Richard J. Kaplan, Esq. Village Attorney, Ellenville
You have requested an opinion as to whether the Village of Ellenville is preempted from enacting a local law which would prohibit persons from entering the village hall while possessing a firearm, gun or dangerous weapon of any description, including but not limited to handguns, pistols, target pistols, revolvers, rifles and shotguns.
A village is empowered to adopt local laws for the "government, protection, order, conduct, safety, health and well-being of persons or property therein" (Municipal Home Rule Law, §
Article 400 of the Penal Law prescribes the eligibility for issuance of a license to carry or possess a firearm, the procedure for obtaining such a license, and the types of licenses that may be issued. Section
"Any license issued pursuant to this section shall be valid notwithstanding the provisions of any local law or ordinance. pistol or revolver, not otherwise limited as to place or time of restriction, shall be effective throughout the state, except that the same shall not be valid within the city of New York [except in certain circumstances] unless a special permit granting validity is issued by the police commissioner of that city".
A license to carry a firearm, therefore, is valid anywhere in the State notwithstanding "the provisions of any local law or ordinance". On its face, section 400.00(6) precludes a municipality from enacting a local law adding restrictions or limitations to licenses provided for in article 400. (See 1987 Op Atty Gen [Inf] 107 [village is preempted by section
We note that, although various provisions of article 265 of the Penal Law touch on the possession of other types of weapons (see, e.g., Penal Law, §
Although section
A municipal corporation possesses two kinds of power: (1) governmental and (2) proprietary. "In the exercise of the former the corporation is a municipal government, while as to the latter it is a corporate legal individual" (County of Herkimer v Village of Herkimer,
Pursuant to its proprietary right to "make all needful rules and regulations" respecting its property (United States Constitution, Art IV, § 3), the Federal government has been held to have the right to prohibit the possession of weapons and other items in courthouses (Barrettv Kunzig,
Barrett involved regulations promulgated by the United States General Services Administration initiating certain protective procedures in large government buildings (Barrett, supra, p 269). In issue in Barrett was the application of these regulations in a United States court-house (ibid.). Under the regulations, while on government property persons were prohibited from carrying firearms, other dangerous or deadly weapons or explosives either openly or concealed except for official purposes (Barrett, pp 269-270). Persons entering the government building were required to present their I.D. cards or have their packages inspected (Barrett, p 270). The District Court recognized the right of the government to control its property (Barrett, p 271).
"Thus it would seem clear that the United States Government and its custodian, General Services Administration, could make use of its property as could any private citizen with his home. Hence, it could prevent entry or make such conditions as it deemed proper as a precedent to entry.
"Once the United States had located offices and courts in its property and issued invitations for the public to enter, has it completely given up its right to protect itself, i.e., its property and employees? Stated in another way, may the government make the right of entry on its property conditional, i.e., on a casual visual inspection of packages, etc.? Reduced to an absurdity, is the United States helpless in protecting its property once it has been opened for the public use?"
The state, no less than a private property owner, has power to preserve the property under its control for its dedicated use (Adderly v Florida,
We acknowledge that the cases cited in the previous two paragraphs do not involve preemption issues, but they demonstrate that the village, like other governmental units, has many of the same rights in their proprietary capacity as do private citizens. It follows that a village, like the Federal or State government, has power to control and preserve its property for its intended public use. Actions such as development of security procedures to safeguard persons and public property promote the public safety and welfare and help to ensure the continued use of government property for its intended purpose.
In this light, section
We conclude that a village may in its proprietary capacity prohibit a person who has an unrestricted license to carry a firearm from entering the village hall carrying or possessing a firearm covered by the license.
