61 N.J.L. 513 | N.J. | 1898
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an application for an alternative or peremptory writ of mandamus to compel the township committee of the township of Manchester, in the county of Ocean, to issue the bonds of said township in an amount not exceeding $5,000, in compliance with the result of a special meeting and election of such township held on February 25th, 1897, agreeably to a resolution of said township committee adopted at a meeting of the township committee held on February 18th, 1897, and commanding and enjoining the chairman of such township committee to sign, and the treasurer thereof to countersign, number and register, said bonds, pursuant to the statute in such case made and provided.
The statute under which the resolution of the township committee was adopted and such special township meeting or election was held, is entitled “An act relating to roads and •streets' in townships, and authorizing the inhabitants of townships to place all roads and streets within the township under the management of the township committee, and to raise money by bonds for grading, macadamizing and improving the same,” approved March 23d, 1888. Pamph. L., p. 240; Gen. Stat.,p. 2920.
By the fourth section of the act it is provided that the inhabitants of any township shall have power at their annual or other meeting duly called for that purpose, by voting upon a resolution submitted by the township committee, to direct the issuing of bonds for the purpose of raising money for the purpose of improving the streets and roads of said township by grading and macadamizing the same and building culverts and drains, also providing, in case bonds are issued, for the manner of signing and registering the same. The statute, in the same fourth section, also enacts as follows: “ Provided, however, that before any such bonds shall be made or issued
A petition purporting to be under this statute was presented to the township committee of the township of Manchester on the 18th day of February, in the year 1897. This petition, ■after reciting the importance of its presentation, requests as follows, to wit: “ Now, therefore, we beg your prompt con- ■ sideration of this our petition, to issue bonds of the township not exceeding five thousand dollars, and to dispose of them or ■such portion of them as may be deemed necessary to prepare
On the same day, at the same meeting, the township committee in accordance with the statute adopted the following resolution, to wit:
“ Resolved, That a special township election be held on Thursday, February 25th, for the purpose of voting on an issue of bonds for roads. Resolution to be printed on ballots.
“ Resolved, That the township committee be authorized to issue bonds to an amount not exceeding five thousand (¡$5,000) dollars for the purpose of preparing and graveling the following roads, to wit, [naming the roads], as duly set forth in a petition duly received and recorded with the clerk of the township of Manchester.”
The special election was called for the date named in the resolution, and the resolution was adopted by a majority of the voters voting at such election. N> further reference need be made to the proceedings of the township authorities, and for the purposes of the determination of this matter it is assumed that the election was held according to the formalities provided by the statute.
The respondents contend that in many respects the conditions precedent to the exercise of the power to issue these bonds by the township committee have not been observed,, and therefore they refuse to proceed to perform the duties imposed upon them, by statute, to issue, sign, countersign and register such bonds, so ordered by the special election to be issued.
All of these contentions are not now determined. But two of them have been considered. The sufficiency and legality of the petition presented to the township committee, and the resolution adopted by such committee for submission to the voters, alone have been considered.
There exists one defect embodied both in the petition and resolution which render them both illegal and insufficient to-be used as a basis upon which to hold an election under the statute, and which renders the results of such election entirely
The amount of bonds to be issued is not specified in either the petition to, or the resolution caused by the township committee to be submitted to the voters. This is a fatal defect. It will be observed that the statute expressly provides that a petition must be presented to the township committee to issue such bonds, specifying the amount to be issued. The statute also further provides that “ the said committee shall, on receiving such petition, cause a resolution to issue such bonds ” to be submitted to the legal voters of the township. The power vested in the petitioners was to request the issue of bonds to a certain and definite amount. The power of the township was to cause a resolution to issue sueh bonds to be submitted to the voters. Ho petition which left it to the discretion of the township committee to cause a resolution, with discretion reserved to themselves as to the amount for which the issue should be made, to be submitted to the voters, could be a legal'exercise of the power conferred by the statute, and no such resolution with discretionary power to the township committee as to the amount to be issued could be legally submitted, or be of any effectiveness if submitted and adopted.
These are proceedings under a statute vesting an express power in the township committee. The township committee have no power or authority except that derived from the statute, and the conditions imposed by it are conditions precedent, which must be observed and performed. If the proceedings under the statute are not fairly and substantially in compliance, with the statute they are entirely void, and no power is conferred by reason of them upon the township committee. Hudson v. Inhabitants of Winslow, 6 Vroom 437, 442; Morgan v. Gloucester City, 15 Id. 137, 140; Slack, pros., v. Palmer, 10 Id. 250, 251; Puryee et al. v. Greenleaf, 5 Id. 441, 442; 1 Pill. Mun. Corp. (4th ed.), §§ 89, 90, 91.
Under this petition the township committee acquired no jurisdiction even to cause any resolution to be submitted to
The resolution clearly is not one provided by the statute to be submitted to the legal voters. The voters were to determine the amount by voting for a resolution definitely fixing the amount, or defeat any issue of bonds by voting against it. They were not to be called to delegate the power to the township committee to issue in their discretion bonds to the amount of five hundred or five thousand dollars.' Under this statute no such discretionary power could be vested in the township committee. The authorities fully bear out this proposition, that when such power exists, under the statute,, in the legal voters to order any issue of bonds to a certain fixed amount, that power cannot be delegated to another body.
The power was vested here solely in the voters, and they could not, as they did, by voting upon this resolution submitted to them, under the statute, for their determination, delegate the power to the township committee of exercising a discretion as to the amount. After the election, upon a proper resolution, the action of the township committee could only be ministerial so far as the amount to be issued was involved. Mercer County v. Pittsburg and Erie Railroad Co., 27 Pa. St. 389 ; State v. Roggeir, 22 Neb. 118 ; Cooley Const. Lim. (6th ed.) 248; State v. Paterson, 5 Vroom 163, 168; Banghart, pros., v. Sullivan, Collector, 7 Id. 89; Corrigan v. Duryea, 11 Id. 266 ; Trustees v. Padden, 15 Id. 151.
The resolution was absolutely void. The statute did not contemplate that any such question as it contained should be submitted to the voters. In fact, the election left the matter, so far as the exercise by the township committee was concerned of any power to issue bonds, just where it was, and just what it was, before the resolution was submitted, and the power which, by the petition and this resolution, was to be exercised by the township committee could not, under this statute, be delegated by the voters to them. Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Co. v. Elizabeth, 13 Vroom 235, 245, 246, 247; Mercer County v. Pittsburg and Erie Railroad Co., 27 Pa. St. 389; State v. Roggeir, 22 Neb. 118; Cooley Const. Lim. (6th ed.) 248; State v. Paterson, 5 Vroom 163, 168; State, Banghart, pros., v. Sullivan, Collector, 7 Id. 89; Trustees v. Padden, 15 Id. 171.
Many other considerations have been presented to the court by the respondents. It is contended that the notice of election did not comply with the statute, in that it did not state the objects and purposes of the election; that the resolution was in many other respects indefinite and uncertain, in that it did not specify accurately and definitely the roads to be improved; that both petition and resolution were indefinite ■and uncertain as to the improvement to be made and the extent of it; that they did not conform to the statute as to-the character of the improvement to be made; that in other respects the petition and resolution did not conform to the statute; that the petition was not in form and did not contain the requirements provided by the statute, and that it was not properly signed by the requisite number of taxpayers and not verified in accordance with the statute.
In view of the rule of law that these statutory proceedings must be pursued with much strictness, and that the conditions and limitations to the issue of the bonds under this statute must be strictly performed and' observed, these questions be
The application for mandamus must be denied and the rule to show cause discharged, with costs.