The ordinance, for violating which the defendant was convicted, prohibits the use of any wagon or other vehicle upon any paved, macadamized or improved street in the city of Syracuse, carrying a weight of 3,000 pounds or upwards, unless the tires of such vehicle are at least three inches in width, under a penalty of five dollars for each offense. A provision in the charter makes an offense against any ordinance a misdemeanor. (Laws of 1857, chap. 63, tit. 4, § 7.) The defendant contends that the common council, in passing the ordinance referred to, exceeded their ¡Dowers.
The charter contains no specific grant of the power in question. If the power exists, it is to be found in the general powers over streets and highways, vested in the mayor and common council, who are made commissioners of highways of the city, with the powers of commissioners in towns, supplemented by the power of the common council to make all such ordinances, not in violation of the laws of this State, or of the United States, as they shall deem necessary or proper. (Title 4, § 6.)
Certain rules of construction invoked by the defendant’s counsel are well established, to wit: That the charter of a municipal corporation is its constitution, and every act beyond the charter is void; that the presumption is against the exercise of any unusual power by the corporation, and the burden of showing the power is upon the corporation; and that any fair, reasonable doubt concerning the existence of the power will be resolved by the courts against the corporation and the power denied. But if, in the present case, the power in question, although not given in specific terms, is embraced in a general grant of power, the rules above stated do not stand in the plaintiff’s way.
There is no subject upon which it is more common for the
The counsel for the defendant contends, however, that as the charter enumerates certain powers upon the subject of carriages or vehicles used to transfer merchandize in the city, this is an implied exclusion of all other authority upon that subject, notwithstanding the general powers above referred to. It is, undoubtedly, a general rule of construction that the enumeration in a charter, of certain powers upon a particular subject, is an implied, exclusion of all other powers upon that subject, oven although the charter contains a general clause permitting the common council to pass all such other ordinances, as they shall deem proper and necessary. The enumerated powers in the charter of Syracuse, to which the counsel refers, are the following : “To license and regulate cartmen, porters, hack, cab, truck, omnibus and stage owners and drivers, and all carriages or vehicles used for the transportation of passengers or merchandize * * * and fix the rates to be paid to or by them; to prohibit unlicensed persons from acting in either of such capacities ; * * * and to require the owners to mark carriages or vehicles in such manner as the council may designate.” (Title 4, § 4.) These powers are vested in the common council alone. They have no reference to the authority of the mayor and common council to regulate the use of the streets. In respect to such use, persons licensed
A more serious question is raised by the exception taken to the refusal of the police justice to allow the defendant to be tried by a jury. The charter of the city provides that the police justice, while holding courts of special sessions, shall, in addition to his other powers, have power to try certain offenses committed within his jurisdiction, therein specified, including “ all violations of the laws and ordinances of said city, when such violation is a misdemeanor.” (Laws 1857, ch. 63, title 5, § 3, as amended by Laws 1869, ch. 360, § 2.) As we read the charter, the police justice had no jurisdiction to try the defendant for the offense charged, except as a court of Special Sessions. The counsel for the people takes the position that the right to a jury trial is not secured by the Constitution in cases of misdemeanor, and that the Legislature has power to authorize courts of special sessions to try offenses of that grade, without a jury. It is not necessary to express an opinion as to the correctness of that position, since we think the Legislature has not given such authority to the magistrate by whom this case was tried. Our opinion is that the police justice of Syracuse, acting as a court of special sessions, is to be governed by the provisions of statute applicable to those courts generally, unless the charter has otherwise provided. The charter is silent as to whether a defendant in a court of sessions held by the police justice, may elect to be tided by a jury. Since 1824, that right has existed in all courts of special sessions in the State, except those held in the city and county of New York. (Laws of 1824, ch. 238, § 47.) The present charter of Syracuse, adopted in 1857, preserved in force all the provisions of law then existing, in reference to the police justice of the city, except such as were
The point is made by the defendant’s counsel that his client had a right to give bail for his appearance before the grand jury. We think that right was cut off by the statute of 1854 above referred to ; but for the error involved in the denial of a jury trial in the court of sessions held by the police justice, the conviction should be reversed.
The defendant having given bail before the justice for his appearance at the next term of the Court of Sessions of Onondaga county, the judgment is to be remitted to that court, to be by it carried into effect. (2 E. S., 719, § 54.)
Conviction reversed and proceedings remitted to the Court of Sessions of Onondaga county.