155 N.Y.S. 590 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1915
.Application pendente lite, to restrain the defendant commissioner of licenses of the city of New York from interfering in any manner with • the exhibition of a motion picture, entitled ‘ ‘ The Frank Case,” in the city of New York or any other city or place. The plaintiffs herein are producers of a motion picture film which they have called “ The Frank Case.” This film purports to portray the principal events of the life of one Leo M. Frank, including his trial on the charge of murder in the state of Georgia. It was completed and ready for exhibition while the case on appeal of Frank was pending in the Supreme Court of the United States. Under the circumstances, the national board of censorship, to whom the film had been submitted, unanimously refused to approve it, and the commissioner of licenses of the city of New York, for the same reason, denied its production in the moving picture theaters in the city of New York. Under chapter 475 of the Laws of 1914, the legislature has vested in the commissioner of licenses discretionary power over theaters and the exhibitions therein. This section reads as follows: ‘ ‘ The commissioner of licenses shall have cognizance and control of the granting, issuing, transferring, renewing, revoking, suspending and canceling (1) Of all licenses and permits now issued by the mayor pursuant to the code of or
Motion denied.