Judges: Andrews
Filed Date: 12/15/1877
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
We think this action cannot be maintained, for the reason that no penalty is now prescribed by law for the omission of the owner of premises to comply with a special order relating thereto, made by the Health Department of the city of New York. 1st. The present health department was created by Laws of 1873, chap. 335, known as the city charter. Its organization and powers are defined in sections 80, 81, and 82. The principal duty and authority imposed upon and granted to the board by the act is found in section 82, which makes it the duty of the board “immediately upon organization under this act, to cause to be conformed to this article the sanitary ordinances then or lately adopted by the existing department of health, which shall be called the ‘sanitary code,’” and authorizes the Health Department to add additional provisions for the security of life and health, which additions are directed to be published. The section then proceeds, “ Any violation of said code shall be treated and punished as a misdemeanor, and the offender shall also be liable to pay a penalty of fifty dollars, to be recovered in a civil action in the name of the mayor, aldermen, and commonalty of the city of New York.”
Section 119 contains this provision : “ And the city of New York is hereby excepted from the provisions of the act entitled an act to create a metropolitan sanitary district and board of health therein, for the preservation of life and health, and to prevent the spread of disease, passed February 26, 1866, and of the acts amendatory thereof, and any sections of statutes and provisions of law which created said district are hereby repealed.”
The supplementary act, Laws of 1873, chap. 757,
' 2nd. No penalty was imposed by the act of 1873, creating the present board of health, except in a single case, viz. : the violation of the sanitary code. The sanitary code was first enacted pursuant to section 20 of chapter 74 of the Laws of 1866, and section 10 of chapter 956 of the Laws of 1867, under the metropolitan district system. The section last referred to declares, that the code of sanitary ordinances, which the Metropolitan Board of Health was by the act of 1866 authorized to enact, “may embrace all matter and subjects to which and so far as the powers and authority of said board of health extends.” The code enacted by the Metropolitan Board of Health, so far as it was applicable to the city of New York, has been continued in force by subsequent legislation, subject to the powers vested in the present Health Department of the city, to add to or amend the same. It now con
3rd. This construction is not admissible. Section SO of the act, chapter 74 of the Laws of 1866, as amended by chapter 686 of the Laws of 1866, contains this clause: “ And every person, body or corporation that shall violate or not conform to any ordinance, rule, sanitary regulation, or special or general order of said board, duly made, shall be liable to pay a penalty not exceeding fifty dollars for each offense,” &c. The power of the present board to make a special order for the ventilation or other improvements of particular premises in a condition dangerous to life or health, when the case is not provided for by the sanitary code,
4th. The legislature in the act of 1873, expressly imposed a penalty in one of the cases provided for in section 30 of the act of 1866, viz. : for a violation of the sanitary code. It omitted to impose a penalty for a violation of a special order: The legislature con-
sidered the subject of penalties. Can we say that the-omission was not designed, and may not the legislature have considered that only the violation of the permanent code of health laws should constitute a public offense,' and subject the offender to a penalty %
The existence of a penalty for the violation of a special order is not essential to the execution of the powers conferred upon the board. Ample authority is given to the board in the statutes, to cause their orders to be executed by their own officers, and to"
For these reasons, we are of opinion that this action cannot be maintained, there being no penalty given by law for the omission of the defendant to comply with a special order of the present board of health.
The other questions need not be considered. Many of them were involved in the case of the Metropolitan Board of Health, 37 N. Y. 661, and were there considered and decided, and that case should be regarded as settling the law upon the points involved in the decision.
The judgment is reversed, with costs.
Miller, J., concurred in the result. Rapallo, J., not voting.
All the other judges concurred.