126 N.J. Eq. 100 | N.J. Ct. of Ch. | 1939
Defendant moves to remove the cause to the United States district court on the ground that it is a suit of a civil nature in equity where the matter in controversy exceeds the value of $3,000 and is between citizens of different states. 28 U.S.C.A. § 71; Id. § 41(1), as amended. Defendant is a corporation of Delaware and a citizen of that state. The complainant named in the bill is the State of New Jersey on the relation of the board of health of the township of Hillside. The question is whether the complainant is a citizen of New Jersey. *101
"A state is not a citizen, and under the judiciary acts of the United States, it is well settled that a suit between a state and a citizen or a corporation of another state, is not between citizens of different states." Postal Telegraph Co. v.Alabama,
The state, of necessity, always acts through agents, generally through the attorney-general in civil matters and the several prosecutors of the pleas in criminal matters. The question presented is whether the state is the actual complainant, acting by means of the local board of health, or whether the board is itself the real complainant.
The State of New Jersey endeavors to protect public health through the instrumentality of a state department of health (R.S. 26:2-1), and local boards, which all our municipalities are ordered to maintain (R.S. 26:3-1). The director of the state department is required generally to enforce all laws relating to the health of the people of the state. R.S. *102 26:2-15. Among other duties, the department is directed to call to the attention of local health authorities any failure on their part to enforce the laws and to order them to do so and if they fail to comply, then the state department itself must immediately take the action which the local authorities fail to perform.R.S. 26:2-20. Our public health organization is state-wide, with local boards charged in the first instance to safeguard public health in their several vicinages, and with a central body in which is vested final power and responsibility.
The local board is commanded to "examine into and prohibit any nuisance, offensive matter, foul or noxious odors, gases or vapors, water in which mosquito larva breed and all causes of disease which may be known to the board or brought to its attention, which in its opinion are injurious to the health of the inhabitants thereof." R.S. 26:3-46. The local board may notify the owner of the property to abate the nuisance and if he fails to do so, "the board shall proceed to abate the nuisance."R.S. 26:3-49 and 50.
"The local board instead of proceeding in a summary way to abate a nuisance hazardous to the public health, may file a bill in the court of chancery in the name of the state on relation of the board for an injunction to prohibit the continuance of such nuisance." R.S. 26:3-56. The quoted provision is the authority for the institution of the suit before me.
"It seems clear enough that it [the nuisance which is the subject of the statute] must be a public as distinguished from a mere private nuisance; that it must affect a considerable number of persons; and it would seem to follow with equal certainty that it must be such as would be indictable at common law." State, ex rel. Board of Health of Hackensack v. Board ofChosen Freeholders of Bergen County,
"The authority to abate a public nuisance resided solely in the courts of criminal jurisdiction at common law. All common nuisances are regularly punishable by fine and imprisonment; but as the removal of the nuisance is the chief end of the indictment, the court will adapt the judgment to the nature of the case. Where, therefore, the nuisance *103
is stated in the indictment to be continuing and does, in fact, exist at the time of the judgment, the defendant may be commanded by the judgment to remove it at his own cost." Hedden v. Hand,
Defendant does not contend that the bill fails to state a cause of action under the statute. It seems quite clear then that the bill is filed to enforce the criminal law of the state, not by fine or imprisonment, but by injunction to restrain a nuisance which jeopardizes the public health and which is an offense against the state. The board of health of the township of Hillside, or the township as a municipal corporation, suffers no special injury from the nuisance. The injured party is the state. The board is only the instrument which, by appointment of the statute, sets in motion the judicial procedure to enforce the right of the state.
I conclude that the state is the real party complainant and that the motion to remove the cause to the federal court should be denied. *104