Starin v. . Edson

19 N.E. 670, 112 N.Y. 206, 20 N.Y. St. Rep. 898, 67 Sickels 206, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 816
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 19 N.E. 670 (Starin v. . Edson) 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
Starin v. . Edson, 19 N.E. 670, 112 N.Y. 206, 20 N.Y. St. Rep. 898, 67 Sickels 206, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 816 (N.Y. 1889).

Opinion

Peckham, J.

We shall assume that there is nothing in the record which in any way precludes the plaintiff from maintaining this action, provided it could be maintained by any taxpayer under the act chapter 531 of the Laws of 1881, entitled “An act for the protection of taxpayers.” We therefore proceed to consider the grounds upon which the plaintiff bases his right to maintain this action. The property which the defendants, the commissioners of the sinking fund, advertised to be sold, was described in such advertisement as “ the franchises of operating the ferries from the city of Hew York to Staten Island and to Bay Bidge, Long Island, as established by the common council, Hovember 3,1875, and June 4, 1877, respectively, for the term of eight years and eleven months, from June 1, 1884, * * * together with the right to occupy and use the wharf property now occupied and used for ferry purposes at the foot of Whitehall street by the ferry to the west shore of Staten Island.”

One of the principal objections by the plaintiff is in regard *210 to the manner in which the sale of the franchises was conducted by the defendants, the commissioners of the -sinking fund. In the advertisement of the proposed sale the commissioners stated that “ the franchises would be offered at an upset price of five per cent of the gross receipts from fer - riage of each of said ferries, and a yearly fixed rental of ten thousand dollars for the wharf property, to be paid in addition to the percentage of gross receipts from ferriage.”

The objection that was made as to this point, was that the rental for the wharf property should have been fixed alone by the price for which the purchaser would be willing to take it at an auction sale, and as the objection was disregarded and the lease sold on the advertised conditions and in the manner therein stated, it is claimed that it was illegally made and that it is void.

A brief examination of the statutes relating to the sale or leasing of such property will, we think, show that the claim is not well founded. By the consolidation act, known as chapter 410 of the Laws of 1882, and which is entitled “An act to consolidate into one act and to declare the special and local laws affecting public interests in the city of Hew York,” various departments of the city government are recognized and the duties of .each one pointed out. Chapter 6 of that act treats of the department of finance, and title 4 of such chapter treats of the sinking fund as a part of the finance department. Section 170 of the act, which is the first section of title 4, treats of the board of commissioners of the sinking fund and confirms in such board all its then existing powers. Power is also given in that section (170) to such commissioners to sell or lease for the highest marketable price or rental, at public auction or by sealed bids * * * any city property, except wharves and piers. By section 180 of the same act, and which is part of the same title (4) the commissioners of the sinking fund possess the power and they are authorized to lease im, the marmer provided hy law, along with the franchise of the ferry, -within said city, such wharf property, including wharves, piers, bulk-heads and structures thereon, and slips, *211 docks and water fronts adjacent thereto, used or required for the purposes of such ferry now owned or possessed or which may be hereafter owned or acquired by the city.

It is claimed that the expression in section 180 as to the leasing of the wharves “in the manner provided by law,” contemplates the existence of some legal restraint upon this power, and that such restraint is found in the provision contained in section 716 of the act in question, which states that “ all leases other than for districts appropriated by said department to special commercial interests shall be made at public auction to the highest bidder.” Assuming the applicability of this provision, it is claimed that the practice pursued by the commissioners is in violation thereof, and so the sale is void. We think that this provision does not apply to the case of a leasing by the commissioners of the sinking fund.

It will be noticed that the provision is found in chapter lo of the consolidation act which treats of the department of docks, and the leases spoken of in the section are leases to be made by that department, and provision is made for the condition and terms of such leases and the manner in which they shall be sold. The effect of the two sections (170, 180) upon the powers of the commissioners of the sinking fund is to place in their hands the right generally to sell or lease for the highest marketable price or rental at public auction or by sealed bids, any city property whatever, excluding wharves or piers; excepting that wharves or piers used or required for the purposes of a ferry, the right to run which the commissioners are about to lease, may be leased “ along with the franchise to run such ferry,” and such lease must be in the manner provided by law. The manner provided by law in reference to such a lease, is the law which governs the commissioners of the sinking fund in their selling or leasing city property, and that law is found in section 170 of the act in question. Taking their powers from those two sections (170, 180), the commissioners are invested with power to make a lease of the ferry franchise and, along with it and as part of it, a lease of the wharf or pier required for the purpose of using the ferry franchise and the *212 whole subject of the lease is, in substance, one entire thing, a ferry franchise and a place to land, without which the franchise of the ferry would be comparatively worthless. This whole piece of property (franchise and wharf) must be leased for the highest marketable rental at public auction, or by sealed bids, according to the mandate of section 170. Construing the language of section 180 to mean that the wharf or pier is to be leased along with the ferry franchise as part thereof, and that the whole is to be put up as one entire piece of property, the leasing provided by law is to be a leasing of such property for the highest marketable rental at pnblic auction.

If this be the true construction, then it is apparent that the sale was properly conducted. If the condition had been that the sale would be made of the franchise and the wharf to him who would bid the highest percentage upon the gross receipts, there could be no question, as it seems to us, that such condition wo aid have been proper, and a sale under it to the highest bidder entirely legal. The fact that $10,000 is stated as an upset price for the wharf is but another means of stating that $10,000 and a certain percentage, etc., must be bid as an upset price for the whole property which is to be leased. To permit a mixing up of the two kinds of bids at the same auction for the- sale of the same property, viz., a bid for a sum in gross, with a bid on percentages upon the gross receipts, would simply lead to an impossibility of conducting such a sale, for it would be impossible to state from among all the bids which was the highest, the one which was for the highest sum in gross, or the one which was for the highest percentage on the gross receipts.

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Bluebook (online)
19 N.E. 670, 112 N.Y. 206, 20 N.Y. St. Rep. 898, 67 Sickels 206, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/starin-v-edson-ny-1889.