State v. Board of Chosen Freeholders

63 N.J.L. 155 | N.J. | 1898

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Collins, J.

I will present and discuss in convenient order the reasons assigned for the allowance of writs to these applicants.

*161First. The statute is assailed as a local or special law regulating the internal affairs of counties, because in its second section it is enacted that nothing in the act shall be construed to authorize the construction of a street railroad on any public highway on which it is not lawful at present to authorize the construction of a street railroad. It is claimed that thereby the operation of the act is restricted to public highways now existing upon which it is lawful to authorize the construction of a street railroad. It is too plain to need argument that the act will operate on public highways hereafter opened under county control or otherwise subjected to such control. The only limitation is on the power to authorize construction of street railroads where it is not now lawful to authorize their construction. This limitation does not create a class of counties. All counties are equally affected by it. All may authorize construction of street railroads upon the highways now or hereafter subject to their control unless such construction is otherwise prohibited. The statute does not remove existing prohibitions, if any there be. We see no objection to that saving clause, although in point of fact no such prohibition has been indicated to us. Probably the draftsman of the act had in mind the restrictions on the location of street railroads contained in the general act on that subject. Gen. Stat., p. 3220, pi. 55. It was as competent to preserve those restrictions by indirect reference as by direct insertion in the new act. It is quite clear that an act empowering any county to authorize the construction of street railroads subject to existing restrictions as to their location is a general law. The case falls within the principle declared in this court and affirmed on review, that a general law cannot be deemed special because it does not sweep away other general laws. Road Commission v. Harrington Township, 25 Vroom 274; affirmed, 26 Id. 327.

