54 N.J.L. 462 | N.J. | 1892
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The questions involved by the returns to each •of thése writs are identical. They were argued and will be •decided as one.
The following is the course taken by the city in laying out York street:
By an ordinance passed in 1866, with all due formality, to open this street.
After the passage of this ordinance, no steps were taken, so far as appears, to assess damages and benefits on account of such opening.
At this time the common council had, under the charter of the city of Elizabeth, full authority to lay out and vacate any street in the said city.
That body was deprived of this power for a period by an act passed March 13th, 1867. By the terms of this act this power was put exclusively in a board of commissioners. This board was empowered to cause maps of the streets laid out or altered to be filed in the city clerk’s office, with notes and explanations. On March 31st, 1869, a repealing act was passed, but with a provision that the previous action of the board in respect to the establishment and alteration of streets should be conclusive, unless altered by common council before a certain date. This repeal restored to common council the power to open streets. State Central Railroad Company v. Elizabeth, 3 Vroom 432, &c.
After the passage of the repealing act in March, 1869, the common council passed, on July 14th, 1869, another ordinance laying out York street as it had been laid out by the ordinance of 1866.
. So that, recognizing either of these ordinances as valid, the ■city council had exercised its authority to lay out York street at times when that authority resided in the common council.
Nor is there any force in the view that York street had been .already laid out by the board' of commissioners when the ordi
The explanatory note upon the map shows that the color in which the street is delineated indicates it, not as a street laid out by the commissioners, but as a street already laid out. The common council were not, therefore, precluded from vacating it on the ground that the result of the work of the commissioners in laying out streets could not be altered by the common council except within the time mentioned in the repealing act of March, 1869.
This, I think, disposes of the objection that there was no power in the common council to vacate.
The next reason assigned is, that the prosecutrix, by the vacation of this street, is divested of property rights which cannot be taken without compensation, and that no compensation has been- made.
It appears that when York street was laid out, one of the persons assessed for benefits- was the prosecutrix. She then had, and still has, property abutting on York street.
It does not, however, abut- upon that part of York street vacated by the questioned ordinances. The nearest line between her property and the vacated part of the street is from one thousand eight hundred to two thousand feet.
It is assumed by counsel for prosecutrix, that because the prosecutrix was assessed for a benefit resulting from the opening of this street peculiar to herself, that she got a vested right in the continued existence of the street, of which she could not be stripped without compensation.
But this, I think, is more plausible than substantial. While the right she got may have been of peculiar benefit to her property, yet it was a right which she shared with the public.
The privilege of using the street was shared by each member of the community.
It may not have been of the same value to each member of the community, but the right to use the street was in each
The assessments' of benefits is presumed' to be based upon the recognized power of the state and its agencies to modify of destroy the improvement.-' . .
The attitude of those who have been assessed for peculiar benefits differs in no respect from that of any other citizen in regard to this control of the public over a public right.
The position of a citizen in respect to such public rights is entirely settled.
In Smith v. City of Boston, 7 Cush. 254, a petition was filed for an assessment of damages alleged to have been done to plaintiff by the discontinuance of. a portion of Market street by order of the mayor and aldermen. The petitioner owned! several lots on and near Market street, but not on that part discontinued. Shaw, O. J., remarked : “ The damages complained of, though they may be greater in degree in consequence of the proximity of the petitioner’s estates, does iaot differ in kind from that of any other member of'the community who would have had occasion more or less frequently to pass over the discontinued highway.”
In the case of Coster v. The Mayor of Albany, 43 N. Y. 399, the action was for the removal of part of a bridge.
The court remarked: “ The bridge, so far as the plaintiffs were interested in it, was but a part of a public street or high"way. * * * Assuming that the statute did not, by some particular provision or phraseology, provide for the payment of consequential damages, or such as may result to persons whose lands are not taken or immediately injured, the state would not have been liable for the damages claimed by the plaintiff as following from the removal of the bridge, nor is the city liable.”
This was the view of the'right of the public authorities to abandon public rights expressed by Van Fleet, V. C., in his
The principle laid down by the cases already mentioned is sustained by an abundance of authority. Chicago v. Union Building Assn., 102 Ill. 379) McGee’s Appeal, 114 Pa. St. 470; Ellsworth v. Chickasaw Co., 40 Iowa 571; People v. Supervisors, 20 Mich. 95; Dill. Mun. Corp. 666; Lew. Em. Dom. 134.
Nor do I find any substance in the point that the vacation was made to subserve a private interest.
It is true that the proceedings for vacation were taken immediately after a petition for such vacation had been presented by the trustees of the Trumbull estate.
• • The vacated portion of the street ha'd been laid over the Trumbull lands. There appears to have been an opportunity to sell a tract of said land to a company which would locate extensive works upon it, and so increase the prosperity of that portion of the city.
The required piece of land could not have been obtained without a vacation of this part of York street. This was probably the principal inducement to the action of common council. But the motives which induce municipal proceedings of this kind are always of a mixed character.
¡. Regard for private interests are necessarily intertwined with public interests. The size of lots for building purposes is a proper factor to be taken into consideration in the vacation, as well as in laying out or altering streets.
If the motive of a common council in exercising the power conferred upon it by the legislature can ever be questioned is doubtful.
. If the courts can enter into the motives of the municipal legislature in respect to acts of this kind in any case, it must be one. in which the public interests have been glaringly sacrificed to subserve private ends.
Nothing of this sort appears in this case. The vacated portion of the street runs through salt meadows and crosses an
Between the property of the prosecutrix and the vacated part of the street York street is crossed by Schiller street, which is open and built upon.
Under all the circumstances the action of common council is not properly the subject of a suspicion of being influenced by any considerations other than to-conserve the best interests of the city^
The writ of certiorari must be dismissed.