People ex rel. Wayside Home v. Board of Supervisors

Babtlett, J.

The revised Constitution of this state provides that “ payments by counties, cities, towns and villages to charitable, eleemosynary, correctional and reformatory institutions wholly or partly under private control, for care, support and maintenance, may be authorized but shall not be required by the legislature.” Art. VIII, § 14. This provision went into effect on the 1st day of January, 1895. The Wayside Home is a reformatory institution, under private control, in the city of Brooklyn, to which magistrates are authorized to commit certain classes of females. Under the statute it is made the duty of the county treasurer of Kings county to pay to the managers $110 a year, or a less sum at that rate for the time any inmate may remain in the institution, for her support and maintenance. Laws of 1892, chap. 439, § 4. The language of the act is mandatory, the word shall ” being used.

There is a provision, however, that the charge for. support and maintenance must first be passed upon by the board of supervisors in the manner provided by law for the payment of county accounts. This means that the board is to ascertain the correctness of the bill so far as the number of inmates is concerned and the time of their stay. These facts being established, the rate of compensation is fixed by the terms of the statute itself at $110 per annum. The Wayside Home has presented to the board of supervisors two bills which they have refused to audit. One is a bill for the quarter ending December 31, 1894. The other is a bill for the quarter ending March 31, 1895. The present proceeding is an application for a peremptory writ of mandamus to compel the board to pass upon both.

As to the first bill, I think there can be no doubt that the relator is entitled to have it audited. The claim accrued wholly before the revised Constitution went into effect. There is nothing in the provision which has been quoted from section 14 of article VIII to indicate that it was designed to *189operate retroactively, and, in the absence of such indication, the rule is the other way. Cooley Const. Lira. (6th ed.) 77.

A more serious question arises as to the second bill, which is for support and maintenance furnished and afforded since the revised Constitution took effect. Does the provision of section 14 in article VIII relate only to future legislation, or does it act upon existing statutes so as to modify or repeal them as far as they are at variance with its requirements % If the provision relates only to future legislation, it leaves in full force the act of 1892, which not only authorized but requires Kings county to pay for the support and maintenance of inmates of the Wayside Home. On the other hand, if this constitutional provision operates directly upon existing statutes its effect is to modify the act of 1892 by striking out the command that the county shall pay, but leaving still in force the authorization to pay if the county sees fit to do so. I am satisfied that the latter view is the correct one.

It is plain that a portion of section 14 was intended not merely as a restriction on subsequent law making, but as a prohibition which should affect action to be taken under existing laws. This is true of tire sentence which immediately follows the provision under consideration here, and which sentence is in these words: “Ho such payments shall be made for any inmate of such institutions who is not received and retained therein pursuant to rules established by the state board of charities.” Here we have a command which indicates an intention to establish a new rule which should be applicable at once to all payments to be made after the Constitution went into effect, whether under laws already on the statute book or laws thereafter to be enacted. Viewing both sentences together, I think the same intent is manifest in -the language of the preceding provision, which declares that payments of this kind may be authorized, but shall not be required. The purpose seems to have been to provide that after January 1, 1895, payments by municipalities for the support of the inmates of charitable and reformatory institutions, not wholly public, should under no circumstances be compellable, but *190should be permissible, provided the inmates were received and retained under the rules of the state board of charities.

I think the case at bar is distinguishable from the decisions cited by the learned counsel for the relator in support of his contention that the provision in question here was not designed to affect anything but the future action of the legislature. The South Dakota case of Cutting v. Taylor, 15 Law. Rep. Annot. 691, arose out of a territorial statute authorizing certain payments by the territory to cities for the benefit of •certain fire companies. When the state government came into existence the territorial laws continued in force, so far as they were not repugnant to the State Constitution. That Constitution declared that the state should not make donations to or in aid of any individual association or corporation. It also contained provisions as to the manner in which appro-, priation bills should be passed. The state auditor, in resisting an attempt to enforce payment under the statute, insisted that such payment was a donation contrary, to the Constitution, and .the opinion of the court shows that it would have been so held were it not that the statutory offer and the subsequent action of the firemen constituted a contract by which the state was bound. Another objection, that the statute was not passed-as the Constitution required appropriation bills to be passed, was properly pronounced untenable, as constitutional provisions relative to the form and method in which appropriation bills should be passed refer solely to legislative action in the future. ■

In the case of People v. Gardner, 45 N. Y. 812, it was held that the limitation of seventy years, applicable to judges elected under the judiciary article of the Constitution which went into effect January 1, 1870, did not apply to a county judge chosen for a term of four years at the preceding general election. This was not because of any general rule forbidding the application of a constitutional provision to an existing state of things and limiting its operation to a state of things to arise thereafter, but because the court perceived that the limit of age was appropriate to the lengthened terms of judicial service only, and inferred that the convention which *191framed the judiciary article did not intend that it should abridge the shorter terms of judges previously elected. In Matter of Gilbert Elevated Railway Co., 70 N. Y. 361, and the case of People v. Brooklyn, Elatbush & Coney Island Railway Co., 89 id. 75, it is no doubt plainly declared that the constitutional amendments of 1875, relative to the construction of street railroads, refer solely to future legislation, and not to previously existing laws. But the language of the Constitution there under consideration was clearly in futwro, and was not immediately coupled with provisions necessarily operating upon statutes in force at the time of the adoption, as is the case here. The whole scope of the section involved in those cases was to dictate to the law-making power what it may or may not do thereafter, what bills it may pass and what it shall not, and not at all to affect or act upon past legislation which at the time was entirely lawful.” Here, I think, the scope of section 14 of article VIII of the revised Constitution is to put an end to the compulsory municipal maintenance of the inmates of private charitable and reformatory institutions, but to allow its continuance, at the legislative will, with the consent of the municipalities concerned.

The last case on the relator’s brief which it seems necessary to discuss is Allbyer v. State, 10 Ohio St. 588. The Constitution of Ohio provides that all laws of a general nature should have a uniform operation throughout the state, and also contains a declaration that all laws not inconsistent therewith should continue in force until amended or repealed. The plaintiff was convicted under a statute enacted before the Constitution, and applicable to one county only. The question presented was whether that statute could be upheld as against the constitutional requirement of uniformity in the operation of laws of a general nature, but the Supreme Court held that this requirement related to future legislation only, inasmuch as any other construction would result in setting aside most of the special laws of the state. Ho such serious or other evil consequence is involved in the interpretation now put upon the constitutional provision which is before us in the case at bar.

*192The conclusion is that section 14 of article VIII of the revised Constitution acts directly upon existing laws of the same character as the statute which provides for payments by Kings county to the Wayside Home. It does not repeal those laws except "to this extent—the command to pay is changed into a jpermission to pay, always provided that the inmates of the institution are received and retained under rules prescribed by the state board of charities. In the present proceeding it was stated and conceded upon the oral argument that the inmates of the Wayside Home are received and retained under such rules.

As to the bill, therefore, which has accrued for their' support and maintenance since the revised Constitution went into effect, the county, through the board of supervisors, has the power, under the act of 1892 as modified by the Constitution, to audit it and direct its payment by the county treasurer. The county, however, cannot be compelled to pay it. The matter is left to the discretion of the board of supervisors, to be exercised for the best interests of the county. But upon the earlier claim, for support and maintenance furnished prior to January 1, 1895, the revised Constitution has no effect, and the relator is entitled to a peremptory writ of mandamus directing the board of supervisors to pass upon it.

Ordered accordingly.