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Easley v. New York State Thruway Auth

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Jun 7, 1956
1 N.Y.2d 374 (N.Y. 1956)

Summary

finding that the state, as sovereign, may assert, waive, or condition at will, immunity from suit for itself and its agents

Summary of this case from Newby v. Government

Opinion

Argued March 16, 1956

Decided June 7, 1956

Appeal from the Supreme Court, Albany County, DONALD S. TAYLOR, J.

John T. De Graff, William F. Conway and Carroll J. Mealey for appellant.

Jacob K. Javits, Attorney-General ( James O. Moore, Jr., and Douglas L. Manley of counsel), for respondent.


The question is as to the validity of section 361-b of the Public Authorities Law, enacted in 1954, which confers exclusive jurisdiction upon the Court of Claims to hear and determine all claims against the New York State Thruway Authority for alleged torts or breaches of contract. The Thruway Authority is "a body corporate and politic constituting a public corporation" (Public Authorities Law, § 352) which performs part of the work of the State Government in building and maintaining a highway. It cannot be doubted that this Authority is an arm or agency of the State. The closeness of its relationship (cf. Glassman v. Glassman, 309 N.Y. 436, 441) to the State is illustrated by these situations among others: its members are appointed by the Governor with the approval of the Senate, its statutory purposes are declared to be "in all respects for the benefit of the people of the state", its functions are statutorily declared to be "governmental", its real property is held in the name of the State, the State advanced the money for constructing the Thruway, the State's Public Works Department designed and supervised the construction work, the legal services are performed by the Attorney-General, the Authority must annually report to the Governor and Legislature, its funds are held by the State Comptroller, its bonds are guaranteed by the State pursuant to the vote of the People, and, eventually, the Authority's properties will revert to the State itself (see Public Authorities Law, art. 2, tit. 9; Highway Law, art. XII-A). Since the State as sovereign may assert, waive, or condition at will immunity from suit for itself and its agents (see Matter of Brown v. Board of Trustees of Hamptonburg School Dist., 303 N.Y. 484, 489), the Legislature could in creating the Thruway Authority have refused to waive immunity as to it and thus could have forbidden suits to be maintained against the Authority in any court or tribunal. Therefore, the only question here is as to whether the State Constitution so limits the jurisdiction of the Court of Claims that the Legislature could not validly confer on that court jurisdiction over claims that are asserted not against the State itself but against such an "Authority". We see nothing in the language or history of section 23 of article VI of the Constitution to support such a construction.

Prior to 1950, the Court of Claims was not a constitutional court but was one of a series of boards and tribunals set up successively by various legislative acts to hear and audit various kinds of claims against the State (see People ex rel. Swift v. Luce, 204 N.Y. 478). In the judiciary article submitted to the People by the 1938 Constitutional Convention but rejected by the People, there was a provision substantially like the present section 23 of article VI. The "abstract" thereof submitted to the voters at the 1938 election stated the purpose to be as follows: "to continue the court of claims substantially as at present, but with the status of a constitutional court of record, the judges thereof to have the same qualifications and be subject to the same restrictions as justices of the supreme court" (see p. 95 of document issued by the Secretary of State, Sept. 8, 1938). Then, by the 1949 election and effective January, 1950, there was approved by the People the present section 23 of article VI of the Constitution which continued the Court of Claims as a court of record, fixed the number, method of appointment, terms, qualifications, etc., of the judges and contained this sentence: "The court shall have jurisdiction to hear and determine claims against the state or by the state against the claimant or between conflicting claimants as the legislature may provide". With that proposed amendment there was submitted to the People an "abstract" thereof as follows: "The purpose and effect of this proposed amendment is to make the Court of Claims a constitutional court and thereby deprive the legislature of its present power to abolish that court at any time. The court now hears and determines claims against the State pursuant to legislative authority and direction. This amendment would incorporate that statutory authority and direction into the constitution." We have examined various parts of the records of the 1938 Constitutional Convention (see Vol. 9, "Problems Relating to Judicial Administration and Organization", p. 390 et seq.; Revised Record of the 1938 Convention, Vol III, pp. 2001-2002; Appendix to the Journal and Documents Volume of the record of that convention, p. 81). There is no suggestion in any of that material that a purpose existed to limit the jurisdiction of the Court of Claims to lawsuits brought directly against the State. Prior to the adoption of the 1949 amendment ( supra), there was nothing in the Constitution to forbid the Legislature's giving to the Court of Claims jurisdiction as to suits against agencies of the State. Because of sovereign immunity, none of the existing courts could take jurisdiction over such claims unless the Legislature should so permit. It follows that, without and prior to section 23 of article VI, the Legislature could have turned over to the Court of Claims jurisdiction as to suits against any or all of the subdivisions, agencies or authorities of the State. The 1949 amendment which became section 23 of article VI did not change that. Its purpose was to remove the Court of Claims from political control and uncertainty of existence and power. It did this by making the Court of Claims a constitutional court and by providing in the Constitution that the court should always have jurisdiction of suits against the State. But there was nothing in that to deprive the Legislature of its pre-existing and undisturbed authority, exercised in section 361-b of the Public Authorities Law, to confer on the Court of Claims authority to hear claims against such agencies of the State as the Thruway Authority.

It is significant that as far back as 1939, by section 1306-a of the Public Authorities Law, the Legislature gave the Court of Claims exclusive jurisdiction as to tort claims against the Saratoga Springs Authority. The Law Revision Commission in its 1939 report recommended that, if adopted, this provision should become part of the Public Authorities Law and there is nothing to indicate that anyone at any time doubted the constitutionality of that statute or so contended in any suit. Much more recently, in 1955 (see Public Authorities Law, § 163-a), the Legislature gave the Court of Claims exclusive jurisdiction to hear tort and contract claims against the Jones Beach State Parkway Authority. We are informed that the Court of Claims has heard and decided a large number of suits against the Jones Beach State Parkway Authority, apparently without anybody asserting the unconstitutionality of this provision for exclusive jurisdiction.

Thus, the New York Legislature took these successive actions:

In 1939 it gave the Court of Claims jurisdiction over the Saratoga Springs Authority.

In 1948 it passed in its present form section 23 of article VI of the New York State Constitution ( supra).

In 1949 it passed section 23 of article VI for the second time.

In 1954 it gave the Court of Claims jurisdiction over the Jones Beach State Parkway Authority.

In 1955 it gave the Court of Claims jurisdiction over respondent Thruway Authority.

Statutes are presumed to be constitutional, Legislatures are presumed to know what statutes are on the books and what is intended by constitutional amendments approved by the Legislature itself. Is it conceivable that the Legislature which enacted section 23 of article VI in 1948, and again in 1949, intended thereby to invalidate its own 1939 Saratoga Springs Act? And is it possible that the same Legislature intended in 1948 and 1949 to deprive the Court of Claims of jurisdiction over State "Authorities" and then turned around in 1954 and 1955 and solemnly conferred on that court jurisdiction over two more such Authorities?

It is clear, of course, that this is entirely different from the question in Malone v. State of New York ( 1 N.Y.2d 837, decided herewith). In Malone, the question is as to whether the State as such was liable under the doctrine of respondeat superior for torts of a water-regulating district.

The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.


This is a negligence action in the Supreme Court to recover damages for personal injuries against the New York State Thruway Authority, which has moved to dismiss the complaint upon the ground that on the face of the complaint the Supreme Court lacks jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action (Rules Civ. Prac., rule 106). Its contention is that section 361-b of the Public Authorities Law, effective April 7, 1954, confers exclusive jurisdiction of this kind of litigation upon the Court of Claims. Prior to the enactment of this section, the State took a different view ( Strang v. State of New York, 206 Misc. 734) by successfully moving to dismiss a proceeding for similar relief in the Court of Claims upon the ground that "The Thruway Authority was created as a separate body corporate and politic constituting a public corporation with authority to sue and to be sued. (Public Authorities Law, §§ 352-354.)" For that reason it was held that the claimant should have sued upon the same cause of action in the Supreme Court. A like result was reached in Pantess v. Saratoga Springs Auth. ( 255 App. Div. 426) on similar reasoning. The Appellate Division's opinion therein applies to the present question, these paragraphs being especially apt: "Where the State assumes to act directly in the carrying out of its governmental function, even though it create and use a corporation for that purpose, it assumes responsibility for the conduct of its agent. Thus the State may choose to create and maintain a State system of parks, and thereby subject itself to liability for the negligence of its officers and employees (Court of Claims Act, § 12-a; Maltby v. County of Westchester, 267 N.Y. 375, 379); or, with like liability, it may provide for the imprisonment of young delinquents and commit their custody to an authorized institution for the purpose ( Paige v. State of New York, 269 N.Y. 352). But, when the State delegates the governmental power for the performance of a State function, the agency exercises its independent authority as delegated, as does a city, and its responsibility for its acts must be determined by the general law which has to do with that class of agent and corporate activity, apart from liability on the part of the State. That is the case when the State delegates its State function of education to a school board, its public health function to a local board of health, when it delegates broader governmental functions to a county, city or village. In such instances there is no authority for making claim against the State, but the agency exercising the delegated authority must respond for its own actionable conduct. * * *

"We regard the Saratoga Springs Authority as an agency exercising governmental powers, and the performance of its functions is not so closely allied or held in such intimate relation to the health activities carried on by the State itself as to make its work a part of the health work carried on directly by the State. The State did not 'employ' the Authority to that end. ( Paige v. State of New York, supra, p. 356.) The State is not liable for the torts of the Authority; and if an actionable cause exists in favor of the plaintiff it may be enforced only against the defendant or those persons whose negligence caused the injury. From this it follows that claimant's claim may not be prosecuted in the Court of Claims, and that the Supreme Court has jurisdiction of the subject-matter" (pp. 428-429). After the Pantess decision, section 1306-a of the Public Authorities Law was enacted, in terms granting jurisdiction to the Court of Claims over causes of action sounding in tort against the Saratoga Springs Authority, which is what section 361-b purports to do in case of the present claim against the Thruway Authority. The constitutional validity of the latter section is challenged upon this appeal.

