Stapleton v. Pinckney

182 Misc. 590, 50 N.Y.S.2d 409, 1944 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2345
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 8, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 182 Misc. 590 (Stapleton v. Pinckney) 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
Stapleton v. Pinckney, 182 Misc. 590, 50 N.Y.S.2d 409, 1944 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2345 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1944).

Opinion

Bekgan, J.

As taxpayer of Albany County, plaintiffs maintain this action to restrain the defendant Commissioner of Jurors from carrying out the provisions of chapter 206 of the Laws of 1944. The Attorney-General has intervened and has been added as a defendant. The statute enacts numerous provisions affecting the office of commissioner of jurors and makes provisions with reference to the preparation of trial and grand jury lists, and to eligibility of jurors. Plaintiffs say that the statute is a local bill for the selecting, drawing and summoning of jurors prohibited by section 17 of article I'll of the New York Constitution; and that it is a county law, local or special in terms or effect, within the prohibition of subdivision (b) of section 1 of article IX.

■ The statute (§12) applies to all counties in the state ” which have: (a) a population of not less than 200,000; (b) a population of not more than 250,000; and (c) a city with a population of 125,000 or more. There is no dispute among the parties over the point that Albany County is now the only county of the State which can meet these three conditions and the Act takes effect immediately. No issue of fact is raised by any of the pleadings.

The Constitution of 1821 required a two-thirds vote for a bill appropriating money for a “ local or private ” purpose and this was the first constitutional limitation upon the New York Legislature in respect of local laws. The Constitution of 1846 required that local or private bills treat of one subject and express that subject in the title, and in one of the numerous amendments made in 1874 to the Constitution of 1846, the Legislature was prohibited from passing private or local bills in regard to certain enumerated matters. Among them were the selection, drawing or summoning of jurors. The amendment of 1874 is now, with but a single change that has no importance here, section 17 of article III of the Constitution.

[593]*593What is a “ local law ” or “ special law ” very early became a troublesome problem of definition to the judges who dealt with it. Various approaches were made. Its inherent difficulty was conceded on all sides. In 1870 Judge Folgeb thought the difficulty so marked that definition up to that time had been seldom attempted judicially. (The People v. Supervisors of Chautauqua, 43 N. Y. 10, 16, 21.) There is here the suggestion that an act is local if it relates to a portion of the people of the State, or their property, “ and may not,” by subject, operation or immediate and necessary results, have general effect. A definition had been undertaken by Chief Judge Davies in The People v. Hills (35 N. Y. 449, 451) as an act having no force beyond a particular city or county, a view followed in The People v. O’Brien (38 N. Y. 193). Judge Eabl felt a .general law relates to things “ as ” a class; a special law to things of ” a class. (Matter of N. Y. Elevated R. R. Co., 70 N. Y. 327, 350.)

Later, Judge Eabl, again adverting to the difficulty of definition, felt that a local act is one operating only within a limited territory, or in a single city or county, or in two or three counties. (People ex rel. v. Newburgh, etc., Plank Road Co., 86 N. Y. 1, 6.) Judge Francis M. Finch said the best way was to add examples to definitions. (In the Matter of the Application of Church, 92 N. Y. 1, 4.) Judge Andesws thought it was expedient to leave the matter of definition to a considerable extent open, to be determined specially in each case. (Ferguson v. Ross et al., 126 N. Y. 459, 464.)

Perhaps because it was so hard to state a simple rule the court tended to take an extremely literal view of the question, an integral part of which view seemed to be that the law must be local in terms to come within the constitutional ban. Legis - lative ingenuity rapidly filled in the gap by devising general language, or “ classifications ” of one kind or another, which were thinly veiled cloaks for local legislation and which were held to be valid because it was literally possible to read the language as having general application. Often the result was reached by ignoring facts of great notoriety and of common knowledge.

This process was noticeable before the amendment of 1874. White v. Syracuse and Utica Railroad Co. (14 Barb. 559, 563) and Williams v. The People (24 N. Y. 405) are examples. But the trend became marked when the impact of the 1874 amendment was felt on legislative practice. An Act of 1875 (ch. 606), granting the right to lay down railroad tracks to “ any ele[594]*594vated steam railway ” which was “ now in actual operation ”, was held valid although it was a matter of general and common knowledge that there was but one such steam elevated railroad in the State. (Matter of N. Y. Elevated R. R. Co., supra, p. 352.) The court did not know and it could not assume the Legislature knew there was only one such railroad.

A statute applying to counties having cities of 100,000 and territory beyond the city mapped out into streets arid avenues was held valid, although there was only one such because its “ terms ” were not so limited. (In the Matter of the Application of Church, supra.) A statute relating to electric wires and conductors in cities over 500,000 was not deenied local because it was “ general in its terms.” (People ex rel. N. Y. Elec. Lines Co. v. Squire, 107 N. Y. 593, 601.) In Ferguson v. Ross et al. (supra, p. 465) a statute regulating dumping in the waters about the city of New York was held not to be local because the impairment of the New York harbor would affect the prosperity of the State and therefore the protection of the harbor was not local in the sense that the administration of justice in New York City, or street repairs, might be local.

So, in effect, the amendment of 1874 purporting to exclude the Legislature from acting by local or private laws in the thirteen fields stated by the Constitution, did not restrain the Legislature at all. If the act in terms was susceptible of applying to a class of things it was sustained, even though there were no such class and only one such thing. The decisions were so uniformly in one direction that the constitutional restriction was quite generally regarded as imposing no restraint on the Legislature.

But in 1897 an act was passed providing for the widening and improvement of highways in “ any town ” having a population of 8,000 or more, containing an incorporated village having a population of between 8,000 and 15,000, and not in Madison County. The court held the statute to be local and invalid. (Matter of Henneberger, 155 N. Y. 420, 428.) The court succeeded in finding and formulating a distinction between this statute and the one applying to counties having cities'- of; 100,000 ’ and territory beyond the city mapped out in streets.

The Henneberger case (supra) was against the current. Writing for the dissenters, Judge O ’Bbiek said so plainly (p. 430 et seq.), and, indeed, this was quite frankly récognized by Judge Beat writing for the majority (pp. 429, 430). The point had been reached beyond which the court would not sanbtion further legislative evasion of constitutional limitation» All that had been-[595]*595done could not be undone in one case, but the breach was not to be widened and the trend of evasion was to be stopped.

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Robinson v. County of Broome
195 Misc. 24 (New York Supreme Court, 1948)
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183 Misc. 430 (New York Supreme Court, 1944)

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Bluebook (online)
182 Misc. 590, 50 N.Y.S.2d 409, 1944 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stapleton-v-pinckney-nysupct-1944.