137 A. 545 | N.J. | 1927
The Oxford Construction Company, the respondent on this appeal, applied to one Dowling, the building inspector of the city of Orange, for a permit granting permission to erect four brick apartment houses upon a plot of ground located at the corner of Highland and Lincoln avenues, in that city. The application was refused upon the sole ground that the zoning ordinance of the municipality prohibited the erection of such buildings in that locality, no suggestion being made that their presence there would constitute a menace to the health, safety or welfare of the public. Thereupon, the construction company moved before the Supreme Court for the allowance of a writ of mandamus to compel the inspector to issue the permit applied for. Upon the final hearing of the cause, it appearing *356 to the court that the presence of the proposed apartment houses in that locality would not endanger the public welfare, health or safety, a peremptory writ was directed. From the judgment entered pursuant to this direction the municipality and its inspector have appealed.
Counsel for the appellants practically concede that, in its determination of the present case, the Supreme Court has followed the earlier decisions, both of that tribunal and of this court, as to the scope and validity of zoning ordinances with respect to their application to particular premises and with relation to specific complaints against their enforcement. They contend before us, however — as they frequently have done before — that because, as they claim, the views upon which our own decisions rest are not in harmony with those of the courts of some of our sister states, and have been repudiated by the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Village of Euclid v. AmblerRealty Co., decided at its last October term (
The determination by the court of the question presented to it for its decision is in harmony with our own decided cases. At the March term, 1921, this court had before it for consideration and determination the case of Cliffside Realty Co. v. Cliffside,
In the later case of Ignaciunas v. Risley (sub nom. State
v. Nutley),
Notwithstanding this line of decisions it is contended by counsel for the appellants that the reasons upon which the Supreme Court of the United States based its decision are opposed to the views which underlie our adjudications upon the question of the validity of zoning ordinances, in their application to buildings of a specified character proposed to be erected in zones where, by the terms of the ordinance, they are excluded. But, as we read the opinion, this contention is not warranted. That court expressly declared that when, if ever, the provisions set forth in the ordinance under review should come to be concretely applied to particular premises, or to particular conditions, or to be considered in connection with specific complaints, some of them, or even many of them, might be found to be clearly arbitrary and unreasonable. Having so stated, it then pointed out that the Ambler Realty Company did not base its right to the relief prayed for upon the ground of a present infringement upon or denial of a specific right, but upon the broad ground that the mere existence and threatened enforcement of the ordinance constituted a present and irreparable injury — and then held that the ordinance, in its general scope and dominant features, so far as its provisions were involved in the case before the court, was a valid exercise of the police power; and "left other provisions to be dealt with as cases arisedirectly involving them." In so holding the United States Supreme Court not only reached the same conclusion as that *360 expressed by us in Cliffside Realty Co. v. Cliffside, supra, but rested it upon the same grounds.
Turning to some of our later decisions, it will be found upon a reading of them that the views of our courts are not out of harmony with that expressed in the above recital. A reference to two of them will be sufficient to make this apparent. InPortnoff v. Bigelow, Building Superintendent, 4 N.J. Mis.R. 539, the relator sought to obtain a mandamus compelling the superintendent to issue to him a permit for the erection of a building in a zone from which buildings of the character of that proposed to be constructed were excluded by the terms of the ordinance. The court held that "a zoning ordinance, like other ordinances, may be reasonable in some aspects and unreasonable in others; that the presumption is that it is reasonable," so far as its attempted enforcement against the property involved was concerned, and that, because such presumption was not rebutted by proof, the relator's application for the writ should be denied. In Long v. Scott, Building Inspector, 4 Id. 587, the question for determination, as stated in the opinion, was whether the zoning ordinance then under review, in its application to the premises of the relator, "was an unreasonable, and, therefore, an unlawful, exercise of the police power." The court held that the presumption was "that it is reasonable," and that, because of the absence of proof overcoming this presumption, the relator was not entitled to the relief sought by him.
Counsel for the appellants further argue that the federal court, although the question was perhaps not involved in its decision, expressly disapproved, in the opinion delivered by it, of the views which it attributed to the courts of this state as the grounds upon which their conclusions with relation to certain provisions of zoning ordinances were rested, and contend that, for this reason alone, we should abandon those views. It is true that the opinion contains such disapproval. It recites that the courts of New Jersey have either denied altogether or narrowly limited the power of the legislature to authorize the adoption of ordinances creating and maintaining residential districts from which business and trade of *361
every sort, including hotels and apartment houses are excluded, and disapproves of that judicial action. But this statement is based entirely upon expressions contained in the opinion of our Supreme Court in the case of Ignaciunas v. Risley,
We see nothing in the grounds of reversal which have been urged by counsel that would justify us in abandoning the views expressed in our earlier decisions involving the question of the validity of zoning ordinances, and the judgment under review will therefore be affirmed.
For affirmance — THE CHANCELLOR, CHIEF JUSTICE, PARKER, KALISCH, BLACK, CAMPBELL, WHITE, VAN BUSKIRK, McGLENNON, KAYS, HETFIELD, DEAR, JJ. 12.
For reversal — None.