143 N.Y.S. 279 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1913
Sixteen motions in as many cases were argued and submitted to the court for decision at the same time. The object of the plaintiffs in all of these motions is to -secure an injunction pendente lite in actions brought to restrain the defendants from attempting to enforce a certain ordinance passed by the board of aldermen of the city of New York, known as the public hack ordinance. The ordinance was approved by the mayor of the city on June 2, 1913, and by its terms was to become operative on August 1,1913. The motion in each case is based upon the contention that the ordinance is unconstitutional, beyond the power of the board of aldermen, discriminatory, unjust and unreasonable and therefore void.
The plaintiffs in these cases are of two classes: First, certain taxicab owners engaged in transporting persons for hire, and second, certain persons engaged in the operation of hotels in front of which the defendants, acting pursuant to the ordinance referred to, have assumed to establish public hack stands. While these two classes of persons claim to be affected in a different manner by the enforcement of the ordinance, all of the plaintiffs assert the invalidity of the ordinance upon the same grounds. The court will determine all of the motions and discuss the grounds urged in support of each in a single opinion.
The plaintiffs engaged in the operation of taxicabs have paid to the city a license fee of ten dollars for each cab employed in its business, and for each stand an amount equal to as many times twenty-five dollars as cabs are allowed on such stand. Some of the licenses issued to these plaintiffs expire by their terms on August 1,1913, and others according to their terms continue beyond this date., Each license states that in consideration of twenty-five dollars the person named “ is hereby licensed to keep and use a special
Those of the plaintiffs who are proprietors or lessees of hotels and are engaged in the business of operating the same assert that they have under contracts with cab companies been enabled to afford to their patrons and guests a taxicab service which has been satisfactory and responsible and that the mayor, pursuant to the ordinance, has located a public hack stand alongside of the curb of the street upon which their hotels front; and that the new ordinance which is now under review does not provide as a condition precedent to the designation of a public hack stand in front of such hotels that the consent of the occupant, owner or lessee must be obtained. These plaintiffs have not given their consent to the designation of public hack stands in front of their respective premises.
The ordinance, the validity of which is assailed in these actions, purports to abolish all public hack stands heretofore designated and all special hack stands. It
On the same day that the ordinance was adopted the board of aldermen passed a separate act repealing sections of a former code of ordinances under which all previous hack licenses had been granted. This repealing ordinance was approved by the mayor on the same day that he approved the public hack ordinance, and both ordinances by their terms were to become operative at the same time.
In determining the questions presented the court must keep in mind the well settled principle of law that the fact that there may be void provisions of a statute
The claim that the ordinance violates the provisions of the State Constitution (Art. I, § 6) and the provisions of the Constitution of the United States ex
Because of the discrimination which licenses issued under the old ordinance permitted against other hack-
The authorities are uniform that such licenses are not contracts and create no property right and are always revocable. Calder v. Kurby, 71 Mass. 597; People v. Roper, 35 N. Y. 629, 635; Laing v. Mayor & Council of Americus, 86 Ga. 756; Sullivan v. Borden, 163 Mass. 470; St. Charles v. Hackman, 133 Mo. 634; Newson v. City of Galveston, 76 Tex. 559; Child v.
The plaintiffs contend that the board of aldermen were without power to enact the public hack ordinance and that the ordinance is void for that reason. This contention is without merit. The statutory authority of the board of aldermen to enact the ordinance is clearly set forth in the Greater New York Charter. Section 51 of that charter, as amended by chapter 262 of the Laws of 1910, provides as follows: “ Subject to the constitution and laws of the state, the board of aldermen shall have power to provide for the licensing and otherwise regulating the business of * * * hackmen, cabmen. * * * The board of aldermen shall also have power to regulate the rates of fare to be taken by owners or drivers of hackney coaches, carriages, motors, automobiles or other vehicles, and to compel the owners thereof to pay annual license fees. All ordinances in relation to any of the matters mentioned in this section shall be general, shall provide for the enforcement thereof in the manner specified in section forty-four of this act as amended, and shall fix the license fee to be paid, if any. All licenses shall be according to an established form and shall be regularly numbered and duly registered as shall be prescribed by the board of aldermen.” Section 44 of the charter provides that “ No enumeration of powers in this act shall be held to limit the legislative
The right of a municipality to establish public hack stands has been recognized and acted upon by the city of New York from early times, and is but an incident of the right to license and regulate those who ply the trade of hackmen for hire. The defendants have submitted upon these motions a record of municipal ordinances from 1817 to date, which demonstrate that the corporate authorities of the city have from such time exercised such power as a part of its police functions.
