York, for the improvement of their health and welfare, and is a public purpose, and the authority shall be regarded as performing a governmental function in the exercise of the powers conferred upon it by this act.”

The Special Term granted a temporary injunction pending a hearing upon a motion for judgment on the pleadings and upon return of the motion granted judgment dismissing the complaint. The appeal is taken directly to this court pursuant to subdivision 3 of section 588 of the Civil Practice Act.

It is contended that the act, by transferring to the jurisdiction and control of the Sewer Authority the existing sewer system of the city, violates section 2 of article XII of the State Constitution, being part of the Home Rule Amendment, so called, which reads as follows:

“ § 2. The legislature shall not pass any law relating to the property, affairs or government of cities, which shall be special or local either in its terms or in its effect, but shall act in relation to the property, affairs or government of any city only by general laws which shall in terms and in effect apply alike to all cities except on message from the governor declaring that an emergency exists and the concurrent action of two-thirds of the members of each house of the legislature.”

• The act was not passed as an .emergency measure by the concurrent action of two-thirds of each house of the Legislature or on a message from the Governor.

The question presented is whether the act relates to the property, affairs or government ” of the city and is special or local either in its terms or effect.

It is immediately apparent that the prime purpose of the Legislature in enacting the law was not to deprive the city of any of its powers or prerogatives under the *59 Home Rule Amendment but rather to afford a means of carrying out the order of the State Commissioner of Health which order was designed to eliminate a serious menace to the health of the people of the State generally and particularly the communities, including the city of Buffalo, which are obtaining their water supply from the waters polluted by untreated sewage from the city of Buffalo. The record indicates that this pollution has affected water supplies taken from Lake Erie, the Niagara river and Lake Ontario.

In Matter of Mayor of City of New York (Elm Street) (246 N. Y. 72, 76) this court pointed out the effect of the Home Rule Amendment upon the previously established test as to whether a law was on the one hand special or local or on the other hand general. We there said: “ We are no longer confined to the inquiry whether an act is general or local in its terms.’ We must go farther and inquire whether it is general or local ‘ in its effect.’ ” That case well illustrates the type of legislation held to be local in effect, that is, an act which though general in its terms has the result of affecting only a single municipality. An act designed to remedy conditions affecting the public generally, though imposing restrictions or obligations upon a particular municipality as a means of affecting the larger purpose can hardly be said to be local in its effect. Not every act so burdening or limiting a municipality is local in its effect. (Adler v. Deegan, 251 N. Y. 467.)

Speaking of the Home Rule Amendment in City of New York v. Village of Lawrence (250 N. Y. 429, 435) we said: “ Enlargement of legislative powers by the city in relation to their ‘ property, affairs or government ’ is balanced by restriction of the powers of the Legislature within the same field. In relation to such matters the Legislature may not pass any law which is ‘ special or local, either in its terms or in its effect,’ except on message from the Governor declaring that an emergency exists.”

*60

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Bluebook (online)
196 N.E. 740, 268 N.Y. 52, 1935 N.Y. LEXIS 905, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robertson-v-zimmermann-ny-1935.