165 N.Y. 517 | NY | 1901
This action was brought to restrain the defendant from killing, disposing of or interfering with the plaintiff's dogs, he having refused to pay the license fee prescribed by chapter 448, Laws of 1896, entitled "An act for the prevention of cruelty to animals and empowering certain societies for the prevention of cruelty to animals to do certain things." The defendant was formed by the consolidation of a society for the prevention of cruelty to children with one for the prevention of cruelty to animals and was vested with all the powers of each association. (Chap. 292, Laws of 1894.) The defendant in its answer pleaded its corporate organization and its power and authority under the statute of 1896, and upon the trial admitted its intent to seize the plaintiff's dogs for non-payment of license fees. The sole question involved in the case is the constitutionality of the provisions of this statute. No objection has been made to the mode of procedure adopted, nor to the plaintiff's right to maintain the action and we shall raise none. The court at Special Term held the statute valid and rendered judgment for the defendant. The Appellate Division reversed the judgment below and granted a new trial, and from the order of reversal the defendant has appealed to this court.
The statute of 1896 provides that every person who owns or harbors dogs within the limits of any city having a specified population, in which there exists, or may thereafter exist, an incorporated society for the prevention of cruelty to animals, shall procure a yearly license for each animal and pay the sum of one dollar therefor to such society. Dogs not licensed, according to the provisions of the act, shall be seized and, if not redeemed within forty-eight hours, destroyed or otherwise disposed of at the discretion of the society. The license fees are to be used by the society towards defraying the cost of carrying out the provisions of the statute and maintaining a shelter for lost, strayed or homeless animals, "and for its own purposes." The learned Appellate Division held this legislation void on two grounds: First, that the direction for the summary destruction or appropriation of the dog without notice *521
to the owner was taking the property of such owner without due process of law. Second, that the act assumed to vest in the defendant, a private corporation, the execution of certain police powers of the state, and, in effect, to constitute it a public officer. We are of opinion that the decision below cannot be upheld on either of these grounds. Under any circumstances, there is but a qualified property in dogs, cats and similar animals, and, in fact, there may be said to be no property in them as against the police power of the state. In Sentell v. NewOrleans C.R.R. Co. (
We think, however, that the statute is unconstitutional so far as it requires the owner of a dog to pay a license fee to the defendant for its own use. In People ex rel. Einsfeld v.Murray (
We are of further opinion that the statute, so far as it empowers the defendant to appropriate, harbor and keep dogs without paying any license fee, while every other citizen is obliged to pay such license fee, is the grant of an exclusive privilege and immunity forbidden by section 18, article III of the Constitution. The law for the incorporation of societies of the character of this defendant permits the incorporation of but one society in a county. Therefore, the defendant is the only person, natural or artificial, who can keep dogs *527 without paying a license. Doubtless the legislature might discriminate between different breeds of dogs and provide that certain breeds should not be harbored within the state, while others it could suffer to be kept. It might subject the keeping of dogs to restrictions which, by reason of their conditions, might in practice discriminate as to the right to keep dogs. If this classification was fairly adapted to the destruction of vicious dogs or dogs of a vicious breed, or to keeping dogs under such conditions as to prevent their endangering the persons or health of the members of the community, it would be a valid exercise of the police power and justifiable. But under the law before us no distinction is made between the breeds or individual characters of dogs, nor as to the manner in which dogs may be restrained and kept. The defendant can keep any dog it sees fit, and is not required to pay anything for the privilege. No one else in the community can keep a dog without paying a dollar a year for the privilege, to say nothing of the fact that he is compelled to pay that dollar to the defendant. We think this an exclusive privilege condemned by the Constitution.
The views we have expressed are not inconsistent with the recent decision in this court in People ex rel. State Bd.Charities v. New York Society for the Prevention of Cruelty toChildren (
The order granting a new trial should be affirmed and judgment absolute rendered for plaintiff on the stipulation, with costs.
PARKER, Ch. J., O'BRIEN, HAIGHT and WERNER, JJ., concur; GRAY, J., concurs on second ground stated in opinion LANDON, J., not sitting.
Ordered accordingly. *529