The fact that the ordinance provides that “ the enforcement of the provisions of this ordinance shall be under the control of the bureau of licenses,” does not justify the contention urged by the plaintiffs that the board of aldermen has delegated to such bureau “ the question of whether the ordinance shall be enforced at all or not. ’ ’ There is nothing in the ordinance which justifies such an interpretation being placed upon its provisions.' Manifestly the board of aldermen cannot
The claim that those of the plaintiffs engaged in the transportation of passengers for hire are subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the public service commission in the first district by virtue of subdivision 9 of section 2 of chapter 480 of the Laws of 1910, as amended by chapter 344 of the Laws of 1913, and that therefore the board of aldermen is without power to enact the ordinance, is unsound and can only be sustained by a process of reasoning which assumes that the legislature in enacting chapter 344 of the Laws of 1913 intended to repeal those provisions of the charter which conferred upon the board of aldermen the right to regulate hack-men and the rates of fare to be charged by them. Such an interpretation not only does violence to that canon of statutory construction, which holds that repeal by implication is not favored, but finds no support in anything contained in the act of 1913 referred to above.
The contention that section 51 of the charter has been repealed by chapter 374 of the Laws of 1910, amending section 288 of the Highway Law, is fallacious.
The amendment made to section 288, upon which the plaintiffs base their claim, so far as applicable to the question under consideration, provides as follows:
‘ ‘ Except as herein otherwise provided, local authorities shall have no power to pass, enforce or maintain any ordinance, rule or regulation requiring from any owner or chauffeur to whom this article is applicable any tax, fee, license or permit for the use of the public highways, or excluding any such owner or chauffeur from the free use of such public highways, excepting such driveway, speedway or road as has been or may be expressly set apart by law for the exclusive use of horses and light carriages, or in any other way respecting motor vehicles or their speed upon or use of the public highways; and no ordinance, rule or regulation contrary to or in anywise inconsistent with the
The contention that the power to fix rates must be expressly given and cannot be inferred is inapt in view of the provision of section 51 of the charter that “ the board of aldermen shall also have power to regulate the rate of fare to be taken by owners or drivers of hackney coaches, carriages, motors, automobiles or other vehicles.” It is difficult to see how the legislature could have expressed more clearly a direct grant of power.
The objection that the board of aldermen is without power to regulate rates because a hackman might contract to carry a passenger from New York to Jersey City, and thus engage in interstate commerce, the power to regulate which rests solely in the congress of the United States, is without merit. The objection seems to me to be frivolous in view of the fact that the ordinance does not assume at all to regulate the rates for interstate commerce. The ordinance in question operates only within the limits of the city, and therefore cannot be held obnoxious as a regulation of interstate commerce. Budd v. New York, 143 U. S. 517, 545. The attempt to show that the ordinance is in excess of the power of the board of aldermen cannot survive an examination of the statutes and the application to them of any reasonable interpretation..
