19 N.Y.S. 676 | New York City Court | 1892
The appellants contracted with an owner to excavate a cellar, and to cart away the dirt. The respondent contends that by reason,of
We do not agree with the learned counsel for the corporation that the ordinance, before the amendment of March 30, 1891, prohibited- the carting of dirt from excavations across the sidewalks. If so construed, it would prevent a party from building upon his lot, and would deny the right to an abutting owner of driving his carriage from a stable. An ordinance must be given a reasonable interpretation. Duryee v. Mayor, etc., 96 N. Y. 477, 495. The ordinance does not contain any penalty for its violation, and the different charters have all provided that “in every by-law, ordinance, or regulation which the said common council may pass, it shall impose a penalty for the violation or nonperformance thereof.” Section 14, tit. 2, c. 583, Laws 1888; section 15, tit. 2, c. 863, Laws 1873; section 16, tit. 2, c. 384, Laws 1854. It would seem clear that the penalty must be included in the ordinance by referring. to sections 15 and 16 of title 2 of the revised charter, (chapter-583,Laws of 1888.) That an ordinance may not be inoperative, it is necessary that there be a penalty for its violation. Dill. Mun. Corp. § 270. The charter provides that ordinances may be enforced by penalties, and when “a corporation is authorized to enforce its ordinances by fine or in any other prescribed manner, it is by implication precluded from adopting any other method of punishing disobedience to them. ” Hart v. Mayor, 9 Wend, 571,588; Kirk v. Nowill. 1 Term R. 124; Dill. Mun. Corp. §§273, 274; City of Utica v. Blakeslee, 46 How. Pr. 165; 17 Amer & Eng. Enc. Law, p. 260; Miles v. Chamberlain, 17 Wis. 446. We are of opinion that the common council had no power, under the charter, to pass the amendment to the ordinance in question. The city cannot enforce ordinances except by a penalty, and cannot require a party to-deposit a sum of money as security that he will not do an act which can only be prevented by an ordinance in which is contained a penalty for its violation.. The common council could pass an ordinance under which a contractor might be compelled to clean up any dirt in the streets which has dropped from his carts, and could provide a fixed and definite penalty for failure on his part so to do. It would be necessary for the common council to have special authority from the legislature to pass the ordinance now under consideration. If it had such right under its general powers, then section 18 of title 15 of. the revised charter would not be necessary. That section provides that the' commissioner of city works may prescribe a license fee to be paid by plumb-: