63 N.J.L. 616 | N.J. | 1899
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Chapter 40 of the laws of 1898 {Pamph. L., p. 63) authorizes -the town council or other governing body of any town in this state to provide by a bond issue for the payment of all bonds and improvement certificates issued by said town for or on account of any street improvement or improvements, and for the payment of interest due thereon, and of any judgments recqvered on any such bonds or improvement certificates, and makes it the duty of such town council or other governing body to order to be raised by annual taxation the interest and not less than two per centum of the principal of the bonds to be issued.
The board of oouncilmen of the town of Guttenberg in the county of Hudson, a town with a special charter enacted
On the first head, the opinion read for the Supreme Court is ambiguous, and, as one of the reasons assigned for holding the act, in that aspect, general, will not bear scrutiny, the decision is not authoritative. The subject is very important and demands elucidation. While the learned judge, who spoke for the Supreme Court, expressed his opinion that there could be valid legislation limited to towns incorporated by that title, he also thought that the challenged law could be upheld as extending to all towns, including “cities, boroughs, townships and villages.” In this we think he was wrong. The word “ town ” is variant in meaning and must be interpreted ah extra. In its primitive sense the word denotes a collection of inhabited houses, whether with or without governmental powers. Of course, such is not the sense of the word in the statute before us, which, in the nature of the powers granted, is limited to incorporated towns. In England, prior to the settlement of this country and down to the time of its securing independence, large towns were generally incorporated, either by royal charter or by act of parliament. Local government in other cases was parochial. The colonists in New England limited the word “ parish ” to church authority and gave to the word “town” a new meaning, akin to that denoted by the ancient British township. They applied it,
Classification by appropriate characteristics is constitutionally permissible. Hammer v. State, ex rel. Richards, 15 Vroom 667. Forms of incorporation may afford such characteristics. This was early perceived. In Anderson v. City of Trenton, 13 Id. 486, 487, Mr. Justice Dixon said, in the Supreme Court, by way of illustration: “ Doubtless a law embracing all cities or all townships would be constitutional, for those bodies, because of their marked peculiarities, are by common consent regarded as distinct forms of municipal government and so forming classes by themselves.” Later, in upholding a tenure of office act limited to cities, this court adjudged that cities form a proper class for all governmental
These adjudications lead to a comprehensive decision in favor of the constitutional right of the legislature to classify towns by their style of incorporation', at least to the extent hereinafter to be stated, and for such a result there seems to be sound reason.
At the time of the amendments of 1875 there had long been existent in this state, and generally, various classes of incorporated municipalities higher than townships. They were cities, boroughs, villages and towns so incorporated. The first two-named classes were derived from English prototypes. In England when a town had been an episcopal see, it was generally incorporated as a city, otherwise as a municipal borough. This last must not- be confounded with a parliamentary borough, which was simply a town whether corporate or not, entitled to representation in parliament, and which often was not co-extensive with the municipal borough of the same name. A municipal borough differed from a city in no governmental essential. In this country the two styles of corporations have been generally retained, and the difference between them is largely one of nomenclature. Large towns are eventually incorporated as cities, but the converse is not true. While usually a growing town has been content to first be a borough, there are many cases of original incorporation, as cities, of places less populous than many boroughs. On the whole, the difference is one of magnitude, but the two
“ 19. JSTo county, city, borough, town, township or village shall hereafter give any money or property, or loan its money or credit to or in aid of, or be directly or indirectly the owner of any stock or bonds of any association or corporation.”
While, as was pointed out iu Pell v. Newark, ubi supra, the same word may be used in different senses in the constitution, and, therefore, this collocation does not militate against the generic use of the word “towns” in the other amendment, still, as it was made with reference to a subject of general concern and undoubtedly referred only to corporate capacity, it is strongly suggestive that the framers of the amendments expected that all municipal governmental legislation would be classified according to the varying forms of incorporation, and we are of the opinion that,' as incorporated cities, boroughs, towns and villages, as well as townships, are recognized by the constitution as classes for legislation, laws limited to either of such classes will not violate the prohibition of private, local or special laws “ regulating the internal affairs of towns and counties.”
But though the classification herein approved is legitimate, still it is urged that the true type of the several organizations must be judicially defined and that the applicability of any challenged charter, special or general, to the type must be discovered by the courts, otherwise it is said that the legislature has created or may create a class of municipalities by mere label. This is more strongly pressed as t'o the laws passed, since the amendments, for the incorporation of the different classes of municipalities. Boroughs were authorized in 1878 (Gen. Stat., p. 179), towns in 1888 and 1895 (Gen. Stat., p. 3492, 3525), villages in 1891 (Gen. Stat, p. 3724), cities in 1895 (Gen. Stat, p. 785) and 1897 (Pamph.
But whether or not these laws be valid, no possible exception can be taken to a law that brings in all of a class. Such a law was upheld in Johnson v. Asbury Park, ubi supra, and in Crookall v. Matthews, ubi supra. Nor can there well be any other judicial test than that of name. In effect this has already been declared by this court. In Johnson v. Asbury Park, 31 Vroom 427, 429, it was held that an act, then in question, “operates upon all the municipalities called boroughs in whatever mode their organization has been effected.” In Day v. Morristown, 33 Id. 571; affirmed, ante p. 353, the contention was that Morristown, although incorporated as a town, was, at least by force of supplements to its charter, in fact a city and so within the purview of an act concerning cities. The opinion in the Supreme Court, adopted in this court, put the decision that the act did not apply toMorristown upon the legislative intent not to include it, but it is plain that this involves power to exclude that city if it be in fact a city simply because it is called in its charter a town. In Crookall v. Matthews, ubi supra, it was earnestly
On the second head there is no ground to challenge the generality of the act. Its subject is debt for street improvements. All existing securities are grouped in a funding scheme. It was not necessary to include all debts nor to anticipate future debts. Every town needing relief is afforded it, and that constitutes generality. This court has upheld a statute authorizing cities to annul assessments existing at the time of its enactment. Jersey City v. Green, 13 Vroom 627. The cases are quite analogous.
We find no difficulty in declaring the challenged law general. On the incidental questions discussed we are entirely satisfied with the opinion read for the Supreme Court, and{ the judgment will be affirmed.
The rational distinction between general laws and special laws, was, I think, in a measure abandoned by this court in the decision rendered in the case of Day v. Morristown, 33 Vroom 571, where it was held that a municipality, possessing all the substantial characteristics of a city, was not to be deemed a city if the legislature had named it a town, and for that reason it should be excluded from the operation of a law applicable to all cities. The outcome of that decision must be that, for the purpose of our legislation, the municipalities named “cities” form one class and the municipalities named “towns” form another class.
Having gone thus far, the best stopping-place seems to be ■that pointed out by the opinion of Mr. Justice Collins, that the several sorts of municipalities mentioned'in the constitution — cities, boroughs, towns; townships and villages — are ■distinct classes within the constitutional intent, and that the members of each class are to be ascertained by their legislative titles, at least if the titles be not palpably illusive. On that ground the statute now under review should be deemed constitutional.
For affirmance — The Chief 'Justice, Depue, Van Syckel, Dixon, Garrison, Ludlow, Collins, Bogert, ■Nixon, Hendrickson, Adams, Vredenb'urgh. 12.
For reversal — None.