All of the plaintiffs in these actions urge that the provision of the ordinance permitting the establishment of a public hack stand in front of hotels without the consent of owners or lessees of such property is in violation of the right of such owners or lessees and renders the ordinance void. Those of the plaintiffs who are engaged in the business of transportation of passengers for hire claim the right to assert this objection because at the present time, by leave of the
If the municipal authorities have the right to establish public hack stands, as they undoubtedly have, it follows that they have the right to establish such stands at such places as the public welfare and convenience shall require. The designations pursuant to the ordinance (art. 5, § 3) of spaces alongside the curb adjacent to property used as public parks, public buildings, railroad stations, steamships and ferry landings, hotels, restaurants and theatres, are obviously conducive to the public convenience. Such a designation is not, therefore, in itself either invalid or unreasonable. That such a designation must be made with due regard to the rights of abutting owners "is clear, but if such designation does not impair the rights of such owners there can be no legal objection urged against it. It is settled law that a court of equity will withhold injunctive relief where there is no substantial injury to the easements of light, air and access to the premises of an abutting owner. Adler v. Metropolitan E. R. Co., 138 N. Y. 173, 180. The statement of the plaintiffs that the designation of such public hack stands in front of the property of an abutting owner or occupier without the latter’s consent is a nuisance and illegal is too broad a statement of the rule of law applicable to this
In City Council of Montgomery v. Parker, 114 Ala. 118, it was held that a municipal ordinance providing that a portion of a street in front of a designated hotel shall be “ established as a stand for two hacks ” was within the power of the municipality, not unreasonable, and that the penalties prescribed for a violation thereof were enforceable. The opinion of the court makes it clear that provided such stand does not obstruct the property and guests of a hotel which abuts such street in their reasonable ingress to and egress from the hotel
In Veneman v. Jones, 118 Ind. 41, the court said: ‘ ‘ There can be no question but that the ordinance authorizing the depot marshal to prescribe the places where omnibuses, hacks and other vehicles should stand at the railroad depot, and requiring drivers to obey the directions of police officers in regard to the places which their respective vehicles should occupy, was a proper regulation and one which the municipal authorities had the power to pass. City of St. Paul v. Smith, 27 Minn. 364; Commonwealth v. Robertson, 5 Cush. 438; Commonwealth v. Stodder, 2 id. 562. Such regulations tend to the convenience of the general public by protecting persons from the annoying solicitations of hackmen and others, who when acting without restraint often confuse travelers, besides engendering strife and contention among themselves.”
In Pennsylvania Co. v. City of Chicago, 181 Ill. 289, it was held that railroad depots in cities are in the nature of public buildings, and the city council may establish hack stands in front of them so long as access to and egress from the building are not prejudicially interfered with. In Donovan v. Pennsylvania Co., 199 U. S. 279, 303, Mr. Justice Harlan says: “By the Illinois statutes it is provided that the city council in cities may regulate the use of streets and sidewalks, and license, tax and regulate hackmen, omnibus drivers, carters, cabmen, porters, expressmen and all others pursuing like occupations, and to prescribe their compensation. Hurd’s Ill. Stat. 1901, pp. 285, 287. And by ordinance of the city council of Chicago it is provided that ‘ any licensed hackney coach, cab or other vehicles for the conveyance of passengers may stand, while waiting for employment, at the following places and for the period of time hereinafter pro
These authorities and the others referred to in them leave no doubt in the mind of the court that the ordinance in question in so far as it permits the establishment of public hack stands in front of the hotels of some of these plaintiffs is a police regulation which offends against no constitutional provision and does not impair the rights of easement which the owners abutting on the street possess.
—The decision in McCaffrey v. Smith, 41 Hun, 117, upon which these plaintiffs place great reliance, does not seem to me to be contrary to the authorities cited, because in that case the stand in front of the plaintiff’s premises “interferes somewhat with access to the hotel and premises of the plaintiff.” Upon the facts before the court the actual decision in McCaffrey v. Smith, supra, may be sustained, although I think that the authorities cited above demonstrate that the rule declared in the opinion in that case is too broadly stated to be an accurate statement of the law governing this subject.
It is further contended by the plaintiffs in these actions that the ordinance is unreasonably discrimi
The classification which the ordinance makes between those operating motor-driven vehicles and horse-drawn vehicles and which is objected to in the second objection, set forth above, is one which has repeatedly had the sanction of the courts. People v. McWilliams, 91 App. Div. 176; Christy v. Elliott, 216 Ill. 31; State v. Swagerty, 203 Mo. 517. The purpose of a taximeter is to enable the occupant of the cab to determine the distance traveled and the rates of fare therefor. It is a matter of common knowledge that the distance traveled is more easily ascertainable in the case of horse-drawn than in the case of motor-driven vehicles.
