190 Misc. 244 | Utica City Court | 1947
This is a motion prior to trial to dismiss an information charging defendant with violating subdivision a of section 21 of Ordinance No. 596 of 1945, as amended by Ordinance No. 335 of 1946 of the City of Utica, commonly known as the Taxicab Ordinance. The information alleges that defendant solicited a passenger for his taxicab within the Union Station and at a point more than ten feet from his cab.
Subdivision a of section 21 of the Ordinance provides: “ No taxicab driver shall solicit passengers while cruising, nor shall any taxicab driver leave his cab on any stand for the purpose of soliciting except at the New York Central Railroad Station where a driver may solicit 10 ft. from his car.”
The defendant maintains and the People concede for the purpose of this argument that defendant was an employee of the Black & White Taxi Company, which has a contract with the New York Central Railroad Company granting to it and its employees an exclusive privilege to solicit passengers for its cabs. The defendant also maintains that said solicitation occurred on private property and that the Black & White Taxi Company had permission in accordance with subdivision b of section 21 of the Taxicab Ordinance to solicit on the private property of the railroad. It is conceded by defendant however that such written permission was not filed with the Commissioner of Public Safety until several days after the arrest and several days before the reargument of the motion.
Defendant contends, as a matter of law, that the New York Central Railroad Company has a right to grant an exclusive franchise to the Black & White Taxi Company; that insofar as subdivision a of section 21 of the Ordinance prohibits drivers from soliciting passengers more than ten feet from their cabs, it does not apply to defendant who was soliciting passengers on private property with permission of the owner; and that if such section does apply to defendant, it is unconstitutional in that it deprives a person of private property or a property right without due process of law.
Counsel for the People argues that the ordinance does not interfere with private property or a property right because subdivision b of section 21 of the Ordinance provides for solicitation on private property provided written permission is filed with the Commissioner of Public Safety.
Counsel who appears as amicus curiae for a number of the independent taxi owners argues that the ordinance should be equally applicable to all or to none; that unless such ordinance
While the power of this court “ to declare a law unconstitutionalshould be exercised cautiously * * * and avoided if possible * * * ” (Garcia v. Pan American Airways, 183 Misc. 258, 259-260), the question of the constitutionality of subdivision a of section 21 of the Ordinance has been, squarely presented to this court for decision and if it appears clearly and without the slightest doubt that the section is unconstitutional, then it is our duty to so declare.
Because of the importance of this decision, a careful study of the councilmanic and judicial history of the problem of taxicabs at the Union Station should be made. Contrary to popular belief it is not a recent problem.
‘ The New York Central Railroad Station known as the “ Union Station ” is without question private property owned and controlled by the New York Central Railroad Company. It has á frontage on Main Street of 200 feet; the sidewalk' in front of the Union Station on Main Street is 15 feet in width. On the west side of the Union Station is a public alley 25 feet in'width with a 15-foot concrete sidewalk on the westerly side of the station. (Wurz v. Miller, Sup. Ct., Oneida Co., Dec. 20, 1932, by Dowling, J.)
In 1922, the Common Council enacted a so-called “ taxicab ” ordinance, section 7 of which established “ public ” stands in the city and provided that the stand at the Union Station should not be occupied by more than five cabs at a time, said stand to be located on Main Street; and no driver should solicit passengers at any point more than ten feet away from hi's vehicle. (Ordinance No. 328 of 1922.)
On July 25, 1928, the New York Central Railroad Company granted to one Achille Perretta the exclusive privilege of operating taxicabs at the Union Station. As Mr. Justice Dowling stated in his opinion: “ Perretta’s lease does not allocate any precise place for the standing of his taxicabs. Since the inception of his lease, he had parked them in front of the westerly entrance to said Station, adjacent to the sidewalk. His servants have the exclusive right to solicit fares in the Station. The privilege given to Perretta by the .Central had been enjoyed by other taxicab operators for "many years before 1928.”
' The so-called independent taxicab operators were riot allowed to solicit in the. Union Station but apparently enjoyad thé privilege of soliciting fares from the public in front of thé Btátion.’ '''
- In a litigation involving one of the independent operators as plaintiff and the Commissioner of Public Safety as defendant, Don. J. B. M. Stevens, Official Referee of the Supreme Court, held (Oct. 22, 1931) that the Ordinance of 1931 was unconstitutional.
On February 19, 1932, the Common Council adopted an ordinance (Ordinance No. 328 of 1922, as amd.) by which a taxicab stand was authorized at the Union Station to “be located on the easterly side of said Union Station, on the westerly side of First Street, northerly on Main St.” It was further provided that no driver should “ solicit passengers at any point more than .ten feet away from his vehicle. ’ ’ Mr. Justice Dowling in his opinion remarks that, ‘ ‘ From the center of the westerly door on the south side of the Station,' to the southeast corner thereof, is 137 ft. The effect of this provision was to compel taxi drivers to solicit fares at a distance of 127 ft. ’ ’.
Several of the independent operators were arrested in 1932 and' arraigned in this court charged with violating the ordinance and one of them, Joseph Wurz, commenced an action against the Commissioner of Public Safety (Wurz v. Miller, supra). Mr. Justice Dowling dismissed the complaint, holding that the ordinance was reasonable and valid.
On December 5, 1945, the Common Council adopted the ordinance which is here questioned.
Defendant’s first contention that the New York Central Railroad Company has a right to. grant an exclusive franchise to the Black & White Taxi Company is unquestionably the law. The dominion which a railroad company has over its depot grounds is no less complete or exclusive than that which any owner of property has over his own property. In Barney v. Oyster Bay & Huntington Steamboat Co. (67 N. Y. 301 [1876]) the highest court of the State stated (p. 303, per Andrews, J.): “ * * * a carrier may establish, for the convenience of pas
This proposition of law found favor in the case of Brown v. New York Central & H. R. R. R. Co. (75 Hun 355, appeal dismissed 151 N. Y. 674 [1894]) in which the General Term, Fifth Department, ruled on the case where the defendant railroad company had a written agreement with the Miller & Brundage Coach Company where for a valuable consideration it gave that company the exclusive right to have its agents upon its trains to solicit business and also to drive its carriages into its property to receive passengers. Plaintiff in that case was a so-called “ independent ” operator who placed his carriages on the street near the depot and solicited passengers. Defendant railroad company refused to allow plaintiff to go upon its trains or to enter the yard reserved for Miller & Brundage and plaintiff sought an injunction on the ground that such preference violated section 54 of the Railroad Law. The court denied the injunction and stated (pp. 360, 362)': “ If the plaintiff be right in his contention, it logically follows that any one wishing to engage in the business of selling papers, pamphlets, stationery, etc., has the right, if he can find an unoccupied corner in a railroad depot, to insist upon occupying it for his business, if any other person shall be occupying a place in said depot for a like business by permission of the company. * * * The contract between the defendant and the Miller & Brundage Company is not against public policy. ’ ’
Passing to the second contention of defendant that the City of Utica may not enact legislation which interferes with the lawful right of the New York Central Railroad Company and the Black & White Taxi Company to have such an exclusive arrangement, it appears that defendant’s contention is sound in law.
Defendant is a licensed cab driver who was in fact soliciting passengers more than ten feet from his cab in apparent violation of the ordinance.
In the case of Cosgrove v. City Council of Augusta (103 Ga. 835) the Supreme Court of Georgia held that an ordinance which absolutely prohibited hackmen and cabmen from entering, with the owner's consent, a passenger depot to solicit customers was ,ydid.
The motion to dismiss the information is granted and the defendant is discharged.