Board of Health v. Court of Common Pleas

85 A. 217, 83 N.J.L. 392, 1912 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 15
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 27, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 85 A. 217 (Board of Health v. Court of Common Pleas) 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 Health v. Court of Common Pleas, 85 A. 217, 83 N.J.L. 392, 1912 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 15 (N.J. 1912).

Opinion

The opinion of the court- was delivered by

Minturn, J.

The legislature (2 Comp. Stat., p. 2662) empowered all local boards of health to pass, alter or amend ordinances, and make rules and regulations in regard to the public health, within their several jurisdictions, for the following purppses, inler alia, section 12:

[393]*393“To prevent the spreading of dangerous epidemics or contagious diseases, and to declare that the same has become epidemic, and to maintain and enforce proper and sufficient quarantine whenever deemed necessary.”
“Section 50. That any local board of health may prescribe a penalty for the violation of any ordinance, section of code or amendment thereof, heretofore or hereafter passed by such board, not io exceed one hundred dollars, and not less than two dollars.”

The local board of health of Cranford, in the county of Union, pursuant to this authority, adopted a sanitary code which provides:

“Section 11. Whenever there shall occur in the township of Cranford a case of scarlet fever the board of heal tip or its authorized agent, shall place on the house in which said case or cases are confined one or more placards stating that a case of contagious disease exists within the house.”
“Section 12. Whenever a placard shall be placed on a house as provided in section 11 of this article no person or persons except the medical attendant and nurses shall enter therein or depart therefrom without permission of the hoard of health or its authorized agent.”
“'Section 18. Any person violating any of the provisions of this article shall, upon conviction thereof, forfeit and pay a penalty of fifty dollars.”

The home of Edward Montenecourt, a resident of Cranford, was placed under quarantine, by order of the hoard of health, upon the ground of the existence therein of the disease of scarlet fever. The house was duly placarded, continuously from December 20th to the 29th, inclusive. Mr. Montenecourt, who, it is conceded, was neither a medical attendant nor a nurse during ibis interval, departed from the house without the permission of the board, or its agent, and, consequently, subjected himself to the charge of having violated the provision of the sanitary code referred to.

The hoard of health thereafter instituted suit in the small cause court against him io recover the prescribed penalty; [394]*394and after a hearing that court found him guilty and imposed the penalty and costs.

Thereafter an appeal was taken to the Common Pleas, where the ease was tried de novo, and'testimony presented in behalf of Mr. Montenecourt as to the reasonableness of the board’s order, as to him, upon which the court reversed the judgment below, and rendered judgment against the board of health, which judgment is before us for review upon this writ. The reversal was based upon testimony taken before the Pleas, designed to show that the necessity for the quarantine did not exist as to Mr. Montenecourt.

We think the Common Pleas was without jurisdiction to determine this case upon appeal. We assume that the appeal was taken under the provisions of the eighteenth section of the Health act. 2 Comp. Stat., p. 2666. But that section substantially in its present form was before this court in Holzworth v. Newark, 21 Vroom 85, and it was there held that the words “unless an appeal be granted” did not confer the right of appeal upon the Pleas, if such right did not exist without this language. We deem that case controlling here.

But upon the general merits of the. controversy, we are unable to perceive anything in the legislation referred to conferring upon the Common Pleas the right to review the conditions, and the emergency in the locality, which prompted the board of health to impose the restrictions and quarantine complained of in this case.

We are unable to perceive any authority in. the legislation itself or in the pubile policy upon which it is based which can be said to contemplate the submission to a legal tribunal of the public necessity, which requires in an emergency the prompt and expeditious intervention of a board to which the legislature for the protection of life and- health, in a community, has especially committed the determination of the facts.

No question is made in the case at bar as to tire conceded power of a proper reviewing tribunal to pass upon the reasonableness. of an ordinance or a resolution passed under general [395]*395laws, or the manner of the- exercise of the powers therein conferred. That question has long been -settled, in the affirmative, by repeated adjudications. Powell v. Pennsylvania, 127 U. S. 678; Jacobson v. Massachusetts, 197 Id. 11; Haynes v. Cape May, 21 Vroom 55.

But the insistence is, that a tribunal to which an appeal is presumably given may by its review of conditions and exigencies, in a trial de novo, determine adversely to the board to whom the power has been specifically committed, by legislative act, that its exercise in any given case was unwarranted, and that its discretion was improperly exercised.

We find no autliorit}^ in the act for such a claim, and it is proper to assume that if the legislature intended to confer such power, it would have found expression in the act. The statute makes provision for the interposition of the Court of Chancery under certain conditions, and it defines the liability which may be imposed upon the members of the board, by reason of an excessive or illegal use of power conferred. Valentine v. Englewood, 47 Vroom 509.

The legislative recital of these remedies carries with it a presumption of the exclusion of other and additional remedies. Expressio unius est exclusio alterius. Regnia v. Bell, 7 T. R. 600; Paul v. Gloucester, 21 Vroom, 588.

To assume that the legislature intended to confer a review of -a discretionary power of this character, vested in a statutory board, charged with its exercise in critical situations, involving detriment to the life and health of a community, is tantamount to a declaration that the police power of the state is moribund and useless.

It will not be assumed, therefore^ in the construction of such a statute, that the legislature intended to defeat its own will or to create absurd results such as would ensue under such conditions. United States v. Kirby, 7 Wall. 482.

Aside from these considerations, the rule of construction of such statutes as that sub ¡udice, has been settled by many adjudications in this state.

In Haynes v. Cape May, supra, it was held by Mr. Justice Depue, speaking for this court, that “When the legislature [396]*396lias defined the delegated powers, and prescribed with precision the penalties that may be imposed, an ordinance within the powers granted, prescribing a penalty within the designated limit, cannot be set aside as unreasonable.”

This case was cited with approval by' Mr. Justice Yan Syekel, in his opinion in Paul v. Gloucester, supra. In Kennelly v. Jersey City, 28 Vroom 296, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
85 A. 217, 83 N.J.L. 392, 1912 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-health-v-court-of-common-pleas-nj-1912.