73 N.J.L. 710 | N.J. | 1906
The opinion of the court was delivered by
A certiorari allowed in this case brought into the Supreme Court for review an ordinance of the common council of Atlantic City, requiring that a designated portion of Atlantic avenue be paved with asphalt, or bithulithie, pavement, and directing that the cost of such improvement should be assessed upon the land and. real estate benefited therebj', to the extent of the benefit received. It was hold by the Supreme Court that the ordinance was invalid, because it was passed without notice to those property owners who were affected by tire provision which directed an assessment for benefits to be made. The soundness of that decision depends upon the character of the ordinance under review. If it be judicial, then the failure to give, notice was fatal to its validity; if it be legislative, then such failure has no effect upon the validity of the ordinance. This is the settled rule under our decisions.
The true test to be applied in determining whether an ordinance which directs the making of a municipal improvement is ministerial or judicial in its character, seems first to have been pointed out, so far as our decisions are concerned, by Chief Justice Green, speaking for the Supreme Court, in the ease of Camden v. Mulford, 2 Dutcher 49. He there states the principle to be that ordinances which direct the mere repaving or repairing of streets, acts which are imposed upon municipal corporations as matters of duty, are purely ministerial; but that ordinances which require tire paving of streets, not as a matter of ordinary repair, but upon specified conditions only, and impose the burden thereof, not upon the city treasury, but upon a specific class of individuals, are in their nature judicial. . The application of
Since the decision of the cited case, in 1856, the principle established by it has always been accepted by our courts as furnishing the test for deterniining the character of an ordinance providing for a municipal improvement. In Vannatta, v. Morristown, 5 Vroom 445, the test was applied by the Supreme Court to an ordinance directing the alteration of a grade line of one of the streets of a town, the court declaring that “the distinction is between those ordinances which adopt a general system of policy affecting all the inhabitants of a city or town, or of the property situate in the corporate limits, directing the execution of mere public duties, the burthen of which is borne by all equally, and those which provide for the making of an improvement affecting property in one locality, the cost of which is to be defrayed by certain specified individuals, * * * With respect to this latter class, the adoption of an ordinance ■directing the improvement to be made is a judicial act affecting those individuals, and they are entitled to be heard before the oi’dinance is passed which adjudges the necessity or expediency of the proposed improvement and directs it to be made.” In the eases of Boice v. Plainfield, 9 Vroom 95; Stretch v. Hoboken, 18 Id. 268; West Jersey Traction Co. v. Board of Works, 27 Id. 431, and Landis v. Vineland, 31 Id. 264, the Supreme Court reiterated the principle promulgated in Camden v. Mulford, and made the test furnished by it the basis of its decision. In the case of West Jersey Traction Co. v. Board of Works, supra, Justice Reed thus states the distinction between municipal acts which are ministerial and those which are judicial in their character: “A legislative (ministerial) act is one which prescribes a general rule of conduct, while a judicial act is one which imposes burdens, or confers privileges, in specific cases, according to the discretionary judgment of some person or board as to the propriety of imposing the burden, or granting the privi
In the case of Moore v. Haddonfield, 33 Vroom 386, this court had under consideration the validity of a municipal ordinance which fixed the location of the tracks of the West Jersey Traction Company in certain of the borough streets. Justice Garrison, who delivered the opinion of the court, after pointing out that the matter to be inquired of was whether the municipal action was legislative or judicial in its character, declared that an examination of our decisions would show that where personal property, or personal rights, are clearly involved, the rule is plain, and that in case the municipal action then under scrutiny imposed an additional burden upon the land of abutting owners it was judicial in its character. He then proceeds to point out that the ordinance affects only public rights, and imposes no burden upon abutting landowners, and for this reason declares the ordinance valid.
The rule established by this line of cases is so firmly imbedded in our jurisprudence as to be no longer debatable. The only question is its applicability to the given case. The ordinance now under review imposes upon abutting property the cost of paving Atlantic avenue, to-the extent to which the improvement benefits that property, and it is argued that this fact differentiates the present case from those which have been cited, for the reason that the ordinance places no burden upon abutting property, because it furnishes to the owner an equivalent, in the benefit conferred, for the imposition which is placed upon it. But this contention overlooks the basis upon which the rule rests. Where the abutting owners were compelled to bear the whole expense of the improvement, they received, always, a partial, and sometimes a full, equivalent for the burden imposed — a partial equivalent where the benefit was less than the amount assessed against the property, a full equivalent where the assessment was no greater
The judgment of the Supreme Court must be affirmed.