Bellington v. Township of East Windsor

112 A.2d 268, 17 N.J. 558, 1955 N.J. LEXIS 315
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 14, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 112 A.2d 268 (Bellington v. Township of East Windsor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bellington v. Township of East Windsor, 112 A.2d 268, 17 N.J. 558, 1955 N.J. LEXIS 315 (N.J. 1955).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Heher, J.

We are concerned here with the legal sufficiency of a local ordinance to “license and regulate” trailer camps and camp sites within the municipality, adopted May 6, 1953.

The ordinance is essentially regulatory directed to the problems peculiar to trailer camps and camp sites. It embodies measures related to the provision of potable water and adequate sanitary facilities, overcrowding, the disposal of garbage, ashes and waste matter, the maintenance and use of cesspools, septic tanks and plumbing fixtures, the lighting of the camp grounds and toilet facilities, drainage, grading, the observance of health practices and the requirements of law and good order. It prescribes a “license fee” of $200 per annum for a “trailer camp or camp site” and $2 “per calendar week per trailer,” reduced to $1 for “any trailer parked in a camp three days or less,” which “said fee is hereby expressly declared to be imposed for revenue”; and this “license fee” is denounced “as enacted for purposes of *562 taxation, not regulation,” and “prohibitory and confiscatory,” yet severable from the “regulatory and administrative” provisions of the ordinance which stand unchallenged.

The contention of pro tanto invalidity was overruled by the Law Division of the Superior Court, and the Appellate Division affirmed the judgment. 32 N. J. Super. 243 (1954). The case is here under Article YI, section Y, paragraph 1(a) of the 1947 Constitution, providing for an appeal of right in cases involving a substantial and not merely color-able constitutional question. See State v. Pometti, 12 N. J. 446 (1953).

The argument is that the “municipal purpose, in adopting the license fee provisions, was to impose a tax,” and a license fee “imposed as a tax is equally bad, standing alone or accompanied by separable regulatory provisions.” And this “notwithstanding the language” of R. S. 40:52 — 2, on the authority of Salomon v. Jersey City, 12 N. J. 379 (1953). But the Salomon case does not go so far.

It cannot be gainsaid that a business, occupation or activity having a'potential for harm to the public weal in matters of health, safety, morals, or property is the subject of reasonable regulation to obviate or eradicate the inimical influence; and tourist or trailer camps are by their very nature in this category. This is but the exercise of the police power to a legitimate public end.

In New Jersey such regulation is a municipal function by legislative grant. Under R. S. 40:52-l(d), as amended by L. 1948, c. 425, the local governing body “may make, amend, repeal and enforce ordinances to license and regulate: (d) * * * trailer camps and camp sites, * * *.” And the next succeeding section, R. S. 40:52-2, empowers these local agencies of government to “fix the fees for all such licenses, which may be imposed for revenue, * * *.”

In Edwards v. Mayor & Council of the Borough of Moonachie, 3 N. J. 17 (1949), we sustained, as within this statutorjr power, a local ordinance which combined both police and tax measures. And in Independent Warehouses, Inc., v. Scheele, 134 N. J. L. 133 (E. & A. 1946), affirmed *563 331 U. S. 70, 67 S. Ct. 1063, 91 L. Ed. 1346 (1947), the sale of coal storage service was the business regulated and taxed by local ordinance under the same grant of power. The statute, R. 8. 40:53-l(<7)-3, was there held to concern “a license or privilege tax or excise levied for both revenue and regulation under the police power * * *.” The statutorily-provided “license” was defined as “a means of regulating and taxing privileges and occupations and the use and disposal of property,” a power contained within reasonable bounds and subject in its exercise to the basic principle interdicting “confiscation and oppression under the guise of taxation.”