The fact that motor-driven vehicles designed to carry not more than four persons are required to have taximeters, while the same requirement is not made as to motor-driven vehicles of greater carrying capacity, cannot be said to be unreasonably discriminatory. The smaller cabs designed to carry a few persons are more generally engaged in transient business, while touring cars and sight-seeing vehicles designed to carry a larger number of persons are more generally employed to travel a fixed route between known points or are employed for a definite time at an agreed rate. In determining whether or not a provision of an ordinance is discriminatory, it is always to be borne in mind that regulations which are designed to promote •public convenience are not to be condemned, and whether or not such regulations are adapted to this eiid rests largely within the discretion of the governing body of the city. City of Buffalo v. New York, L. E. & W. R. R. Co., 152 N. Y. 276, 281.
There is not, therefore, anything in the provisions objected to that denies to any person or class of persons the equal protection of the laws. The distinctions made in the ordinance are not made arbitrarily, but are, generally speaking, a classification made with due regard to the acts sought to be regulated and bear a natural and reasonable relation to the objects classified. Such being the case it follows that the ordinance is not unreasonably discriminatory.
Finally, it remains only to consider the contention of the plaintiffs that the ordinance is unreasonable and
First. It requires expensive meters. Second. It imposes unreasonable penalties for incorrect meters. Third. The requirements exacted of an applicant for a driver’s license are unreasonable. Fourth. That the provisions for the suspension and revocation of a driver’s license are unreasonable. Fifth. That the requirement that no person shall solicit passengers for a public hack or hacks upon the streets or highways of the city, except the driver of a public hack when sitting upon the box of his vehicle is unreasonable. Sixth. The prohibition against any one riding on the seat with the driver is unreasonable. Seventh. That the rates prescribed are so low as to make it impossible to operate motor vehicles at a profit, and that therefore the ordinance is unreasonable.
1. The requirement that meters shall be used has been shown by experience to be essential in order to check the frauds which might easily be perpetrated upon passengers. The commissioner of accounts of the city of New York and the commission appointed by the mayor of the city to investigate this whole subject of taxicab regulation have both reported that such frauds have been commonly committed. The requirement that meters shall be used is not only necessary if the frauds heretofore practiced are to be prevented, but is obviously so just and reasonable a regulation as not to justify further discussion.
2. If the requirement that meters shall be used is reasonable it follows as a corollary that the ordinance may impose penalties for the failure to comply with this requirement. The requirement of the ordinance is that correct meters shall be used. Meters of any other character would only serve to facilitate the perpetration of fraud. The penalties prescribed for a
3. The requirement that an applicant for a driver’s license shall present a sworn testimonial as to his character by two reputable citizens and a further testimonial from his last employer, unless a sufficient reason is given for its omission, is a reasonable and wise requirement designed to afford protection to those who in using such vehicles are obliged to commit the safety of their persons and property to the care of such persons. In the opinion of the board of aldermen, this requirement was deemed essential to securing competent and reliable men to operate such vehicles. The plaintiffs object to the ordinance on the ground that the abolition of private hack stands deprives them of the opportunity to protect their patrons, because they will no longer have any control or authority over those operating motor vehicles. This objection would not be without force if it were not for the requirement that the bureau of licenses should exercise care in the selection of such drivers and retain a measure of control over them after their appointment. Notwithstanding the fact that this provision is well calculated to protect the patrons and the guests of the plaintiffs and others, it is objected to by the plaintiffs on the ground that it will prohibit ‘ ‘ many thoroughly competent and reliable men from pursuing this calling.” In a careful report submitted to the mayor by the commission appointed to investigate the subject of the regulation and control of public hacks and hack stands the commission in suggesting a proposed ordinance which has since been enacted into law and which is the ordinance now under review say: “ Proprietors of some of the large hotels object to the elimination of private stands, insisting that if this be
4. The provision of the ordinance giving to the mayor the power to suspend or revoke a driver’s license is only a reasonable method of securing such continued control over such drivers as is essential to the protection of those using such vehicles.
