70 N.J.L. 59 | N.J. | 1903
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Two questions of law arising in this cause are certified by the Circuit Court, to the end that the opinion of this court may be given thereon, viz.:
First. To what extent, if at all, are the practice- regulations in condemnation proceedings prescribed by section 14 of the act entitled “An act for the formation _ of traction companies for the construction and operation of street railways or railroads operated as street railways, and.to regulate the same,” approved March 14th, 1893 (Pamph. L., p. 302; Gen Stat., p. 3235), modified or repealed by chapter 53 of the Laws of 1900, entitled “An act to regulate the ascertainment and payment of compensation for property
Second. Is the appeal provided for by section 9 of said act of 1900 applicable to and available in the case of a report of commissioners in condemnation proceedings taken under authority of section 14 of said act of 1893 ?
The Traction act of 1893, just referred to,- authorizes the formation of corporations for certain purposes requiring the exercise of the power of eminent domain. By section 13 a company thus organized is ■ authorized to take such land or materials as may be necessary for the purposes of its incorporation, upon making compensation to the owner. Section 14 prescribes that when the company cannot agree with the owner application is to be made to one of the justices of the Supreme Court, who, after causing notice to be given to the persons interested, is to' appoint three freeholders of the county as commissioners to examine and appraise the land or materials required and to assess the damages. The report of the commissioners is to be made in writing and filed within ten days in the county clerk’s office. Thereafter the commissioners are to meet in order to hear and consider objections to the report, at a time and place of which public notice is to be given, and “thereupon said commissioners shall have power to alter and amend their report in any respect they may deem necessary, or as equity and justice may require; and after said commissioners shall have filed their certificate that they do not desire to make any alteration or amendment to their said report, the said company shall apply to a justice of the Supreme Court to appoint a time and place when and where he will sit and hear a motion to confirm the report of said commissioners,” public notice of which motion is to be given. Objections to such confirmation are to be made in writing and filed in the county clerk’s office, and the said justice, having heard the parties interested in said report and the objections thereto, “may confirm the said report in all things, or refer the same back to said commissioners to be reformed, corrected or amended
The act makes no other specific provision for a review of the report of commissioners and confers no right of appeal, unless the review provided for in section 14 can be deemed to be an appeal.
The act of 1900 above mentioned embodies the substance of certain previous acts relating to- condemnation proceedings, but contains also sundry provisions not before embodied in any general act. As its title indicates, it. merely regulates the ascertainment and payment of compensation to be paid upon the taking of1 property for public use, and does not confer the right of condemnation. By its first section it is, in substance, enacted that whenever the proper officers of the state, or of any county, or of any municipal corporation, or of any other corporation, public of private, having power to take land or other property for public use, shall have determined to acquire -land or other property pursuant to authority .conferred by law, and for any reason cannot acquire-such property by agreement with the owner, the compensation shall be ascertained and paid in the manner directed by this -act. Then follow provisions requiring the presentation._of a petition to one of the justices of the Supreme Court for the appointment of three commissioners-to fix the compensation to be paid, followed by the appointment of such commis
Section 9 is as follows: “In those cases where an appeal has been or may be given by the statute conferring the power to take land or property for public use, the petitioner or the owner of any of the land or other property may appeal from the report of the commissioners to- the Circuit Court of the county wherein the land or other property may be; * * *. which appeal and notice served as hereinafter provided shall vest in the Circuit Court full.right and power to hear and adjudge the same, and to direct a proper issue for the trial to be framed between the parties, and to order a jury struck and a view of the premises to be had.” Subsequent sections regulate the proceedings on appeal.
By section 17 it is declared that “the practice prescribed by this act shall supersede the existing practice in all condemnation cases for the ascertainment of compensation, except in cases of the taking of land for a public improvement where payment of the award for land taken and damages is authorized by statute to be set off against or made wholly or
By section 18, “all acts or parts of acts, general, special, public and private, inconsistent with the provisions of this act," are repealed.
In Houston v. Traction Co., 40 Vroom 168, a case decided in this court by two of the justices now sitting, it was said that the act of 1900 did not repeal or modify any part of the act of 1893. That declaration, which- was not necessary for the decision of the Houston case, is now, upon full consideration, withdrawn. The scope of the act of 1900, and the language contained in its first, seventeenth and eighteenth sections, are such as to exclude the use of other methods than are by this act prescribed in ascertaining the compensation to be paid upon the taking of property for public use. Although the act of 1893 is not covered by the repealing act {Pamph. L. 1900, ¶. 78) that accompanied the revision of 1900, we think the practice prescribed in condemnation cases by section 14 of the act of 1893 must be taken to be superseded by the latter enactment, so far as it establishes inconsistent regulations.
Thus the provisions contained in section 14 of .the act of 1893, permitting an alteration and amendment, of the commissioners’ report by the commissioners themselves, after the making and filing of the report, are now superseded; for the provisions of sections 7 and 8, authorizing the condemning party to enter and take possession of the property upon the filing of the commissioners’ report, and upon making payment or tender of payment of the amount awarded, or payment of the same into chancery, exclude the notion that the report, after it is made and filed, is to be subject to revision by the commissioners. Eor the same reason these provisions exclude the necessity for confirmation of the commissioners’ report by a justice of this court, as provided in section 14 of the act of 1893, and exclude the special review of the
As to the second question submitted, it will be seen, by reference to section 9 of the act of 1900, that this act assumes ro regulate the practice on appeal only in those cases where an appeal is given by the statute conferring the power to condemn. The right of appeal is not conferred by the act of 1900'. The meaning of the word “appeal,” as used in this act, seems to us to be settled by the accustomed use of the same term by the legislature for many years in similar legislation. In numerous special charters and general laws wherein condemnation proceedings have been authorized and regulated, the term “appeal” has been employed to describe a proceeding that confers upon the appellate tribunal the power of trying do novo the whole question that was determined by the commissioners — that is to say, the question, what is just compensation to be qoaid to the owner for the property taken? In some cases the appeal was required to be made to the Court of Common Pleas, in other cases to the Circuit Court, and perhaps in other cases to the Supreme Court. In some instances the appeal was to be made before the next term, in other instances before the second term, following the report of the commissioners. In all cases there was provision for the impaneling of a 'jury to determine the amount of compensation, and in most cases a provision for á view of the property by the jury. A trial by jury is in such cases not a constitutional right, and the granting of such an appeal is therefore within the discretion of the legislature. But where an appeal was granted it was, without exception, so far as we are reminded, granted for the purpose of' enabling the parties to have a trial by juryi
As already observed, the act of 1893 does not expressly grant any right of appeal unless ’ the review of the commissfohers’ report by a justice of the Supreme Court, as pro