30 N.Y.S. 375 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1894
Though no briefs were submitted, this case is by no means plain. The petitioner applied to the mayor of the city of Brooklyn to license a certain building in the thirty-first ward (formerly the town of Gravesend) for the purpose of public exhibitions and contests in athletic games, including rowing, bicycling, club swinging, fencing, wrestling, boxing, and was refused. The license applied for concededly comes under the head of “places of public amusement,” both in the charter and the ordinances of the city of Brooklyn. The charter act (Chap. 583, Laws 1888, § 12, tit. 2) provides in so many words that the common council shall have power within the said city to make ordinances not inconsistent with the laws and Constitution of this state or of the United States for certain enumerated purposes, one of them being this (subd. 8): “ To prohibit or regulate and license all places of public amusement.” This language •— to prohibit or regulate and license—is broad, but the legislature did not intend thereby to confer power upon the common council to prohibit, or authorize the prohibition of, all places of public amusement. The true construction is that it meant to confer power to regulate and license places of public amusement, and as incidental thereto to curtail their number to the extent of refusing licenses to places which, used for such a purpose, would interfere with the general welfare, peace and order; and in this respect the legislature conferred an absolute discretion. The regulation and control of public amusements come within what we call the police power of the legislature, so closely do they concern social order; and it has been decided in this state that the legislature may confer upon the mayor of a city absolute discretion in the licensing of auctioneers or places of public amusement in respect of the persons or places to be licensed. People ex rel. Schwab v. Grant, 126 N. Y. 473; People ex rel. Worth v. Grant, 58 Hun, 455; People ex rel. Dorr v. Thacher, 42 id. 349. It being, therefore, true that the legislature did by the provision already cited validly confer upon the common council of Brooklyn the power to pass ordinances to regulate and license, and in
The motion is granted.