159 N.Y.S. 751 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1916
The purpose of this proceeding is to test the validity of the provisions of section* 155 (Art. 11) of chapter 10 of the Code of Ordinances of the city of New York, in so far as the same require the installation of an oil separator or similar appliance, as a condition precedent to the right of the owner or proprietor óf a garage to obtain a permit which will enable him to conduct the garage business, for the petitioners pray that a mandamus issue requiring the appellants to pass upon their application for a garage permit irrespective of whether or not they have complied with the requirements of said ordinance. Subdivisions 32 and 33 of section 1 (Art, 1) of chapter 10 of the Code of Ordinances define private and public garages. Section 150 (Art. 11) of chapter 10 provides that no person shall store
“Oil separators.— 1. When required. No garage permit authorizing the storage of volatile inflammable oil shall be issued for any premises, storing more than 4 motor vehicles, which are not provided with an oil separator, trap or other similar apparatus attached to the house drain, for the purpose of preventing volatile inflammable oils from flowing into the sewer; provided, however, that the fire commissioner may exempt from the requirements of this section a garage draining into a short sewer line.
“2. Oil receptacle. The oil receptacle of an oil separator shall not exceed 50 gallons capacity, and shall be emptied as often as may be necessary to prevent the oil from overflowing; and such oils as are recovered from the separator shall be removed from the garage within 24 hours after being taken from the separator.
“3. Sewer connection. Each oil separator shall be connected to the house drain, and shall be so arranged as to separate all oils from the drainage of the garage.
“ 4. Waste oil. All oils spilled on the floor of a garage shall be removed by sponging or swabbing, and poured into the drain leading to the oil separator.”
Section 156 (Art. 11) of chapter 10 provides that no garage permit authorizing the storage of volatile inflammable oil shall be issued for any premises which are not equipped with an approved storage system as therein prescribed, and regulates the manner in which oil shall be delivered to the garage; and subdivision 3 thereof provides, among other things, that “No * * * oil separator * * * shall be installed in a garage unless it be of a type for which a certificate of approval shall have been issued by the fire commissioner. ” A violation of any of the provisions of these ordinances is punishable by fine or
The petitioners are copartners, conducting a general garage business on premises owned by them known as Nos. 528-530 Morris avenue, borough of The Bronx, New York, on which it is' alleged the garage was constructed in 1910, pursuant to plans approved by the fire commissioner of the city, who, it is also alleged, approved the storage tank for gasoline in said garage and all other appliances used therein. On the 10th day of January, 1915, the petitioners presented to and filed with the appellants an application in due form for a permit to conduct a public garage on said premises, and to keep thereon 275 gallons of gasoline, five barrels of lubricating' oil, one barrel of kerosene and seventy-five motor vehicles. It does not appear whether or not the petitioners had a prior permit, but they admit that they require a garage permit to authorize them to continue the business, and, therefore, it must be assumed either that they had no permit before or that the former permit expired. On the filing of the application with them, the appellants caused an inspection of the premises to be made, and it appears that the inspector inquired whether the petitioners had installed in their garage an oil separator, and ascertained that they had not. The fire commissioner thereafter notified the petitioners that they would be required to install and use certain additional appliances, and among others an oil separator. It appears that the fire commissioner has approved nine different styles of oil separators which are evidently purchasable in the market, and that 475 oil separators of types so approved are in use in garages in the city of New York. The petitioners failed and refused to install an oil separator, but complied with all other requirements of the fire commissioner. They allege that their garage is carefully operated under the supervision and control of one who holds a certificate of fitness therefor issued by the fire commissioner of the city of New York, and that their application for a permit has been denied solely on the ground that they have failed to install and attach to the house drain an oil separator, trap or other similar apparatus approved by the fire commissioner of the city of New York, as required by said section
The order directs that an alternative writ issue requiring the appellants to pass upon the application and to approve it and issue a garage permit thereon “ irrespective ” of whether an oil separator, trap or similar apparatus has been installed in their garage, as required by said section 155 of chapter 10 of the Code
The petitioners presented affidavits of garage owners, chemists and engineers in support of their petition, which tend to show that gasoline, owing to the fact that it is expensive and that its use in washing automobiles injures the finish, forms only a very small percentage of the effluent drained from a garage into the public sewer, and the percentage is stated by one affiant as low as one one hundred and twentieth of one per cent; that the gasoline so escaping into the sewer will cause neither an explosion nor a fire; that gasoline in a liquid form is not an explosive and an explosion will take place only when there is a, particular percentage of gasoline vapor in the air, and then contact with a spark or flame, and that it is improbable that gasoline vapor would be given off from the small percentage of gasoline in solution or in suspension in the effluent from a garage, and that it is highly improbable that it would be given off in the precise proportion necessary to cause an explosion should it come in contact with a spark or flame; that no known oil separator or other similar apparatus is practical, or will remove any material part of the gasoline from the effluent, because such separators are constructed to operate upon the principle that gasoline being lighter than water will rise to the surface of the effluent, and that this does not occur owing to the fact that there is ordinarily a large quantity of soap in the effluent which forms an “emulsion” with the water and gasoline, and that the effluent is discharged with such rapidity into and through the separator that there is little opportunity for gravitation to have effect, and that the low temperature of the effluent also retards or prevents
There is also evidence presented by affidavits in behalf of appellants to the effect that under tests made by the fire department of the effluent from one of its garages which passed through one of the oil separators approved by the fire commissioner, it was demonstrated that a large quantity of gasoline rose to the surface in the separator and remained there until removed in the ordinary operation of the device. This is uncontroverted, with the exception that the evidence presented by appellants shows that sixty per cent of the fluid thus removed from the oil separator, during one of the tests, was gasoline, and an affidavit in behalf of respondents is to the effect that only one and six-tenths per cent of it was gasoline.
