182 Misc. 462 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1944
On June 3, 1943, the Board of Estimate of the City of New York, by a vote of eleven to five, adopted a resolution approving a project submitted by Stnyvesant Town Corporation and a proposed form of contract for consummating that project, between the City of New York, on the one hand, and Stuyvesant Town Corporation (Stuyvesant) and Metropolitan Life Insurance Company (Metropolitan), on the other.
Under that contract, which was formally executed on August 4,1943, a rehabilitation or redevelopment project was embarked upon pursuant to article XVIII of the Constitution of the State of New York (adopted in 1938) and the Redevelopment Companies Law, passed pursuant thereto (L. 1942, ch. 845, as amd. by L. 1943, eh. 234). This project was to be undertaken in an area comprising some eighteen city blocks on the east side of Manhattan.
On the eve of the Board of Estimate hearing, in a proceeding entitled Matter of Murray v. LaGuardia (see infra), certain property owners in the proposed redevelopment area petitioned,
On June 4,1948, Mr. Justice Schbeiber at Special Term (180 Misc. 760) denied the petitioner’s application and on cross motion dismissed the petition in an opinion upholding the constitutionality of the law in question and the validity of the project proposed to be undertaken thereunder. On July 2, 1943, this ruling was affirmed without opinion by the Appellate Division, First Department, two Justices dissenting (266 App. Div. 912). On December 2,1943, the holding below was affirmed by the Court of Appeals by a vote of 4 to 2 (Matter of Murray v. LaGuardia, 291 N. Y. 320, certiorari denied 321 U. S. 771). In the comprehensive prevailing opinion of Judge Lewis, the history of the housing amendment to the Constitution, the provisions of the Redevelopment Companies Law, the objects sought to be accomplished thereby, the requirements and reciprocal obligations under the statute and the validity of the proposed project were carefully considered. A study of that opinion is essential to the consideration of the further questions presented on these motions.
In the meantime, after the decision at Special Term in the Murray case and after the contract was executed, the present action was commenced on August 16, 1943. It is a taxpayer’s action, under section 51 of the General Municipal Law, to secure (1) a declaratory judgment that the carrying out of the contract and certain acts performed and proposed to be performed thereunder were illegal and void, and (2) a permanent injunction restraining the performance of such acts as “ a threatened gross and illegal misuse of public funds and property.” in brief, the object of the present taxpayer’s action is to prevent the parties from proceeding under the contract and to annul the earlier determinations by various governmental agencies of approval of the proposed project.
On the argument before the Appellate Division and the Court of Appeals in the Murray case, the present plaintiff, together with others, presented briefs as amici curia. ■ The decision of the Court of Appeals having upheld the constitutionality of the Redevelopment Companies Law and sustained the validity thereunder of the rehabilitation project undertaken* the main basis of the present plaintiff’s complaint has been eliminated.
I hold that the decision of the Court of Appeals in the Murray case is not stare decisis of the foregoing three questions; there may be some doubt as to the first question, but it seems clear that the Court of Appeals did not pass upon the other two. The third ground of objection was not presented in any form to the Court of Appeals; it was not referred to in any of the briefs. While the first and second grounds were urged, for the most part in briefs of amici curice, presented to the Court of Appeals and answered by the defendants, they were matters, in large measure, extraneous to the record then before the court. They had not been litigated below and there is no indication in the opinion of Judge Lewis that they had been considered and passed upon by the court. The opinion was concerned almost
Let us proceed, then, to take up the three additional grounds for relief here urged.
1. The claim that the contract is illusory. It is clear that the contract imposes an absolute obligation upon the redevelopment company to construct the project in accordance with the plan.The obligation must be performed in any event within a reasonable time. However, should the Comptroller of the City of New York ascertain that materials and labor are available at prices not substantially higher than those prevailing on January 1, 1943, he may accelerate the time of performance by certifying that materials and labor are available at such prices. In other words, the redevelopment company is obligated to perform within a reasonable time or when the Comptroller makes the certification referred to, whichever time is earlier. The obligation on the part of Stuyvesant and Metropolitan to perform is by no means illusory. There is no escape from it. The plaintiff would have us believe that the comprehensive detailed contract, entered into after long negotiation and close scrutiny by various governmental agencies, was all “ sound and fury, signifying nothing ” so far as the companies who are obliges are concerned. A contract cannot be interpreted to reach any such absurd result. (Outlet Embroidery Co. v. Derwent Mills, 254 N. Y. 179; Wood v. Duff-Gordon, 222 N. Y. 88.)
