Tenement House Department v. . McDevitt

109 N.E. 88, 215 N.Y. 160, 1915 N.Y. LEXIS 1526
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 25, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by74 cases

This text of 109 N.E. 88 (Tenement House Department v. . McDevitt) 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
Tenement House Department v. . McDevitt, 109 N.E. 88, 215 N.Y. 160, 1915 N.Y. LEXIS 1526 (N.Y. 1915).

Opinion

. Cardozo, J,

The action is brought to recover, a penalty for the violation of section 109 of the Tenement *163 House Law (L. 1909, ch. 99, as amended by L. 1913, ch. 598). The charge is that the building has been used for the .purpose of prostitution. The building is a tenement house, and is the home of twenty-two families. The defendant "is the owner. It is conceded that on July 23, 1913, two women, one the occupant of an apartment on the first floor, and the other the occupant of an apartment on the second floor, used their rooms for the purpose of prostitution, and that they were arrested, found guilty, and sentenced to imprisonment. One of the women had lived in the house for six months; the other had lived there for a week. There is no evidence of previous misconduct by either of them. A stipulation conceding that they offended on a single day makes up the plaintiff’s case. The owner testified that the unlawful use was without her knowledge. She testified that she believed the tenants to be respectable. Testimony to the same effect was given by the janitor. As soon as the police gave notice of the arrest, the women were evicted. The trial judge held, upon sufficient evidence, that the defendant and her agent were innocent of any willful wrong. He held that they had not even been shown to have been negligent. The facts as he found them must be accepted in this court. The question to be determined is whether a tenant’s wrongful use of an apartment on a single day subjects the owner, irrespective of knowledge or of opportunity for knowledge, to the statutory penalty.

Section 109 of the Tenement House Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 61) as amended in 1913 (L. 1913, ch. 598), provides as follows: “Ho tenement house, or the lot or premises thereof shall be used for a lodging house or stable, or for the storage or handling of rags. Ho tenement house or any part thereof or the lot or premises thereof shall be used for the purpose of prostitution or assignation of any description. Ho horse, cow, calf, swine, sheep or goat shall be kept in a tenement house or on the same lot or premises thereof except that, outside of the fire limits, not *164 more than two horses may be kept on such lot or premises, provided they are stabled at least twenty feet distant from any building used for living purposes, and that such stabling is not detrimental to health in the opinion of the department charged with the enforcement of this chapter.” The provision “ no tenement house or any part thereof or the lot or premises thereof shall be used for the purpose of prostitution or assignation of any description,” came into the section for the first time through the amendment of 1913. Automatically, there became attached to the violation of the statute, as thus enlarged, the penalties which section 124 of the Tenement House Law had already prescribed for the violation of any provision of that chapter of the laws. “ The owner of-any tenement house or part thereof, or of any building or structure upon the same lot with a tenement house, or of the said lot, where any violation of-this chapter or a nuisance exists, and any person who shall violate or assist in violating any provision of this chapter, or any notice or order of the department charged with its enforcement, shall also jointly and severally for each such violation and each such nuisance be subject to a civil penalty .of fifty dollars.” (Tenement House Law, section 124.) It is for the penalty thus prescribed that the defendant has been sued.

We think the plaintiff failed to prove that the defendant’s building had been used, in the sense contemplated by the statute, for the purpose of prostitution. To charge an owner with liability, there must be more than a single act of vice in the seclusion and secrecy of a tenant’s apartment. Against such an offense, a landlord, however vigilant, is helpless. To make the owner liable, it must appear that the building has been “used” for the purpose of prostitution, and this imports,. not an isolated act of vice, but some measure, even though brief, of continuity and permanence. To say that a building is used for such a purpose means, in substance, that it is kept or maintained for such a purpose. Many well-considered *165 cases sustain that construction of the statute. Thus, in Comm. v. Patterson (138 Mass. 498), the defendant was charged with keeping and maintaining a tenement that was “used” for the illegal sale of intoxicating liquors. Evidence was given that two sales had been - made. The trial judge held that if the defendant had made either of the sales, the jury must find him guilty. The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts reversed the judgment. It held, in an opinion by Holmes, J., that a buildingcanbe said to be “used” for the illegal sale of intoxicating liquors, within the meaning of the statute which makes it a nuisance, “on the strength of a single casual sale, made without premeditation, in the course of a lawful business. Not only do the words ‘used’ and ‘keep or maintain ’ import a certain degree of permanence, but the same idea is usually a part of the conception of a nuisance.” There was a like ruling in Comm. v. Hayes (150 Mass. 506) and in State v. Stanley (84 Me. 555). In Regina v. Davies (L. R. [1897] 2 Q. B. 199) the court construed a statute by which the owner or occupier of a house or room, who kept or used it for the purpose of unlawful gaming carried on therein, was made liable to a penalty. The decision was that a single unlawful game, played by the defendant and his friends, without evidence that any one else had ever played an unlawful game at the defendant’s house on any other occasion, did not justify a conviction. A like construction has been given to statutes prohibiting the use of buildings for the purpose of prostitution. (State v. Irvin, 117 Ia. 469; State v. Ruhl, 8 Ia. 447.) In all these cases, some element of permanence has been held essential to a conviction. It is true, of course, that a building may be so used even on a single day as to justify the inference with but slight additional evidence that the illicit use has been continuous. But the inference in such a case is one of fact and not of law, and must be drawn, if at all, by the trial judge in the light of all the circumstances. *166 The plaintiff makes no claim in this case that such an inference is possible. It takes its stand upon the broad position that a single act of vice leads as a matter of law to the conclusion that the building in which the act occurs is one used for prostitution. We do not need to inquire at this time whether the legislature has the power to visit on the owner a penalty so drastic. At least if it has that purpose, it must say so in plain words. We think it has not said so yet.

When we look to the context of this statute, our view of its meaning is confirmed. The same section that prohibits the use of a tenement house for prostitution prohibits its use for a lodging house or stable, or for the storage or handling of rags. In these latter prohibitions, the element of continuity is manifest. We ought not to hold that in the first sentence of the statute the word “use” means one thing, and in the second sentence something else.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 N.E. 88, 215 N.Y. 160, 1915 N.Y. LEXIS 1526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tenement-house-department-v-mcdevitt-ny-1915.