27 N.J.L. 493 | N.J. | 1859
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The certiorari in this case is brought to review the proceedings of the defendants touching the construction of a main sewer in South Fifth street, in said city, together with certain lateral sewers connecting therewith. The prosecutors complain that the proceedings by which their property is affected were not had in compliance with the provisions of the charter, and are in divers respects illegal.
The fifth reason assigned for setting aside the proceedings is, that the committee on sewers, to whom the application was referred, did'not meet at the time specified in the order of council to hear the parties interested in the application. The objection is not true in point of fact. It was founded upon the return originally made to tho writ. But by the amended return, it appears that the time first appointed for the meeting was subsequently altered by council, and that the committee did meet at the time thus specified.
The second objection urged to the proceeding is, that the committee to whom the application was referred consisted of three persons; that the report is signed by two only; and that it does not appear that more than two met, or that the third had notice of the meeting.
The objection is not sustained in point of fact. It does not appear that at the time the committee consisted of three persons; on the contrary, from the report, it would
The third objection is, that the sewer ordered to be constructed is different from that applied for—the sewer applied for being in Fifth street, and that ordered to be constructed being in South Fifth street. Upon the face of the proceedings, it does not appear but that Fifth street and South Fifth street are one and the same street. The discrepancy should appear affirmatively, in order to sustain the objection. By the exhibition of tiie map, it appears that the streets in reality are not the same, but different streets. But it also appears from the maps, that the streets containing lateral sewers, named in the application and in the proceedings, as connected with the main sewer, fixed the locality of the proposed improvement, and left no possible room for doubt as to its location or to the identity of the improvement, as made with that described in the application. The notice and all the subsequent proceedings described it truly as in South Fifth street.
Subsequent to the date of this charter, an act was passed by the legislature, entitled “ An act to authorize the construction of works for supplying Jersey City and .places adjacent with pure and wholsome water.” Pamph. L., 1852, 419. By the 22d section, of said act, it is provided that the said commissioners shall decide upon a plan . for a general system of sewers for the whole district .proposed to-be supplied with water; and. if the plan shall he approved, no-sewer .shall - thereafter-be -constructed, ex,cept in. conformity with said plan, and under the superintendence of .said commissioners.. And, by a supplement .to .the ..last,-ipcnt.i.oned. act,, approved - March - 16th, 1854, {af’tpf. vecjjjng-that .the, -plan, for ..the sewers, had been- made, .anil -submitted to.:the mayor .and-common council .of Jersey City, and by them approved, it is enactedthat-1 lie
From these enactments it is plain that the general plan and system of sewerage has been settled; that council have no further concern with or control over the matter of construction or assessment than simply to decide that the sewer, ought to be constructed, and to give notice thereof to the water commissioners, who are to construct the work according to the plan already settled, and to assess the costs according to the provisions of the act of 1844. The preliminary proceedings referred to in the third section of the act can only be those which precede the decision of council, that the work should be done. Those alone remain in force, as prescribed by the 55th section of the act of 1851. All the subsequent provisions of that section are repealed by the act of 1854. It is no objection, therefore, to the validity of these proceedings that t-hey are not in accordance with the act of 1851. The
It is further objected that the proceedings are fatally defective, because the decision of council, that the sewer should be built, was not made by ordinance, but in the form of a resolution only. There is nothing in the charter that requires that the decision of the council should be made by ordinance —all that is required is that they should decide when the improvement should be made.
It is further objected that council did not decide, in the terms of the first section of the act of 1854, that the sewers directed to be constructed “are required for the benefit or Convenience of the citizens or the promotion of the public health.” The third section, which regulates the mode of proceeding, and which adopts the provisions of the city charter, simply requires that the council shall decide that the sewer ought to bo constructed. The first section of the charter was not designed to regulate the mode of proceeding by council. When council decide that a sewer-ought to be constructed, they virtually decide that it is required for the benefit or convenience of the-citizeus or the promotion of the public health.
It is lastly objected that the proceedings are erroneous, because council ordered the sewer to be extended beyond the limits for which it was originally applied. The sewer, as applied for, was the main sewer in South Fifth street-, from the east side of Prospect street to Brunswick street, with certain lateral sewers connecting therewith. The original resolution of council ordered the sewer to be constructed as applied for. By a communication, subsequently made to council by the water commissioners, it appears that after the decision of council had been made, and before the work .was constructed, a portion of South Fifth street had been filled up, rendering it necessary to extend the sewer one hundred feet further east than- was
The proceedings should be affirmed.