Salomon v. Jersey City is differentiable. There, the question decided was whether the selfsame statute delegated to municipalities legislative jurisdiction to “impose solely for revenue purposes, license taxes upon all businesses operating within their borders, including manufacturers, wholesalers and retailers,” a power distinct in attribute and incidence. The local action reviewed was an ordinance “establishing licensing requirements for businesses having a situs in the City.” It was devoid of regulatory features; indeed, it did not purport to be regulative, but was concededly a taxing measure designed to raise annual revenues of $3,000,000. Wholesalers and retailers were made subject to license fees measured by gross receipts; manufacturers, by their payrolls; truckers, by the square footage of space occupied by their truck terminal. There were other classifications. But we need not go on. It suffices to say that this was a general revenue measure, in no sense involving regulation for police purposes or otherwise; there was no pretense of regulation. Justice Jaeobs said, and this is the rationale and interpretive principle of the decision: “It is purely a taxing measure without any regulatory aspects whatever and is made applicable to all businesses, including those clearly having inter-municipal and interstate aspects such as manufacturers, and with varying tax bases including gross receipts, payrolls and square footage,” and so not within the enabling act cited supra. In the light of the history and long-continued usage, *564 the nature of the subject matter, and the acts in pari materia, it was deemed that the “primary and overriding” legislative purpose was “to authorize municipalities to license and regulate as police measures for the public health, safety, morals or welfare, the local businesses described therein, and only incidentally to impose on the businesses thus licensed and regulated license fees for revenue which may, at least within reasonable limits, exceed the regulatory costs.”

In a word, the enabling statute is not a general municipal tax measure, as an end in itself, but is in essence a regulative police mechanism directed to the service of the public need in the particular area of governmental action by control through license and a license fee which may also, within reasonable bounds, be imposed for revenue as an incident of the police regulation, and by the same token a fee reasonably related to the regulated subjects and the public ends to be served.

There is a basic distinction between a local legislative act primarily regulative of a business, trade, profession, or calling in the exercise of the police power to serve the common need and the use of the delegated power to tax the pursuit for revenue.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Fallone Properties, L.L.C. v. Bethlehem Township Planning Board
849 A.2d 1117 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2004)
Fallon Prop. v. Bethlehem Plan Bd.
849 A.2d 1117 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2004)
Btd-1996 NPC 1 L.L.C. v. 350 Warren L.P.
784 A.2d 1214 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2001)
Pullen v. Tp. of South Plainfield
676 A.2d 1095 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1996)
Resolution Trust Corp. v. Lanzaro
658 A.2d 282 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1995)
Resolution Trust Corp. v. Lanzaro
638 A.2d 931 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1992)
Holmdel Builders Ass'n v. Township of Holmdel
583 A.2d 277 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1990)
Automatic Merchandising Council v. Township of Edison
506 A.2d 352 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1986)
Township of Middletown v. Storer Cable Communications, Inc.
503 A.2d 357 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1985)
Pub. Serv. Elec. v. NJ DEPT. OF ENVIRON
501 A.2d 125 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1985)
Atlantic City Casino Hotel Ass'n v. Casino Control Comm'n
496 A.2d 714 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1985)
Tanque Verde Enterprises v. City of Tucson
691 P.2d 302 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1984)
Redeb Amusement, Inc. v. Tp. of Hillside
465 A.2d 564 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1983)
Gross v. Township of Ocean
445 A.2d 435 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1982)
Trailways, Inc. v. City of Atlantic City
431 A.2d 191 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1980)
Taxi's Inc. v. Borough of East Rutherford
373 A.2d 717 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1977)
Sente v. Mayor and Mun. Coun. Clifton
330 A.2d 321 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1974)
Nelson Cooney & Son, Inc. v. Township of South Harrison
273 A.2d 33 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1971)
Boulevard Apts. v. BOR. OF HASBROUCK HEIGHTS
268 A.2d 359 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1970)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 A.2d 268, 17 N.J. 558, 1955 N.J. LEXIS 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bellington-v-township-of-east-windsor-nj-1955.