110 N.Y.S. 210 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
Lead Opinion
The relief asked for in this case is that the defendant, who is the police commissioner of the city of Uew York, be enjoined from interfering with the exhibition óf the plaintiff on Sunday, and for such other and further relief as to the court may seem just. This demand for an injunction is based upon the fact that the plaintiff has for twenty-five years maintained an exhibition of “ heroic, religious, patriotic and historic scenes, in which the figures are elaborately costumed in the clothing appropriate to the age and personages represented. These figures are ordinarily made of wax, and they are of high artistic excellence and historic accuracy. * "x" “ And it has been also the custom in the past on Sunday to have a concert consisting of instrumental music, at which the orchestra played sacred music, the stage entertainment above mentioned being omitted.” The complaint alleges that plaintiff made inquiry of the defendant as to whether he considered plaintiff’s exhibition of wax figures and .curios a place of amusement which it was unlawful to open on Sunday; whether he proposed to use the process of the criminal law to close the same on that day by arresting the officers or employees of the plaintiff; and also whether in case this plaintiff omitted all music and all entertainment of every kind, but nevertheless opened its doors on Sunday, the eighth of December, or any Sunday thereafter, such arrest would be made by the order of the defendant; and that to all these questions the defendant .replied in the affirmative. Upon this complaint a temporary injunction was granted enjoining the defendant “ from interfering on Sunday with the plaintiff’s exhibition of paintings, statuary, wax figures, plastic groupings and curios, or with the opening thereof on Sunday for the admission of the public when such exhibition is unaccompanied with any entertainment of the stage;” and this injunction was continued by the Special Term during the pendency of the action. There was quite an elaborate opinion by the learned
It seems to me that the mere statement of the proposition involves the answer to it. I have expressed my views upon this question so frequently that it is hardly necessary to say more than to refer to the various cases in which they have been reported. (Kramer v. Police Department of New York, 53 N. Y. Super. Ct. 492; Stevens v. McAdoo, 112 App. Div. 458; Burns v. McAdoo, 113 id. .165, 173.) And see, also, the opinion of. Mr. Justice Clarke in the latter case, in which I concurred and my views are based upon what I understand to be tlie decision of the Court of Appeals in Davis v. American Society, etc. (75 N. Y. 362), and Delaney v. Flood (183 id. 323). In this latter case what the defendant, who was a police captain, was restrained from doing was stationing policemen outside of a place which had a liquor license and which the police suspected of being a disorderly house, to notify the customers who
It was asserted by the learned counsel for the respondent in his supplemental brief that Delaney v. Flood (supra; reported in this court at 105 App. Div. 612) was unanimously affirmed, two of the present justices of this court concurring, and when that statement was questioned on the argument that fact was confidently and emphatically reaffirmed. As a matter of fact the statement is without foundation. I was not a member of the court which affirmed that order nor had I anything to do with its decision.
It follows that the order appealed from must be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion denied, with ten dollars costs.
McLaughijn and Scott, JJ., concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
For the reasons stated in my opinion in Burns v. McAdoo (113 App. Div. 165) I concur.
Concurrence Opinion
The plaintiff in this case is conducting publicly every Sunday the same business that it conducts on week days and substantially in the same manner, charging fees for admission, which involves the employment of men on the Sabbath to perform similar duties to those regularly performed by them on secular days. It does not clearly appear that the plaintiff is not violating provisions of law enacted to secure a proper observance of the Sabbath, and it cannot fairly be said that the police in threatening to close the business on Sundays are acting arbitrarily. For the reasons expressed by me in Burns v. McAdoo (113 App. Div. 165) and in Devlin v. McAdoo (116 id. 224), I am of opinion that the temporary injunction order should not have been granted. I, therefore, concur in the reversal of the injunction order.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs.