20 Misc. 2d 403 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1959
Petitioner seeks an order directing respondents, the members of the Board of Estimate of the City of New York, to place his petition and communication to the board on its calendar for consideration and public hearing at its meeting of October 22, 1959. He originally requested that they be placed on the board’s calendar for October 8,1959. When he appeared before the board on that date, he discovered that they were not on the calendar. An oral request of the Mayor that the petition and communication be added to the calendar was denied. Petitioner thereupon made the present application to compel the board to place the petition and communication on the calendar of the board for October 22. The motion was returnable on October 20, but adjourned on that date to November 6, when it came on before me. By that time it was obviously no longer possible to grant the relief sought.
The court will not, however, rest its decision on that ground alone, for petitioner would not be entitled to the relief sought even if the date fixed by him had not yet gone by.
Petitioner contends that his ‘1 constitutional right to petition government has been abridged by respondents’ refusal to calendar, consider and determine his petition”. If respondents had taken the position that they would at no time calendar and consider his petition, it would be necessary to determine whether this would constitute an infringement of petitioner’s rights, as well as the question whether mandamus would lie to compel the board to consider the petition and communication. The petition, however, merely alleges that petitioner’s petition and communication were not on the calendar for October 8, 1959, the date originally requested by petitioner at the time he submitted them to the Board of Estimate, and that an oral application by the Mayor to add it to the October 8 calendar was denied. The present application, therefore, raises for determination only the
Motion denied.