The charges of invalidity stem from the constitutional limitation of the jurisdiction of the Court of Claims to situations where a claim is made against the State, contrasted with the independent entity of the Thruway Authority as a public corporation, and the direction in section 361-b that "All awards and judgments arising from such claims shall be paid out of moneys of the authority." The Thruway Authority, to be sure, conducts a governmental function of the State in the construction and maintenance of a highway ( People ex rel. Van Keuren v. Board of Town Auditors, 74 N.Y. 310). The State itself could have performed that function through the instrumentality of an agency acting in its behalf ( Maltby v. County of Westchester, 267 N.Y. 375; Paige v. State of New York, 269 N.Y. 352; Pauchogue Land Corp. v. State Park Comm., 243 N.Y. 15; Conklin v. Palisades Interstate Park Comm., 282 App. Div. 728). We disagree with the majority opinion that this is what the Legislature did in case of the Thruway Authority. The Legislature has a choice in the selection of the kind of agency or authority which it creates for the performance of governmental functions. It can be a mere commission or alter ego of the State, which transacts the business at hand in the same manner as though it were performed by any officer or employee of the State with the consequence that, if governmental immunity is waived, the State is liable under the rule of respondeat superior; or it may set up an authority having an independent status as a public corporation. By special act, the Legislature has created some forty-five different Authorities under section 5 of article X of the Constitution, which provides that "No public corporation (other than a county, city, town, village, school district or fire district or an improvement district established in a town or towns) possessing both the power to contract indebtedness and the power to collect rentals, charges, rates or fees for the services or facilities furnished or supplied by it shall hereafter be created except by special act of the legislature." The special act creating the Thruway Authority (L. 1950, ch. 143, adding tit. 9 to art. 2 of the Public Authorities Law, §§ 350-375), establishes it as "a body corporate and politic constituting a public corporation" (§ 352), having power "To sue and be sued", in conformity with section 4 of article X of the Constitution, which provides that "all corporations shall have the right to sue and shall be subject to be sued in all courts in like cases as natural persons."

We are confronted, therefore, with a public corporation having an independent legal entity and status of its own, not a mere agent of the State as was the case in Maltby v. County of Westchester ( supra); Paige v. State of New York ( supra); Pauchogue Land Corp. v. State Park Comm. ( supra); Conklin v. Palisades Interstate Park Comm. ( supra). It is a separate entity resembling the Saratoga Springs Authority. The State has delegated governmental power to the Thruway Authority, to be exercised by it as an independent public corporation, for the performance of a State function, "as does a city". ( Pantess v. Saratoga Springs Auth., supra, p. 428.) The parallel of this public corporation with counties, cities, towns, villages, school districts, fire districts or improvement districts is recognized in section 5 of article X of the Constitution. Like them, the Thruway Authority is invested by statute with "performing a governmental function in carrying out its corporate purpose and in exercising the power granted by this title." (Public Authorities Law, § 353.)

If the Court of Claims can be vested with jurisdiction over causes of action sounding in tort against the Authority for the reason that it performs a governmental function, so, also, could it be authorized exclusively to hear and determine similar causes of action against cities, counties, towns, villages, school districts, fire districts or improvement districts which also perform governmental functions of the State (cf. N.Y. Const., art. X, § 5).

