38 N.Y. 193 | NY | 1868
From the facts found by the judge upon the trial, the respondents are respectively entitled to hold the office of councilmen of the city of New York, in case section eight, of chapter 586, of Laws of 1866, entitled, "An act to enable the board of supervisors of the county of New York to raise money by tax for the use of the corporation of the city of New York, and in relation to the expenditure thereof, and to provide for the auditing and payment of unsettled claims against said city, and in relation to actions at law against said corporation;" so far as it relates to the term of office, and the time of electing councilmen in future, is constitutional, and, therefore, valid; and, if that section is in conflict with the Constitution, and, therefore, void, it is equally clear, that the respondents are not entitled to the office, but that the appellants, respectively, are so entitled. It is claimed by appellants' counsel, that section eight of the act is in conflict with, and a violation of, article three, section sixteen, of the Constitution of the State, and, also, with article ten, section two. Section sixteen, article three, of the Constitution, provides, that "no private or local *194
bill, which may be passed by the legislature, shall embrace more than one subject, and that shall be expressed in the title. The first inquiry, obviously, is, whether section eight, of the act above referred to, so far as relates to the term of office of councilmen in the city of New York, and the time, etc., of their election, is local in the sense of the Constitution. It is clear, that it relates only to the officers of the municipal corporation of New York, and has no force outside of the territory embraced in the corporation, nor any possible effect upon property not within the corporate limits, or upon persons not for the time being within such limits. It would seem to follow, necessarily, that the act in question is local, as contradistinguished from general. The former is entirely confined in its operation to the property and persons of a specified locality — the latter, embracing either persons or property of the people of the State generally, or of some class of persons, or species of property, not limiting the operation of the law to any particular locality less than the whole. This view is sustained by the judgment of this court in The People v. Hills (
Reversed as to all except Hugh O'Brien; affirmed as to Hugh O'Brien. *196