Tyack v. Bromley

4 Edw. Ch. 258
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedJune 16, 1843
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 4 Edw. Ch. 258 (Tyack v. Bromley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tyack v. Bromley, 4 Edw. Ch. 258 (N.Y. 1843).

Opinion

The Vice-Chancellor :

The complainants compose the board of port wardens of the port of New York and to which office they were appointed by the governor and senate of the state ; and the defendants are an equal number of persons who have assumed the name of “ Marine surveyors for the port of New York,” and have undertaken to perform many of the duties which the complainants claim, to belong exclusively to them by virtue of their office. It is the principal object of the bill to restrain the latter from such interference.

The bill, in the first place, refers to the laws of the state creating the office of master and wardens of the port; and it, then, shows that the complainants have been only appointed and taken the oath of office and are in discharge of [263]*263the duties thereof and, as such incumbents, they insist that they are entitled to perform all the duties and transact all the business appertaining to the office and to receive all the fees and emoluments thereof, but that the defendants fraudulently intending to injure the complainants in the enjoyment of their office and to interrupt and disturb them therein, have, under various unfounded pretences, set about depriving them of their business and have opened an office contiguous ánd nearly opposite to the location or office of the complainants in the same street from which the defendants have issued a circular and cards of business, holding themselves out to the public as a board authorized and competent to perform the duties of the complainants in relation to marine surveys.

The defendants show, by their affidavits—not having as yet answered the bill—that having been appointed by the Chamber of Commerce and Board of Underwriters of the city of New York “ to survey ships and merchandize,” they issued a circular headed “ Marine Surveyor’s Office,” and dated May 25th, 1843, announcing the fact of such appointment, and that they had taken an office, No. 67 Wall street, for the accommodation of merchants and masters of vessels to be kept open daily throughout the year, and that their charges for services would be as follows: For every survey on board vessels and on merchandize, $2 ; for every certificate of the same, $ 1; for every survey on vessels put into this port in distress or needing repairs, $2 50; for every certificate of the same, $2 50. They also issued a card in these words : “ Marine Surveyors, Port of New York, appointed by the Chamber of Commerce and Board of Underwriters, office 67 Wall street”—with their names. The defendants also exhibit a certificate, dated June 9,1843, from the Chamber of Commerce and the Board of Underwriters, stating that the defendants were appointed by their respective boards as suitable persons to act as Marine Surveyors for the port of New York and recommending them accordingly in all cases where their services might be required. Still, in their affidavits, they disclaim all interference with vessels or goods arriving at the port of New York in a damaged state which may be required to be sold at auction for the benefit of un[264]*264derwriters out of the city of New York. They do not, however, deny what is very strongly imputed to them in the charging part of the bill, namely, that they have fraudulent-¡y combined to injure the complainants ; to interrupt them in the enjoyment of their office; and to deprive them of the business and emoluments belonging to it. Nor do they deny that they have set on foot the plan of opening and keeping an office for that purpose, and that they do openly and publicly declare that their design is to put down the office of the complainants by discharging the duties thereof themselves, and that they have assimilated their association and their mode and manner of doing business as near as may be to the organization and arrangement of the complainants, giving out that they perform the same duties and maybe relied on as being more competent and that their acts will be more authentic. Nor do .they deny that they have held surveys of damaged goods on board of a number of vessels or granted certificates in apparently official form, similar to certificates granted by the complainants in like cases and in one instance, (the case of the ship Florida, which had finished taking in her cargo and, while in port, had sprung aleak,) put themselves forward to make the necessary survey for repairs and had either made such survey or were then engaged in making it, in defiance of the complainants. Neither do they deny that the complainants have remonstrated with them and requested them to desist and that they refused and still give out that it is their deliberate intention to continue their opposition and to use all their influence entirely to supplant them in their official business. These and other charges in the bill not being denied, must, for the purposes of the present application, be taken as true. Whether the motives with which this opposition has been got up and is persevered in, as charged, can have any influence upon the question of this court’s jurisdiction, it may become necessary to inquire. But the first question to be considered is : what are the complainants entitled to, virtute officii ? Is it, to the sole and exclusive enjoyment of the business belonging to the office of port wardens as established by law ■ or is it a business in which they may only be allowed to par[265]*265ticipate in common with others who may assume to perform the same or similar functions ?

The office of port wardens is one of considerable antiquity even here. It was established by law during the existence of the Colonial Government (1 Smith & Liv. 160); and it has been continued by repeated acts of legislation down to the present time, with but slight alterations. The last act and the one now in force, so far as regards the powers and duties of port wardens, in respect to the present question, was passed February 19, 1819 : (Laws of 1842, Sess. ch. 18.) By this law they are made public officers. They are appointed as such by the Governor and Senate—are organized as a board or body politic under the name of the master and wardens of the port of New York, with power, in that name as a corporation, to sue for all fines, penalties and forfeitures arising under the act and to use a common seal. They take an oath of office, are required to have a clerk, and keep an office open where they are to give daily attendance and where their clerk is to keep a record or book of entries of all their proceedings, which is to be open to the inspection of all persons desiring it. The arrival of all foreign vessels is to be reported at their office under a penalty of fifty dollars for each vessel and certain fees are payable to them with the report of every such vessel. By the § 5 of the act their powers and duties, with respect to the survey of vessels and damaged goods are declared. They or any two of them, with the assistance of one or more skilful carpenters shall be surveyors of any vessel deemed unfit to proceed to sea. They or any two of them shall be judges of the repairs which may be necessary for the safety of such vessel on the intended voyage. And in all cases of vessels and goods arriving damaged and by the owner or consignee required to be sold at public auction on account of such damage and for the benefit of underwriters out of the city of New York, such sale shall be under their inspection ; and when required by the owner or consignee, they shall certify the cause of the damage, the amount of sale of the vessel or goods and the charges attending the §ale. For these and all other services their compensation is fixed in the shape of commissions and fees.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Edw. Ch. 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tyack-v-bromley-nychanct-1843.