Board of Chosen Freeholders v. Jersey City, Hoboken & Paterson Street Railway Co.

88 A. 1061, 85 N.J.L. 179, 1913 N.J. LEXIS 255
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 17, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 88 A. 1061 (Board of Chosen Freeholders v. Jersey City, Hoboken & Paterson Street Railway Co.) 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
Board of Chosen Freeholders v. Jersey City, Hoboken & Paterson Street Railway Co., 88 A. 1061, 85 N.J.L. 179, 1913 N.J. LEXIS 255 (N.J. 1913).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Gummere, Chief Justice.

This action was brought by the board of freeholders to recover from the defendant com[180]*180pany a portion of the cost incurred by the board in the laying of a granite block pavement upon a portion of the Paterson plank road, a public highway of the county, through which the company operates an electric railway. This railway was originally constructed by the Jersey City, Hoboken and Rutherford Electric Railway Company, a corporation organized in 1893, under the Street Railway act of 1886. Comp. Btat., p. 1998. The eighteenth section of that act provides that every company incorporated under it “shall keep in repair, to the satisfaction of the local authorities, the paving, upper planking or other surface material, of the portion of streets, roads and bridges occupied by its tracks, and if such tracks occupy unpaved streets or roads shall, in addition, so keep in repair eighteen inches on each side of the portion occupied by its tracks.” The Jersey City, Hoboken and Rutherford Electric Railway Company, before building its railway, applied to the board -of freeholders of Hudson county for permission to construct it along the Paterson plank road, and such permission was granted upon certain conditions, one of which — and the only one pertinent to the present controversy —was that the tracks of its railway should be constructed and maintained in such manner as to afford all persons, vehicles, and the like, all proper and reasonable facilities for crossing, entering on and leaving the same, and that tire portions of tire highway occupied by its railway should be kept and maintained in a good state of repair at the expense of the company, so as that at all times it should be convenient and safe for public travel. This condition was agreed to by the company, and its road was constructed. In 1899 the property and franchises of this company became vested in the present defendant, and it thereupon assumed the performance of all the duties and obligations which rested upon its predecessor, either by statute or b}1" contract; and the principal question in dispute was whether, by virtue of section 18 of the act of 1886, or by the condition attached to the grant of permission to construct the railway on the Paterson plank road, the defendants were bound to pay to the board so much of the total cost of laying the granite block pavement as represented the [181]*181sums paid for laying it between tlie tracks of the railway, and adjacent thereto, or any other proportionate part thereof.

In the case of Dean v. Paterson, 38 Vroom 199, one of the questions involved and decided was whether or not, under the provisions of an ordinance requiring a street railway to keep and maintain the portion of a street inside its rails, and for a designated distance outside of them, in good and sufficient repair, the company was under a legal obligation to repave within those limits with a new and different material selected by the municipality. It was held by the Supreme Court that the duty to keep in repair did not carry with it the obligation to pay a proportion of the expense of repaving. And, on review by this court, the rule thus laid down was expressly approved. S. C. on error, 39 Id. 664. On the trial below the court, following this rule, held that the present action could not be maintained, and directed a nonsuit. The judgment entered pursuant to this direction is brought up by the present appeal.

It is now urged by counsel for the appellant that the rule in Dean v. Paterson is opposed to that adopted by the courts of some of our sister states, which hold that the duty to repair carries with it the duty of paying a proportionate part of the cost of repaving when the public interests require that a street shall be so improved; and that, therefore, it should now be repudiated by us. But this fact (conceding that counsel is right in the view which he takes of the effect of the decisions to which he refers) does not afford any reason for our departing from a rule of construction which we have once laid down upon a full consideration; for the most that can be said is that in determining the construction to be given to language which is fairly susceptible of one or the other of two meanings, different courts have held diverse views thereon. As was said by Chancellor Kent, in discussing the doctrine of stare decisis, “When a decision upon a point of law has been made upon solemn argument, and upon mature deliberation, the community have a right to regard it as a just declaration or exposition of the law, and to regulate their actions by it. When a rule has once been deliberately adopted [182]*182and declared it ought never to be disturbed by the same court, except for very urgent reasons, and upon a clear manifestation of error.” 1 Kent Com. 475. To the same effect are our own decisions in State v. Taylor, 39 Vroom 276, and Bowman v. Freeholders of Essex, 44 Id. 543.

The judgment of nonsuit cannot be reversed upon the ground that the rule of law applied by the trial court was unsound.

Recognizing that the rule in Dean v. Paterson must be accepted as the law, for the purposes of the trial, counsel for the board of freeholders sought to avoid its effect by attempting to prove that the obligation of the defendant company to keep in repair that portion of the highway designated by 'the statute, and by the resolution of permission, could not be kept, except by the expenditure of moneys largely in excess of the proportionate cost of laying down the new pavement. Upon objection, testimony tending to show this fact was excluded, and it is urged that in this there was harmful error. The offer was properly overruled. The obligation of the company was to repair. The cost to it of doing so, no matter how burdensome, was inconsequential. It could not escape that obligation by showing'that it was to the public interest to have the whole street repaved, and that it was willing, if the . board of freeholders would do this, to agree to pay so much of the cost thereof as represented the expense incurred by the laying of the new pavement upon that portion of the street which it was obliged to keep in repair. In other words, it could not relieve itself of an onerous duty which it had assumed by doing something else outside of the scope thereof, except by consent of the party for whose benefit the duty was to be performed. And the converse is equally true. The board of freeholders could not, without the consent of the defendant company, substitute another and less onerous duty in the place of that which the company had obligated itself to perform, and then compel it, against its will, to discharge that substituted duty. It follows from this that the offered testimony was wholly irrelevant.

[183]*183The testimony ;just adverted to having been excluded, counsel then attempted to show an implied agreement on the part of the company to pay its proportionate share of the improvement. Ho did this by offering in evidence two -written agreements entered into between the parties to this suit, by the terms of which the defendant company agreed to pay a part of the expense of repaving certain other portions of this sariie highway; contending that they showed a course of dealing between the parties which estopped the defendant from denying that it was liable to pay its fair proportion of the work involved in the present litigation.

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88 A. 1061, 85 N.J.L. 179, 1913 N.J. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-chosen-freeholders-v-jersey-city-hoboken-paterson-street-nj-1913.