Second. The power to condemn is challenged because of the direction of the statute that the commissioners in estimating damages shall take into account the benefits conferred by the improvement on the remainder of any lot or tract of land *162partly taken. Except as to Miss Bronson this challenge is premature, but she, of course, has a right to be heard. I would not on the complaint of one lot-owner check so important a public work as that projected, even if I thought this objection debatable. If the grant of power to take a part of a lot in one ownership -is unconstitutional, the act, except in that regard, is valid, and the proceedings should not be hindered; while, on the other hand, the landowner cannot be injured by permitting them to go on, for any attempt to take such land, if power to do so be lacking, is simply futile. In a case like this I would relegate the landowner to the defensive or at most review the award. But I think that such objection is not debatable in this court. The grounds assigned for it are (1) that under our constitution compensation for private property taken for public use must be made in money, not in benefits; and (2) that the challenged provision of the statute involves an assessment for benefits unequal in character. The ease of Carson v. Coleman, 3 Stock. 106, is cited as authority for the first proposition. That decision seems to relate only to general benefits and whether so or not rests on the postulate that compensation must precede the taking. Such is the case where property is taken for public use by an individual or a private corporation, but not where the taking is by the state itself or a public corporation. This difference is apparent from a reading of the two provisions of the constitution (Art. 1, ¶ 16 ; Art. 4, § 7, ¶ 9), and has been declared by this court. Loweree v. Newark, 9 Vroom 151; Wheeler v. Essex Public Road Board, 10 Id. 291. But in any case the doctrine does not exclude the taking into account of special benefits to lands a part of which only is taken, for those are as much involved in the ascertainment of the just compensation of the constitution as are the damages to such lands. How that compensation shall be paid is another matter. That such benefits may be so taken into account has been declared in many cases in this court. Such declarations in Swayze v. New Jersey Midland Railway Co., 7 Vroom 295, 299; Butler v. Sewer Commissioners, 10 Id. 665, 669, and Crater v. Fritts, *16315 Id. 374, were indeed obiter dieta, and perhaps may not be .sustainable in their full extent when applied to a taking by a private corporation; but the decision in Loweree v. Newark, ubi supra, is explicit as to a taking by a public corporation. In that case it was held that the legislature may constitutionally provide that an assessment for benefits arising from a street opening shall be set off against any award for land taken. This case was followed by a decision directly sustaining the right to consider special benefits on such a taking .and disallowing the second ground of objection urged against the statute sub judiee. The case is Mangles v. Chosen Freeholders, 26 Vroom 88. The statute involved authorized the opening of a public road and directed the commissioners “to make a just and equitable estimate and appraisement of the compensation and damages each owner of the real estate and land to be taken will sustain by reason of such taking, considering in such appraisal the condition in which each owner’s .parcel will be left after taking so much thereof as will be necessary for said opening and the benefits that will result from such road to the owner or owners of such land and real estate.” No assessment of benefits was authorized, but the cost of the improvement was to be borne by the county at large. In laying the road existing highways were widened, in many places on one side only. Prosecutors a part of whose land was taken urged, exactly as in the case now before us, that special benefits could not be constitutionally considered in estimating compensation for property taken, or at least that a law providing that they should be considered where part of a lot was taken and not providing for anassessment upon all property benefited was unconstitutional. This court construed the statute as extending only to present special benefits resulting from the mere legal opening of the road and held that the adopted method of ascertaining compensation to the landowner was not only constitutional but that in no other way could just compensation be ascertained. In delivering the opinion of the court Mr. Justice Dixon said: “Just compensation for taking part of an entire tract *164of land for public use cannot, we think, be ascertained without considering all the proximate effects of the taking. These are the withdrawal of the part taken from the dominion of the former owner, the damage done to the residue by the separation and the benefit immediately accruing to the residue from the devotion of the part taken to a public use. Just compensation is ascertained by combining the pecuniary value of all these facts; if any be excluded, what is given is more or less than is just. The value of the land taken is no more essential to just compensation than is satisfaction for the damage done to the residue, nor is it more exempt from diminution on account of the benefits conferred.” This reasoning seems to us unanswerable. Equally satisfactory is this decision' as to the second ground of objection of these applicants. Then, as now, it was argued that the right to assess land for benefits arising from municipal improvements is a bránch of the taxing power not delegated to the commissioners, since they are not authorized to levy such an assessment, being merely agents in the exercise of the power of eminent domain; and if all such benefits be charged, against the value of land taken and damages, under the latter power, the owner of such land will pay a greater portion of the cost of the improvement than would be exacted of him under the taxing power, while upon the owner of other lands, sharing equally in the advantages, no special burden will be imposed. It was, and is now, urged that an award made under, such conditions cannot be just. On this subject the learned judge said “that a right to charge landowners for special benefits conferred by a municipal improvement pertains to the taxing powér does not prove that a similar right may not belong to the power of eminent domain. Sometimes the same result may be attained by force of different branches of the sovereign prerogative. Thus, private property may be taken for public use under the police power, or under the war power, as well asunder the power of eminent domain. And circumstances may readily be supposed in which the legal claim of the owner for compensation will depend upon the election of the *165government as to which power it will exert for the accom- ’ plishment of its ends. Under the taxing power itself, burdens of very different weight may be laid upon different persons for similar benefits, at the option of the legislature. The expense of opening one street may be met by general tax, the expense of opening another by special assessment. Hence there is nothing abnormal in the fact that in opening, a public road a heavier burden may be laid upon a landowner who comes within the reach of eminent domain than may be upon one whom the power of taxation only can affect. Yor does this inequality of burden render the award for property taken unjust. The parties to this transaction are the public and the landowner. Between them the compensation allowed is just. The generosity of the public towards other owners, sharing in the benefit without the burden, does not affect him whose land is taken except as it affects all other members of. the community. No doubt, if the law had directed that the power of eminent domain should be employed conditionally, on payment for the land taken and damages without deduction for the benefits, and that special benefits should be assessed under the taxing power, more even-handed justice might have been done, but as. it directs that the eminent, domain be exerted in full constitutional force, on making compensation deemed just in view of benefit as well as detriment, it is for the courts merely to see that the legislative mandate be obeyed.”

