138 N.Y.S. 338 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1912
Lead Opinion
This action is brought to enjoin the defendants from interfering with the sale of the plaintiff’s product in 'the city of Cortland by threats of prosecution under the sanitary code adopted by the board of health of said city pursuant to chapter 400 of the Laws of 1904 (adding to charter [Laws of 1900, chap. 160], § 175). That such threats were made is unquestioned upon the papers here presented. Nor is any question made that the sale of plaintiff’s product in the city of Cortland has been materially interfered with thereby. Plaintiff has procured one dealer, however, to continue the sale of its product, and requested his arrest by the .city authorities in order that the right to sell plaintiff’s product in said city might be determined. The city authorities, however, have neglected to make the arrest, and plaintiff has no other , remedy than to bring this action, as its damages are uncertain and incapable of proof. The sole question, therefore, as I view the case, is as to the construction of the provision of the sanitary code under which the health authorities of the city of Cortland have assumed to act.
Section .33 of said code provides as follows: “No person who is the owner, lessee, or occupant of any restaurant, saloon, hotel, boarding house, cafe, ice cream rooms, or of any store or place whatsoever, who shall purchase milk or cream from any person or corporation that has not obtained a license as hereinafter provided, shall use, sell, or dispose of any milk, cream, of ice cream, unless and until such owner, lessee, or occupant shall first have obtained a license or permission so to do from this board, as hereinafter provided.” The plaintiff manufactures ice cream at Syracuse, and seeks to sell the same in Cortland without a license from the board of health of the city of
That this was so understood by the board of health itself would seem to be indicated by the fact that of the blanks furnished for obtaining licenses, no’blank was furnished appropriate for obtaining a license by an ice cream manufacturer. By section 34 of the sanitary code an application for a license is required to be made upon a blank furnished by the city clerk.. It is significant that upon an application to the city clerk the only blank that he had was a blank appropriate to one selling milk and cream only from his own dairy, or purchased from other dairies. If section 33 of the sanitary code were originally intended to require a license from one selling ice cream, appropriate blanks would -undoubtedly have been supplied to the city clerk, upon which the application for such license could be made.
It may be argued that this provision is one to protect the public health, and that there can' be no distinction between the mischief to be averted in the sale of ice cream purchased as such and ice cream made from milk or cream, and that the section should. be liberally construed. Recognizing the force of
The order should, therefore, be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements against the city of Cortland, and motion granted, with ten dollars costs.
All concurred, except Kellogg, J., dissenting in opinion in which Betts, J., concurred.
Dissenting Opinion
The prevailing opinion, as I understand it, construes the sanitary code of the city of Cortland as requiring a license to sell ice cream only in cases where it is made from milk or' cream purchased of a local dealer who has no license. In other words, an unlicensed dairyman may sell his milk and cream outside the city limits; it may be made into ice cream there and sold in the city without license, while if the'cream was sold in the city and ^manufactured there a license would be. required. To me this is too technical a construction to put upon a health law. I think the ordinance was intended to protect the people from impure milk and cream and impure ice cream, and it should fairly be given that effect. It cannot give to ice cream made outside of the city with boughten milk any advantage over ice cream made within the city. The object of the ordinance is not to discriminate against local
Betts, J., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements against the city of Cortland, and motion granted, with ten dollars costs.