There may be said to be a conflict in the evidence with respect to the effectiveness of the oil separators; but I think it stands uncontroverted that if there is gasoline in the effluent to any considerable extent, part of it, at least, will be removed
In Matter of Joscelyn Stable Co. v. Johnson (157 App. Div. 119) this court affirmed an order denying a peremptory or alternative writ for a garage permit under the regulation then in force, from which the ordinance now in question has been compiled or taken. The same complaint was there made with respect to the requirement that an oil separator be installed as is here presented. We then held that the regulation was presumptively and apparently valid; but in disposing 'of the contention that the petitioner in that case had shown by extrinsic evidence that the requirement was unreasonable and that a question of fact was presented entitling it to an alternative writ' we said, in effect, that the affidavits read in opposition showed that there were devices in the market which were practicable and efficient and that such affidavits were uncontroverted. The petitioners here h ave made out a stronger case and it requires us to give further consideration to that point for it is claimed that we intimated, at least, that if the facts with' respect to the effectiveness of the appliance had been fairly controverted an alternative writ should have been issued.
Section 178c of the Greater New York charter (Laws of 1901, chap. 466, as added by Laws of 1911, chap. 899) provided that “all regulations ” of the municipal explosives commission “ approved by the fire commissioner, except such as relate exclusively to its organization, or to the duties and discipline of its officers and employees, shall constitute a chapter of the Code of Ordinances of the city, and shall be subject to amendment or repeal by the board of aldermen.” The ordinances in question were originally adopted as regulations of the municipal explosives commission thereafter and on January 3, 1912, and by virtue of said section 118c of the charter they, thereupon, became ordinances. By virtue of chapter 495 of the Laws of 1914 amending said section 118c the municipal explosives commission was abolished, and its powers and functions were trans.ferred to and vested in the fire commissioner, and it was therein provided that all regulations of said commission in force immediately prior to the passage of that act, which took
It appears that some complaint was made and facts with reference to the working of oil separators were drawn to the attention of the fire department in April, 1914, by an association known as the Merchants’ Association; but as no action resulted therefrom, an effort was made to repeal the ordinances in so far as they require the installation of oil separators, and a resolution for the repeal thereof was introduced in the board of aldermen and referred to a committee, and after public hearings the committee reported in favor of the repeal, and the resolution was adopted by a vote of sixty to one, and after a public hearing at which all parties interested for and against the resolution were heard, the mayor determined to veto it, and although it received a majority vote it failed to receive the two-thirds vote necessary to pass it over the veto.
Section 1556 of the charter provides as follows: “A code or other volume containing either the ordinances or by-laws of the city published by authority of the board of aldermen shall be prima facie evidence in all courts of justice of the authenticity of such ordinances or by-laws.” Section 57 of the charter requires that the ordinances of the city shall be reduced to a ■ code and published, and that the general ordinances in force on January 1, 1902, together with all general ordinances thereafter adopted shall be annually compiled by a committee appointed by the board of aldermen, and that said board should cause the ordinances as so compiled to be published annually. The said regulations of the municipal explosives commission, which had thus become a chapter of the Code of Ordinances, were evidently compiled pursuant to this authority, and in such compilation rearranged and the numbers of the sections changed, for it appears by the record on appeal in this court in Matter of Joscelyn Stable Co. (supra) that the requirement for an oil separator was contained in section 376 of the regulations of the municipal explosives commission
Although the city does not pointedly argue that the ordinance, in so far as it requires the installation of oil separators, has been ratified by the Legislature, and is, therefore, in
It follows that the order should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs.
Clarke, P. J., Dowling, Page and Davis, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs.
See, also, Cosby’s Code of Ordinances (Anno. 1914), 396, § 376.— [Rep.