61 N.J.L. 433 | N.J. | 1898
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The question in this case is whether the trustees of the village of Ridgefield Park are entitled, under the act of March 9th, 1897 (Pamph. L., p. 33), to have the Court of Common Pleas of Bergen county appoint commissioners to divide the assets and debts of the township of Ridgefield as it formerly existed, between that township as it now is and the township of Overpeck, which, by the act of March 23, 1897 (Pamph. L., p. 45), was carved out of the township of Ridgefield.
If only the acts above mentioned be considered, it is perfectly manifest that the trustees have not such a right. The act of Mai’ch 9th, 1897, is a supplement of the Township act, and provides that if the legislature shall, by any special act of incorporation, designate the boundaries of any new township, such township shall be governed by the provisions of the Township act and its supplements; that within two months after the passage of such act of incorporation a township election shall be held, at which a township committee shall be chosen, and that the township committee may apply to the Court of Common Pleas for the appointment of commissioners to divide, &c. Subsequently, by the special act of March 23d, 1897, the legislature incorporated the new township of Overpeck. Plainly, by force of the act of March
But these trustees base their right to make this application "upon the fact that the boundaries of the township of Over-peck are coextensive with those of the pre-existing village •of Ridgefield Park, and they insist that, therefore, they possess in this township all the rights and powers of a township committee by force of a statute passed April 16th, 1896 (Pamph. L., p. 269), which enacts that “in any township in this state wherein there now or hereafter may exist any town, ■village or any. municipality governed by a board of commissioners or improvement commission, the boundaries or territorial limits of which are coextensive with those of said township, * * * the office of township committee of said township is hereby abolished, and the governing body of .such town, village or municipality * * * is hereby invested with all the powers, duties, privileges and liabilities by law conferred upon or required of any such township •committee.” .
Ve think this position cannot be maintained.
It is impossible to apply the provisions of the act of 1896 to this new township consistently with the provisions of the •act of March 9th, 1897, and of course in such a conflict the later statute must prevail. The terms of this statute include .any new township thereafter created by special act of the legislature, and we are not authorized to engraft upon those terms an exception of such new townships as have territorial limits coextensive with the boundaries of a pre-existing village.
Furthermore, even the act of March 23d, 1897, by which this new township was created, evinces a legislative purpose antagonistic to the claim of the relators; for it enacts that the township shall be subject to the same government as- the
The mandamus prayed for must be refused.