189 N.Y. 187 | NY | 1907
Lead Opinion
On the 17th day of April, 1903, the board of health of the department of health of the city of New York issued to the relator, George Lodes, six permits to sell and deliver milk from wagons and from his store in the borough of Brooklyn, which permits were revoked by the board of health, without notice to him, on the 17th day of January, 1906. Thereupon the relator applied for a peremptory writ of mandamus to compel the board of health to rescind its action in revoking the permits, alleging that there was no public necessity for the revocation of the permits; that the action of the board was arbitrary and unreasonable, tyrannical and oppressive in the extreme, and beyond the power and authority conferred upon it by law. On the hearing of such application the board of health presented affidavits showing that the relator, his wife and the drivers of his wagons had been four times convicted of selling, or offering for sale, adulterated milk, and that their action in revoking his permits was based upon such repeated violations of the law, and that by reason thereof they deemed him an unfit person to traffic in milk. The Special Term granted the peremptory writ *190 prayed for, and the affirmance of that order by the Appellate Division is now brought up for review.
The Sanitary Code of the city of New York, which was continued in force by the charter of the city (section 1172, chapter 466, Laws of 1901), provides: "Section 56. No milk shall be received, held, kept, offered for sale or delivered in the city of New York without a permit, in writing, from the board of health and subject to the conditions thereof."
The provisions of the Sanitary Code, alluded to, have been held to be reasonable and a valid exercise of the police powers, and violative of no provision of the Constitution, either State or Federal. (People ex rel. Lieberman v. Vandecarr,
The only question remaining to be disposed of is as to whether the relator was entitled to notice and a hearing by the board of health before revoking his permits. The answer to this question may depend upon the soundness of the relator's contention that the permits issued to him were property, of which, under the Constitution, he cannot be deprived without due process of law. He maintains that he has established and built up a business of selling milk at his store and has a regular line of customers whom he supplies daily; that he has established a milk route over which his wagons are sent daily distributing milk to the inhabitants of the city in that locality, and that this established business has become property, of which he cannot be deprived. But the good will of his business, so established, must not be confounded with the permits granted to him to engage in that business. He was never licensed to sell impure and adulterated milk, and after he had obtained his permits to sell and undertook the securing of customers, he knew that he was engaging in a business *191
which must be conducted under the supervision of the board of health of the city subject to the police powers of the state, and that such permits were subject to revocation. He knew that the permits contained no contract between the state, or the board of health, and himself, giving him any vested right to continue the business, and that it would become the duty of the board to revoke his license, in case he violated the statute, or the conditions under which it was granted. Milk is an article of food extensively used by our inhabitants and is chiefly relied upon to support the lives of infant children. If impure or adulterated, or polluted with germs of dangerous or infectious diseases, its use becomes highly dangerous, and the health and welfare of the public demand speedy and, in some cases, instant prevention of its distribution to the people. While it is the duty of the board of health to watch and, through its inspectors, detect violations of the statute and the conditions imposed by it, it has been given no judicial power to hear, try and determine such violations, but must act upon the information obtained by it through its own channels of inquiry. In Cooley's Constitutional Limitations (7th ed. p. 887) it is said that "Dealers may also be compelled to take out a license, and the license may be refused to a person of bad reputation, or be taken away from a party detected in dishonest practices." In Crowley v. Christensen
(
Matter of Lyman (
We incline to the view that the authorities to which reference has been made are conclusive upon the subject; and, *193
although the relator had established a business and secured customers under the permits granted to him, the permit itself cannot be treated as property in any legal or constitutional sense, but was a mere license revokable by the power that was authorized to issue it. The statute, as we have seen, has given the board of health no power to hear, try or determine cases. Its duties are, therefore, not judicial but executive or administrative, and at times must be exercised summarily, as was said in Metropolitan Board of Health v. Heister (
The powers of the members of the board of health being administrative merely, they can issue or revoke permits to sell milk in the exercise of their best judgment, upon or withoutnotice, based upon such information as they may obtain through their own agencies, and their action is not subject to review either by appeal or by certiorari. (Child v. Bemus,
It is now contended, however, that the members of the board of health are judicial officers and act as such by virtue *195
of the provisions of section 1173 of the Greater New York charter. (Vol. 3, Laws of 1901, chap. 466.) It will be necessary to consider the whole section, for we think the subsequent provisions indicate the intention and purpose of the former. It is as follows: "The actions, proceedings, authority, and orders of said board of health shall at all times be regarded as intheir nature judicial, and be treated as prima facie just and legal. All meetings of said board shall in every suit and proceeding be taken to have been duly called and regularly held, and all orders and proceedings to have been duly authorized, unless the contrary be proved. All courts shall take judicial notice of the seal of said board and of the signature of its secretary and chief clerk." Were these provisions intended to change the character of the board of health from administrative to judicial officers? We think not. They do not state that the board shall act judicially or that its orders shall be regarded and treated as the orders of a judge or court, but merely that they shall be regarded in their nature judicial, and that they shall be treated as prima facie just and legal, and that all orders and proceedings have been duly authorized. To our minds it is quite apparent that the legislative purpose and intent was to invest the orders and proceedings of the board of health with the presumption that they were duly authorized and were just and legal, and that it was not intended to change the members of the board from administrative to judicial officers. These provisions have already been the subject of judicial consideration, with a result that accords with our views. In the case of Golden v.Health Department of City of N.Y. (
City of Buffalo v. Chadeayne (
The order should be reversed and the application for a mandamus denied, with costs in all courts, unless the relator within twenty days elects to demand an alternative writ, in which case the proceedings should be remitted to the Special Term, and the costs should abide the final award of costs. *197
Dissenting Opinion
If the order revoking the license of the relator was an administrative act, no notice to him was required, but if it was an act done in the exercise of judicial power, notice and an opportunity to be heard were essential before he could be deprived of the right to carry on a lawful business.
The Greater New York charter provides that: "The actions, proceedings, authority and orders of said board of health shall be at all times regarded as in their nature judicial and be treated as prima facie just and legal." (L. 1901, ch. 466, § 1173.)
While it is difficult to see how all acts of the board of health can be "in their nature judicial," the legislature had the right to provide that they should be so regarded, and in view of its express command I fail to see how we can hold that the order of revocation was an administrative act. Notice was given in the only case involving the power to revoke that has been before us prior to the one now under consideration. (Metropolitan Milk andCream Co. v. City of New York,
Moreover, a license under the police power, as distinguished from the taxing power, involves the right to regulate but not to prohibit, and it cannot be exercised capriciously or arbitrarily. As the right to revoke is not expressly conferred, but is implied from the right to grant, the rule against arbitrary or capricious action applies with equal force to the revocation of licenses. One of the most effective safeguards against the arbitrary acts of public officials is an opportunity to be heard. The revocation of the respondent's license *198 involved the destruction of his business which was useful, legitimate and profitable. Since the power to revoke is not expressly given, but is implied from the power to grant, I think the law also implies that notice must be given before an act can be done which involves such serious loss to the licensee. This involves the conclusion that the revocation of such a license as the one in question is in its essence judicial, independent of the statutory requirement that it shall be so regarded. I vote to affirm.
CULLEN, Ch. J., O'BRIEN, EDWARD T. BARTLETT, HISCOCK and CHASE, JJ., concur with HAIGHT, J.; VANN, J., reads dissenting opinion.
Order reversed, etc.