5. The requirement that no person shall solicit passengers for a public hack upon the streets except the driver when sitting upon the box of his vehicle is obviously designed to prevent the annoyance of those near such hack stands and to prevent the drivers of such hacks from congregating upon the sidewalk in front of hotels and other public buildings, and by their solicitations obstructing traffic and making a nuisance of themselves to the patrons and guests of such hotels and to others going to and from such public buildings.
This requirement is in all respects reasonable and
6. The prohibition against allowing any one to ride on the seat with the driver is a reasonable police regulation and will tend to promote the safety of those using such hacks. The argument that this provision confiscates physically a fractional part of the usable value of the cab loses sight of the reason which impelled the adoption of the provision. The reasons leading to the adoption of this prohibition are well set forth in the report made to the mayor by the commissioner of accounts in January, 1912, which has already been referred to. In that report it is said: “ Finally we would suggest that no license be granted by the bureau of licenses to any cab or taxicab which is constructed with a seat beside the driver. The reason for this provision is obvious. Police records in all cities give evidence of robberies and assaults committed by hackmen with the assistance of companions. Section 324 of the ordinances provides that ‘ no licensed hackman shall carry any other person than the person first employing the hack without the consent of such passenger. ’ This section, however, is inadequate. There would appear to be no violation of the provision unless the passenger actually protests. At any rate, the passenger’s acquiescence is quite sufficient. Most travelers in New York would, if requested by the driver, readily consent to his carrying an additional passenger so long as the latter was not to occupy a seat inside the vehicle. In a lonely spot the passenger inside would be quite helpless against two men. This practice, which is not uncommon, may be reduced to a minimum, we believe, by eliminating the possibility of any person sitting beside the driver of a cab or taxicab.”
I have thus set forth at length the reasons which
7. The contention that the rates prescribed are so low as to make it impossible to operate motor vehicles at a profit and are therefore unjust and unreasonable is urged in the briefs of the counsel for the plaintiffs, under the contention that the rates prescribed are confiscatory. It has already been pointed out that this contention is founded upon a false assumption that those operating hacks under the former ordinances did so under a contract with the city and without regard to the fundamental. distinction asserted at common law and recognized in our constitutional provisions between those engaged in conducting a private business and those the nature of whose business subjects their occupation to public regulation. This contention fell with the false assumption upon which it was founded when it appeared that the permits issued were not contracts conferring property rights, but revocable licenses, and that the rates of fare which the city attempted to prescribe related only to the business of hackmen who from time immemorial have been the subject of public regulation. If, however, the rates prescribed were in fact so low as to make it impossible to operate motor vehicles under them at a profit, that fact would tend to establish that the ordinance itself was unjust and unreasonable. The ordinance prescribes the following rates: For not more than two passengers for the first half mile or any portion thereof, thirty cents,' and for each succeeding one-quarter mile or any portion thereof, ten cents. For three or more passengers for the first half mile or any portion thereof, forty cents, and for each succeeding one-sixth mile or any portion thereof, ten cents. The
Indeed, the plaintiffs contend that the rates of fare prescribed are confiscatory and unreasonable, not because they will not permit those rendering such services to receive a fair profit for the service rendered, but because they would fail to yield a fair return upon all the property employed by the corporation rendering the service. In short, the contention is that the rule declared by the United States Supreme Court for determining the reasonableness of rates in cases of a railroad corporation operating under a franchise are applicable to hackmen operating under a revocable license. The claim is too unreasonable, too clearly contrary to the fundamental principles which have been discussed above to be entitled to further comment.
The contention advanced by the plaintiffs that the ordinance requires the driver to have been a resident of the city for at least a year and that it therefore violates article IV, section 2, of the Federal Constitution, which provides that “ The citizens of each state
The ordinance was not hastily adopted. Gareful and thorough examination and investigation of the whole subject matter involved preceded the framing and adoption of the ordinance. Upon the whole the ordinance must be pronounced a serious and well considered attempt tó remedy abuses which have grown to such an extent as to make the application of a remedy imperative.
The motions are denied, with costs, and the temporary injunctions heretofore granted are vacated and set aside.
Motions denied, with costs.