2. The claim that certain specific provisions of the New York City Charter (1938) and of the Administrative Code of the City of New York (L. 1937, ch. 929, as amd.) were viblated when the contract was approved and entered into. This raises the difficult question of statutory construction as to when a law general in its application supersedes an earlier special law applicable to one city or locality. There are usually persuasive arguments on both sides. Concretely, it is urged (a) that there was a noncompliance with section 384 of chapter 15 of the Charter, and with section 384-10.0 of the Administrative Code, providing in substance that the sale or lease of City property shall be at public auction or by sealed bids after advertisement and after appraisal by three disinterested appraisers, but only
The only question that is at all fairly debatable is whether a three-fourths vote by the Board of Estimate was required for the approval of the rehabilitation project because public streets of the City were involved in the transaction (a three-fourths vote would require twelve votes; the project was approved, as already stated, by eleven votes in the Board of Estimate). The contention of the plaintiff in this respect cannot he sustained. The contract here involved does not call for the granting of any franchise. Moreover, the Redevelopment Companies Law is one of state-wide application. It was designed “ to promote cooperation between municipal government and private capital to the end that substandard, insanitary areas in our urban communities may be rehabilitated ” (Matter of Murray v. LaGuardia, 291 N. Y. 320, 332, supra).
Section 20 of the statute (L. 1942, ch. 845; L. 1943, ch. 234, expressly provides for street areas included in the plan of a project: “ A local legislative body, upon payment therefor or upon exchange for other lands, may convey to any redevelopment company land in any street or public place which is duly closed or discontinued pursuant to the plan of a project.”
Section 15 of the law (L. 1942, ch. 845; L. 1943, ch. 234) states that where the plan receives the unqualified approval of the City Planning Commission, “ approval thereof by the local legislative body may he by resolution adopted by a majority of the whole number of votes authorized to be cast by all of the members thereof ”, otherwise approval shall be “ by a three-fourths vote of the whole number of votes authorized to be cast by all of the members thereof ”. The City Planning Commission issued the required certificate of approval and by express terms of the statute only a majority vote of the Board of Estimate was required, .
This question is not properly before the court at the present time. All that the complaint alleges is that it is the intention of the defendants, to the knowledge of the City, to discriminate against Negroes. From the affidavits submitted on the application for a temporary injunction it clearly appears that neither the directors of Stuyvesant nor the directors of Metropolitan have thus far adopted any renting policy and that they will have no occasion to do so until the project approaches completion, an event which cannot occur for several years to come. Mr. Ecker, the President of Stuyvesant and the Chairman of the Board of Metropolitan, and with his approval the Director of Housing Projects of the Metropolitan, did make statements to the effect that it was not the present intention to make provision for Negro families in the new housing project, which was “ planned ” to accommodate the type of tenants “ predominantly resident in that section and the surrounding area of the city.”' Mr. Ecker states, however, that he was expressing his present personal opinion and that in any event the directors had taken no position in the matter.
A court of equity will not act in anticipation of possible future controvérsies, which may never take place. A temporary injunction is granted only when the menace is imminent, when the rights of a plaintiff are being presently threatened so that irreparable injury will result unless prompt, immediate relief is granted. Clearly there is no basis for a temporary injunction in this case and that application is denied.
Taxpayers’ actions in this State have been afforded a very broad scope. While it is not necessary now to decide the point, there is doubt as to whether even at the proper time a taxpayer’s suit would be appropriate to raise the constitutional question of denial of equal protection of the law. In McCabe v. A., T. & S. F. Ry. Co. (235 U. S. 151, 161, 162), it was held that “ the essence of the constitutional right is that it is a personal one.” “ The complainant cannot succeed,” said Mr. Justice Hughes, “ because someone else may be hurt. Nor does it make any difference that other persons, who may be injured, are persons of the same race or occupation. It is the fact, clearly established, of injury to the complainant — not to others — which justifies judicial intervention. ’ ’ In any event, whether it be by taxpayer’s suit, or by action on the part of individuals personally aggrieved, the time to seek judicial intervention with respect to any proposed discrimination has on the face of the complaint itself not yet arrived. The suggestion has been made that the present action by a taxpayer should be sustained because, at some future time, if the defendant companies find that they have been in error about the law and that they have not the powers of private management which they contend they possess, they may seek a rescission on the ground of mutual mistake of law (Civ. Prac. Act, § 112-f), and that in the meantime the City may have expended large sums to acquire some of the needed property by condemnation or have taken other action to its damage. Assuming that the complaint is
The motion for a temporary injunction is denied and the motions to dismiss the complaint are granted. Settle order.