The question in this case is whether, without impairing the independent corporate status of the Thruway Authority, and without imposing liability for tort claims upon the State itself, the Court of Claims can be moulded into a forum for adjudication of claims against the Authority. Whatever may have been the power of the Legislature to do this prior to the adoption of section 23 of article VI of the Constitution, effective in 1950, since then the jurisdiction of this court has been established by the Constitution, which states: "The court shall have jurisdiction to hear and determine claims against the state or by the state against the claimant or between conflicting claimants as the legislature may provide. The practice and procedure shall be that now or hereafter provided by law." If, in adopting this amendment, the People had intended merely to provide an irreducible minimum of jurisdiction in the Court of Claims, with power in the Legislature to supplement its constitutional jurisdiction by conferring statutory power to act in other fields, the Constitution would have said so, as it does in providing by section 11 of article VI that "The legislature may hereafter enlarge or restrict the jurisdiction of the county courts". On the contrary, the intention was to deny power to the Legislature to "enlarge or restrict" the jurisdiction of the Court of Claims. "The practice and procedure" are to be as "now or hereafter provided by law"; the jurisdiction is to hear and determine claims against the State or by the State against the claimant or between conflicting claimants "as the legislature may provide": that is to say, where the Legislature has waived immunity. Procedural legislation is thus authorized in order more effectually to carry the constitutional jurisdiction of the Court of Claims into effect, but nowhere is the Legislature authorized to augment or limit its jurisdiction. The very mention of legislation for this subordinate purpose shows that no power was intended to reside in the Legislature to change the constitutional jurisdiction in substantive respects. This amendment to the judiciary article of the Constitution was not designed to permit different branches of the Court of Claims, one with a constitutional status and the other purely statutory, which latter might be abolished and whose Judges might be legislated out of office as was done in People ex rel. Swift v. Luce ( 204 N.Y. 478) before it became a constitutional court. In other words, it could not have been contemplated that there would be a constitutional court to decide claims against the State and a court having merely statutory status to decide claims against public authorities, and cities, counties, towns, villages and school, fire or improvement districts, if the Legislature so elected. The argument that there is some interrelation of the Thruway Authority and the State, as by the application of the Civil Service Law, supervision by the State Comptroller and State Superintendent of Public Works, the use of the State's real property, and the like, would apply to these other governmental bodies as well as to almost any of the forty-five public authorities in the State. All of these public or municipal corporations or political subdivisions perform governmental functions of the State, that have been delegated to them in their independent capacities.

Regardless of whatever power the Legislature may have to waive governmental immunity on condition that tort claims be prosecuted in the Court of Claims, unless the claims are against the State, payable from its funds, section 23 of article VI of the Constitution would be violated by granting jurisdiction to the Court of Claims over causes of action that are not against the State but are against these independent public corporations.

The exigencies of government have caused public authorities performing a wide variety of functions to increase and multiply in recent years. They might as well not be created if their separate, corporate existences are to be overridden whenever it is convenient to do so. We think that it was not the intention of the Legislature or of the Constitution to establish public authorities in name only, having the powers but lacking the status and responsibilities of independent corporate entities. In that event their standing would be undermined and their usefulness impaired.

The judgment appealed from should be reversed, and defendant's motion denied with costs in all courts.

CONWAY, Ch. J., DYE and FULD, JJ., concur with DESMOND, J.; VAN VOORHIS, J., dissents in an opinion in which BURKE, J., concurs; FROESSEL, J., taking no part.

Judgment affirmed.


Summaries of

Easley v. New York State Thruway Auth

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Jun 7, 1956
1 N.Y.2d 374 (N.Y. 1956)

finding that the state, as sovereign, may assert, waive, or condition at will, immunity from suit for itself and its agents

Summary of this case from Newby v. Government

In Easley v. New York State Thruway Auth. (1 N.Y.2d 374) we examined the statutory description of the Thruway Authority and because of the close relationship of that Authority with the State held that it was at least for purposes of Court of Claims jurisdiction "an arm or agency of the State" (p. 376).

Summary of this case from Matter of New York Post Corp. v. Moses

In Easley v. Thruway Authority, 1 N.Y.2d 374 (1956) the Court groups all the elements which show a commonality between the State and the body in question.

Summary of this case from Opn. No. 1976-24

In Easley v. New York StateThruway Auth. (1 N.Y.2d 374, 376, supra) the court in concluding that the Thruway was an arm or agency of the State noted that the functions of the Thruway were declared by statute to be governmental.

Summary of this case from Story House v. Job Develop. Auth

In Easley v New York State Thruway Auth. (1 N.Y.2d 374) it was held that the Legislature could constitutionally confer jurisdiction upon the Court of Claims over causes of action asserted against the New York State Thruway Authority — an entity which, like CUNY, possesses independent corporate existence.

Summary of this case from Jones v. City University

In Easley v. New York State Thruway Auth. (1 N.Y.2d 374) the Court of Appeals held that the Authority "is an arm or agency of the State" (p. 376) and that "the Legislature could in creating the Thruway Authority have refused to waive immunity as to it and thus could have forbidden suits to be maintained against the Authority in any court or tribunal" (pp. 376-377).

Summary of this case from Whitmier Ferris Co. v. N.Y.S. Thru. Auth
Case details for

Easley v. New York State Thruway Auth

Case Details

Full title:LEVI EASLEY, JR., Appellant, v. NEW YORK STATE THRUWAY AUTHORITY…

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: Jun 7, 1956

Citations

1 N.Y.2d 374 (N.Y. 1956)
153 N.Y.S.2d 28
135 N.E.2d 572

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