This is an appeal from an interlocutory judgment overruling a demurrer to a complaint. The action is brought to abate an alleged public nuisance. The plaintiff pleads that he is a resident and taxpayer of the borough of Manhattan in the city of New York and “a public hackman, duly licensed as such by the Bureau of Licenses of the City of New York, and engaged, generally, in the transaction of such business throughout the several boroughs of the City of New York.” He complains that the defendant maintains a number of hack stands at various places in the boroughs of Manhattan and Brooklyn for the use of its hacks or cabs, which it offers to public hire .generally.
• The necessity of alleging some special injury or damage1 to enable the plaintiff to maintain an action in equity to abate a public nuisance is conceded by the plaintiff, but he contends that the allegation of his' complaint, above quoted, sets forth' such injury ahd damage sufficiently. In this view the learned court at Special Term agreed and upheld the complaint on its expressed opinion that the allegations in the complaint that the defendant was doing a general hacking business without a license therefor, in violation of the general ordinances of the city, stated a cause of action in equity for injunctive relief in favor of the plaintiff, who has a license to do a public hacking business. . No precedent is cited by counsel, nor has any been found after much labor, in which a similar or fairly analogous
The allegation in the complaint upon which the plaintiff must rest his right to maintain this action is that the defendant, without a license to do so, does a general hacking business in competition with the plaintiff who has a right to do so. If this circumstance is enough to give the plaintiff a standing in a court of equity to maintain an action for injunctive relief, there ought to be found some precedent which may serve as an authority on this proposition. None is to be found. If it be a matter of first impression, then the principles governing actions to abate nuisances should not be stretched to cover it. The city has ample power to enforce its ordinances, and there is no necessity of creating a right of action in favor of a private suitor for his own purposes. The learned court at Special Term was of opinion that Odell v. Bretney (62 App. Div. 595) is an authority in favor of the maintenance of this action. In that case the actual question was whether a public hackman under a general license, and against the objection of the owner of the abutting premises, could use as a public hack stand a portion of a street which, with the consent of the abutting owner, had been set apart for a special hack stand for the exclusive use of another. There is some general- discussion in the opinion in that case which is not controlling except upon its own facts. What the court actually held was that the public hackman could not occupy the street against the objection of the abutting owner. (See Odell v. Bretney, 93 App. Div. 607.)
Jenks, P. J., Hirschberg and Rich, JJ., concurred; Thomas, J., dissented. •
Interlocutory judgment reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and demurrer sustained, with thirty dollars costs, with leave to plaintiff to serve an amended complaint in twenty days on payment of costs and disbursements.