104 Misc. 404 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1918
This action is by the 'Star Company, publisher of the New York American and the New York Evening Journal, against the mayor, aldermen and police commissioner of the city of Mount Vernon to permanently enjoin the defendants from enforcing an ordinance passed by the aldermen defendants and approved by the mayor defendant on or about the 21st day of August, 1918, entitled “An Ordinance of the City of Mount Vernon for the protection of the inhab
“ Chapter XLI-M. An ordinance of the City of Mount Vernon for the protection of the inhabitants in their persons and property and to regulate the use of public streets and highways by those engaged in the business of selling and distributing newspapers, magazines, etc.
“ Section 1. It shall be unlawful within the City of Mount Vernon for any person, firm, corporation or association to sell, circulate or distribute, or cause to be sold, circulated or distributed, any newspaper or publication without first having obtained a license therefor, granted and issued as hereinafter provided, upon a statement in writing filed with the city clerk by the applicant for the license. The violation of any pro- ’ vision of this section shall be a misdemeanor, punishable by a fine not exceeding one hundred (100) dollars,
“ § 2. Upon the filing of the statement mentioned in the foregoing section the common council will grant to the applicant a license in accordance therewith under the following restrictions and limitations, to wit: Licenses, when granted by the common council, shall be issued by the city clerk. All licenses granted hereunder shall" be valid until December 31 next ensuing the date of issuance, when they shall expire unless renewed upon a new application filed withiri two months prior to their date of expiration, or unless previously revoked by the common council. All licenses issued under this ordinance may be revoked by the common council at any time without notice to the holder thereof.
“ § 3. A license granted hereunder shall include the bona fide employees of any such person, firm, corporation or association to whom such a license has been issued, provided the holder of such license shall have registered such employee with the chief of police. Any such employee not registered shall be deemed a person without a license for the purposes of this ordinance, and it shall be the duty of the holder of a license to register such employee as herein provided with the chief of police within twenty-four hours after the employment of such employee. No person of bad repute shall be employed to sell or distribute newspapers or other publications by the holder of such a license. The holder of such a license shall forthwith discharge such employee from such service when notified by the chief of police that such employee is a person of bad repute. Any conviction for a criminal offense or violation of a city ordinance, or having led a life of apparent idleness for a period
“ § 4. No person, firm, corporation or association having received a license as herein provided shall within the City of Mount Vernon sell, circulate or distribute, or cause to be sold, circulated or distributed, any newspaper or publication other than those enumerated in said license. The violation of any provision of this .section shall be a misdemeanor, punishable by a fine not exceeding one hundred (100) dollars, or by imprisonment in the county penitentiary for a period not exceeding three months, or by both such fine and imprisonment.
“ § 5. The common council shall, from time to time, approve the blank form to be used by applicants for licenses to be granted hereunder and may likewise, from time to time, prescribe additional rules and regulations which shall be observed by the holders of such licenses and their employees.
“ § 6. The common council may withhold the granting to any applicant of a license for the distribution and sale of newspapers and other publications to be sold upon the streets and highways, whenever it appears to the common council that the number of such licenses to be issued should be limited; and the common council may withhold altogether the granting of such licenses for the distribution and sale of news
“ § 7. This ordinance shall take effect immediately after the due publication thereof; provided, however, that any person, firm, corporation or association engaged in the business of selling and distributing newspapers and other publications in the City of Mount Vernon on the 2'lst day of August, 1918, shall have to and until the 1st day of September, 1918, in which to obtain such licenses from the common council. The failure or refusal of the common council to grant any license on or before September 5, 1918, shall constitute no protection to the. application therefor against a prosecution for a violation of any of the provisions of this ordinance.”
It is the contention of the plaintiff that this last named resolution is invalid and unconstitutional in that it seeks to do by indirection that which the court declared could not be done directly under the ordinance of May fourteenth and that therefore it likewise contravenes section 8, article 1, of the Constitution of the state of New York, and in addition thereto it is unconstitutional in that it is a violation of the provisions of section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. Applying the test of what may be done under this ordinance it will be noted that the ordinance makes it unlawful for anyone to sell or distribute newspapers or other publications in Mount Vernon without having taken out a license to do so; that no person can obtain such license from the common council, except upon a statement in writing filed with the city clerk by the applicant for the license, the form of which statement shall be approved from time to time by the common council; that the common council may refuse to grant any such license for the distribution and sale of newspapers and
Motion granted, with costs.
See 103 Misc. Rep. 631.— [Repr.