Counsel for the applicants concede that this decision, if applicable in this case, is directly counter to his claim, but argues that there is a distinction that renders it inapplicable. He contends that the benefits to be taken into account as conferred by the improvement include those resulting from the construction of a street railroad, but it is clear to us that such is not the case. The word “ improvement ” in the connection in which it occurs in the first section of the statute signifies only the “proposed widening, straightening or change of location” of the highway shown on the filed map. The. construction of the street railroad is a matter of independent *166and, it may be, subsequent consideration. The power of the freeholders to improve the highway does not depend upon their ability to secure the construction of a street railroad thereon even if an intention to do so is a prerequisite to the exercise of such power, which I by no means admit. The act imposes many conditions precedent to the construction of the railroad. It will not do to say-that these must all be met' before the highway can be widened.

It is further urged that we should allow the writs in order that the court of last resort may review the Mangles case. To this rather novel suggestion we can only say that we think that decision correct, so that not only are we confronted by the doctrine of stare deeisis but also by our own deliberate judgment that there is no debatable question on that head. Under such circumstances the allowance of a writ would be, not the exercise of sound judicial discretion but an arbitrary act’. It is suggested that the Mangles decision was'inconsistent with the views previously expressed by Chief Justice Beasley in an opinion reported in 9 IV. J. L. J. 333, for November, 1886, in the case of King v. Duryea, decided by the Court of Errors and Appeals at March Term, 1886, and reported without opinion in 19 Vroom 372. The decision reversed a judgment of this court upon an opinion reported in 16 Id. 258, and implied the invalidity of a statute there interpreted. The reason assigned by the Chief Justice for such invalidity was that the taxing power had not been exercised in accordance with constitutional requirements as defined in the Agens case and other decisions in two particulars, viz., first, the burden imposed had been unequally distributed upon lands of the same class, and secondly, the distribution of a special credit in the assessment had been left to the will of the commissioners as to what lands should receive its advantage, without any standard being provided in the law itself. This deliverance does not bear upon the points decided in the Mangles case.

Third. The resolution of-July 14th, 1898, is attacked because it declares an intention to “otherwise improve” "West-field or North avenue without disclosing the nature of the *167improvement. It will be time enough for such disclosure when steps shall be taken to effectuate the intention. The resolution affords the necessary support for the advertisement for propositions to construct and operate a street railroad. Direct corporate action will be needed for any improvement of the avenue to be undertaken by the county under section 4 of the act.

Fourth. Said resolution is also attacked because it does not give information of the matters to be stated in the propositions to be submitted thereunder. This was not necessary. The statute expressly directs what shall be stated in the resolution, and its publication is all the notice required. The statute itself — referred to by its title in the resolution — gives the requisite information of what the propositions must contain.

Fifth. The contract with the Elizabeth City Horse Railroad Company is attacked upon the assertion that that company is without legislative authority to construct or operate a street railroad on Westfield or North avenue outside of the city of Elizabeth. Assuming this and assuming that the act of 1898 does not supply that authority to any person or corporation contracting with the county, we cannot see that' the applicants for this writ have any standing to impeach the contract. The county has ample power to provide for the construction of the railroad and if it doés so by contract even with a corporation having otherwise no authority to operate it, the railroad will not be a nuisance and no private right of any landowner will be invaded. It is claimed that as taxpayer’s the applicants have an interest to be heard on this question, and we are referred to the case of Lewis v. Freeholders of Cumberland, 27 Vroom 416, as a precedent. That case upheld a eertiorari by a taxpayer removing a resolution of a board of chosen freeholders permitting the use of a bridge by a railway company in a specified way, when the company was without legislative power to operate its road in that manner. It was shown that there was danger of injury to the bridge, and this court held that a taxpayer who was subject to taxation for the maintenance of the bridge might invoke a review of the *168municipal action because it might lead to such taxation. In the case in hand it is evident that the contract with the railroad company is beneficial to the county and cannot lead to increased taxation.

The applications are denied, with costs.

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