Wallack v. Mayor of New York

5 Thomp. & Cook 310, 10 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 84
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1875
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Thomp. & Cook 310 (Wallack v. Mayor of New York) 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
Wallack v. Mayor of New York, 5 Thomp. & Cook 310, 10 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 84 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1875).

Opinion

Davis, P. J.

The appeal in this case is from, an orcler of the special term, continuing pendente Hie an injunction restraining the defendants and each of them from “beginning or prosecuting or instituting against the plaintiff in the above-entitled action, any of the proceedings which are provided by any of the sections of chapter 836 of the Laws of 187% of this State, referred to in the complaint in this action, and from enforcing or imposing, or attempting to enforce or impose, any penalty or penalties against the said plaintiff, under or by color of any of the provisions of said chapter, by suit or otherwise, and from applying for any injunction to restrain the said plaintiff from conducting or carrying on the business and place of amusement for the performances in the complaint mentioned.”

The act referred to is the act entitled, “An Act to regulate places of amusement in the city of New York.” The first section of the act declares that it shall not be lawful to exhibit to the public in the city of New York the various entertainments and performances therein mentioned, without first having obtained “ a license for the place of such exhibition,” as thereinafter provided.

The second section empowers the mayor to grant such license, on receiving for each license so granted, before the issuing thereof, .the sum of $500, and imposes a penalty of $100 for every exhibition or performance without such license, and authorizes the Society for the Reformation of Juvenile Delinquents to prosecute for such penalty in the name of the people of the State of New York.

The third section subjects the licenses granted by the mayor to be revoked upon a hearing before a judge or justice of any court of record of the city, on summary proceedings.

The fourth section provides that “upon granting every such license authorized by this act the said mayor shall receive from the person to whom the same' shall be granted the amount payable for said license as .above provided, which amounts, as respectively received by him, shall be paid over to the treasurer of the said Society for the Reformation of Juvenile Delinquents in the city of New York, for the use of said society.”

The sixth section declares the violation of any of the provisions of the act to be a misdemeanor punishable, on conviction, by fine or imprisonment or by both.

The seventh section declares it to be the duty of the police and other officers to arrest and convey persons violating the provisions [313]*313of the act before any magistrate having jurisdiction of the offense, “to be dealt with according to law.”

Anri the eighth section provides that it shall be lawful for the Society for the Reformation of Juvenile Delinquents in said city to apply to the Supreme Court for an injunction to restrain any person from opening any theater, circus or building which he shall open or advertise to open until he shall have' complied with the regulations of the act in obtaining such license, which injunction may be allowed, upon a complaint, to be in the name of said society.

The chief object of this act is to provide for the regulation of places of amusement in the city of New York by placing them under the control of the public authorities, through a system of licenses to be granted by the mayor, on the payment of a fixed fee, subject to revocation in summary proceedings before a judge or justice of a court of record and sanctioned and enforced by pains and penalties, both civil and criminal, and by the restraints of an injunction to prevent the opening of such places without license.

There is nothing%new in the system of regulating such places by license. In all its essential features it has been applied by special statutes to the city of New York for upward of forty-five years (Laws of 1829, chap. 302, § 4; Laws of 1839, chap. 13; Laws of 1862, chap. 281). And the same or similar authority has been conferred upon the municipal authorities of the incorporated cities and villages of the State by their respective charters, and upon the authorities of the several towns of the State by general laws reaching back to the earliest history of its legislation. Laws of this character are sustainable upon two grounds. First, as a legitimate exercise of the taxing power of the State. Providence Bank v. Billings, 4 Pet. 514; Nathan v. Louisiana, 8 How. U. S. 73; License Tax Cases, 5 Wall. 462, 475; Savings Bank Cases, 6 id. 611; Lunt's Case, 6 Greenleaf, 412; Ingersoll v. Skinner, 1 Den. 540; People v. Coleman, 4 Cal. 46; Raguet v. Wade, 4 Ohio, 107; State v. Stephens, 4 Texas, 137; Germania v. State, 7 Md. 1; State v. Bock, 9 Texas, 369; Boston v. Shaffer, 9 Pick. 415; City of New Orleans v. North, 12 La. An. 205; Fire Department of N. Y. v. Noble, 3 E. D. Smith, 452; People v. Lawrence, 41 N. Y. 137.

Second, as a part of the police regulations of the State. Fire Department v. Noble, 3 E. D. Smith, 452; Metro. Board of Excise v. Barrie, 34 N. Y. 657; License Cases, 5 How. U. S. 589; Cooley v. Board of Wardens, 12 id. 299; State v. Allmond, 2 Houst. 612; [314]*314Commonwealth v. Stodder, 2 Cush. 562; Nightingale’s Case, 11 Pick. 168; Village of Buffalo v. Webster, 10 Wend. 100; Bush v. Seabury, 8 Johns. 418; Slaughter House Cases, 16 Wall. 62; Commonwealth v. Colton, 8 Gray, 488; Tanner v. Village of Albin, 5 Hill, 121.

It will be difficult to find any authority in which the power of such regulation and restraint by license has been denied to the State or Federal legislature on constitutional grounds when exercised within their appropriate jurisdictions.

In our judgment the constitutionality of the act of 1872 does not at all depend upon the validity of the disposition of the fees to be received by the mayor. That is a question which legitimately arises after the license fee shall have been paid to him by the person taking out the license, and in which such person has ho greater interest than any other citizen who is a member of the municipal corporation. It is a question properly between the city and the Society for the Reformation of Juvenile Delinquents, and if it be true that the legislature has not power to provide that the mayor shall pay over such fee to the treasurer of that 'society pursuant to the directions of the act of 1872, the consequence is that it is his duty to refrain from doing so, and to pay them into the city treasury. In either case the obligation to take the license before opening the theater or other exhibition, and to pay to the mayor the prescribed fee, remains in perfect vigor.

Nor is this affected by the fact that authority is given to the society, etc., to commence an action in its own name to restrain the opening of exhibitions without license. That is a power which may be conferred by the legislature on any citizen or person as a means of more stringently enforcing its laws of prohibition. And the samé thing is true of the provision which authorizes the society to institute suits at law in the name of the people of the State to recover penalties for violation of the law.

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Related

Providence Bank v. Billings
29 U.S. 514 (Supreme Court, 1830)
License Tax Cases
72 U.S. 462 (Supreme Court, 1867)
Town of Guilford v. . the Supervisors of Chenango County
13 N.Y. 143 (New York Court of Appeals, 1855)
Metropolitan Board of Excise v. . Barrie
34 N.Y. 657 (New York Court of Appeals, 1866)
The People v. . Pinckney
32 N.Y. 377 (New York Court of Appeals, 1865)
Robinson v. Perry
4 Tex. 137 (Texas Supreme Court, 1849)
State v. Bock
9 Tex. 369 (Texas Supreme Court, 1853)
People v. Coleman
4 Cal. 46 (California Supreme Court, 1854)
Bush v. Seabury
8 Johns. 418 (New York Supreme Court, 1811)
People ex rel. Crowell v. Lawrence
41 N.Y. 137 (New York Court of Appeals, 1869)
Thomas v. Leland
24 Wend. 65 (New York Supreme Court, 1840)
Ingersoll v. Skinner
1 Denio 540 (Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors, 1845)
Germania v. State
7 Md. 1 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1854)

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Bluebook (online)
5 Thomp. & Cook 310, 10 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallack-v-mayor-of-new-york-nysupct-1875.