42 N.J.L. 435 | N.J. | 1880
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The relators in these cases claim that they, respectively, are members of the board of .assessment and revision of taxes in the city of Newark, and that such offices have been usurped by the defendants. The ■claim of each of these actors rests on similar grounds, and the defence to each application is the same, so that both proceedings can conveniently be considered and disposed of at ■the same time.
The title which the relators rely on is through an alleged election held by virtue of the act passed in the year 1866, (Pamph. L., p. 445,) and it is shown by the testimony taken, and is an admitted fact, that the defendants are now in office under the force of the act of the year 1878. Pamph. L., p. 329.
The right thus asserted on the part of the relators has been •challenged by the counsel of the defendants, on the ground that it is not sufficiently manifested and substantiated by the proofs. But I shall pause but little on this head, for the .subject does not seem of any importance in this inquiry, because, whether, these relators are or are not strictly entitled to fill, at present, the offices in question, they plainly are entitled lo a standing, as relators, in a procedure of this nature. The objects here in litigation are public offices, and are therefore things of public concern, in which every resident of the ■city of Newark has an interest, and I know not how the suit •of a tax-payer of that locality is to be repulsed when the
Passing, then, from the position of the relators, we come to a consideration of that of the defendants.
That position is assailed on the single ground that the before-mentioned act of 1878, by force of which the defendants have been invested with office, is unconstitutional, and therefore void.
For this arraignment of this law, two causes are assigned, the first of such objections being that the object of the statute is not expressed in its title.
This objection must be overruled. The title of this statute is this: “ An act relating to the assessment and revision of
This exception cannot prevail.
The second exception taken to this act is that it contravenes, in its spirit, that provision of the constitution that prohibits the enactment of any local or special law which regulates the internal affairs of towns and counties. Const., § 7, p. 11.
As the act thus challenged provides a new method for the selection of the members of the board for the assessment and revision of taxes in the city of Newark, there can be no doubt that, within the meaning of this clause of the constitution, such act is one regulating the internal affairs of that municipality. This law has not only the effect to regulate
The question therefore arises, is this law of that character ? It does not profess to be such, for its title is, “An act relating to the assessment and revision of taxes in cities in this state.” But this descriptive generality is immediately dwarfed and curtailed by the initial words of the body of the enactment, for it at once proceeds to declare, “ that in any city of this state where a board of assessment and revision of taxes now exists, such board,” &c., the effect being to restrict the operation of the law to those certain localities that were possessed, at the time of the passage of the enactment, of the body of officers so designated. The evidence now before us shows that ttjere were only two localities so circumstanced, the one being the city of Elizabeth and the other the city of Newark. The result therefore is, that the act was intended to apply, and that it does and must ever apply, to these two cities alone, and that the legal effect of this law, as now constituted, is the same as though it had, in express terms, declared that it was not to be operative through the state at large, but in the cities of Elizabeth and Newark only. Can a law thus designed and framed stand the constitutional test ?
But a single argument has been presented in its support, which is, that this act is general in its terms, and embraces '“ all of a group of objects having characteristics sufficiently marked and distinguished to make them a class by themselves.” And these qualities, it is contended, bring this case within the requirements of the constitution, as the same is expounded in the case of Van Riper v. Parsons, 11 Vroom
With respect to the argument which was pressed upon the attention of the court, and which was founded on the supposed public inconvenience that will have to be encountered, in case these defendants should be ousted, it is sufficient to say that the force of this appeal is entirely dissipated, if we take into the account a consideration which this reasoning ignores. It is not pretended that the illegality which the relator here
Let the writs issue.