Borough of Kenilworth v. Raubinger

105 A.2d 837, 15 N.J. 581, 1954 N.J. LEXIS 302
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 7, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 105 A.2d 837 (Borough of Kenilworth v. Raubinger) 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
Borough of Kenilworth v. Raubinger, 105 A.2d 837, 15 N.J. 581, 1954 N.J. LEXIS 302 (N.J. 1954).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

William J. Brennan, Jr., J.

The Borough of Kenilworth seeks a determination nullifying the high school expansion program of the respondent Board of Education of the Union County Regional High School, District No. 1. The program proposes a $1,950,000 bond issue to finance the acquisition of sites for new high schools in Berkeley Heights and Clark Township and the immediate construction of a high school on the Clark Township site.

This regional district is comprised of the municipalities of Garwood, Kenilworth, Mountainside, Springfield, ClaTk and Berkeley Heights. It is roughly triangular in shape, with Springfield (abutted at its southeast corner by Kenilworth) at the northerly apex, and Berkeley Heights and Clark Township, respectively, at the extreme southwest and southeast base angles. The district at present has but one high school, which is located in Springfield.

In 1953 the regional board made a comprehensive survey of the future needs of the district for new high school facilities in light of growth and population trends, and upon the basis of that study concluded that a second high school will be needed prior to September 1956, and a third by 1959- *585 1960. This required the framing of a proposal by the regional board, R. S. 18:7-86, to be submitted to the voters at a referendum election, R. S. 18:7-85, and, because there were existing debt limitations, it was necessary that prior to the referendum election the proposal be consented to by the State Commissioner of Education and the Board of Local Government, R. S. 18:5-86(a) (3).

On October 6, 1953 the regional board framed a proposal: (a) to acquire as sites for school houses, and to expend for said purpose not exceeding $125,000, a plot of 42 acres in Berkeley Heights and a plot of 25 acres in Clark Township, (b) to construct a new high school on the Clark Township site at a cost not exceeding $1,825,000, and (c) to issue bonds for both purposes in the aggregate amount of $1,950,000.

Application for consents of the State Commissioner of Education and the Local Government Board were duly made on October 20, 1953. A hearing by the State Commissioner of Education was held, upon notice, on October 21, 1953, and on October 29 the Commissioner endorsed his consent to the proposal. A hearing was also held by the Local Government Board, after which that body on November 16, 1953 adopted a resolution endorsing its consent to the proposal. The proposal was approved by a vote of 3,360 to 570 at a referendum election held on November 30. The submission at the referendum election was for the approval or rejection of the proposal in its entirety. The vote in Kenilworth was 297 opposed to 53 in favor, the only adverse vote among the six communities.

Eollowing the referendum election the Borough of Kenilworth on December 14 and December 29, 1953 filed notices of appeal from the actions respectively of the State Commissioner of Education and the Local Government Board. On January 18, 1954 the borough filed a complaint in lieu of prerogative writ against the regional board to have the election set aside and the bond issue declared invalid. The two appeals and the proceeding in lieu of prerogative writ were consolidated and have been certified here of our own motion.

*586 Appellant’s first point is that, because the proposal as it relates to Berkeley Heights provides for the acquisition of a school site only and not also for the building of a high school thereon, it is invalid.

The argument is that a proposal to purchase land unaccompanied by a proposal to build school buildings thereon is not a proposal to finance “new educational facilities” within the meaning of R. S. 18:5-86 under which consent of the State Commissioner of Education may be given only if he is satisfied, among other things, “that the new educational facilities to be financed pursuant to said proposal or ordinance will within ten years be fully utilized.” It is said that a site without a school is not an educational facility within the meaning of the statute. The short answer to the argument is that R. S. 18:5 — 86 is to be read with R. S. 18:7-85 which expressly authorizes the submission to the voters of a proposal including “any or all of the following purposes: a. Purchasing or taking and condemning land for school purposes or improving such land.” Thus, “new educational facilities” embraces sites for school purposes. This conclusion is buttressed by reference to other statutes in pari materia, R. S. 18 :7-91, prescribing time limits upon the maturity of bonds, which expressly embraces, in subsection (b), bonds “For acquiring land for school purposes;” and R. S. 18:8 — 16, concerning meetings of a regional board of education, which speaks of meetings “for bonding the district for the purchase of land * * * for school purposes.”

It is next argued that the State Commissioner of Education could not legally discharge his statutory function under R. S. 18 :5-86 to “record in writing his estimates * * * that the new educational facilities * * * will within ten years be fully utilized” if the proposal does not provide for the building of a school upon the site within ten years. The key word in this provision is “estimates.” Plainly the Legislature did not contemplate that the proposal incorporate a *587 guarantee that new school buildings would be constructed within ten years. All that is contemplated is that there be sufficient evidence from which the Commissioner may reasonably "record in writing his estimates” that the "new educational facilities,” in this case the Berkeley Heights site, will within ten years be fully utilized for school purposes. It is clear from the record that there was ample material before the Commissioner to support his conclusion. At. the hearing before him evidence was adduced which plainly indicated that the present high school facilities in the district will be taxed to capacity by September 1956, that the high school student population will steadily increase, that even the proposed new Clark Township school, with the present Springfield school, will provide adequate facilities only until 1960, and that for that reason construction on the Berkeley Heights site in or about that year is contemplated by the regional board. There was also uncontradicted evidence that not only is the Berkeley Heights site an integral part of the comprehensive regional plan but also that it can be acquired at this time upon very favorable terms and that the opportunity to do so should not be lost.

The duty of the State Commissioner under the statute is to examine into the regional board’s plans for use of the proposed facilities, such as they may be, and to be satisfied that the facilities will be fully utilized within the ten year period. All that the statute requires is that the Commissioner’s estimate be based upon adequate evidence, and the wealth of data before the Commissioner in this case fully supported his conclusion. The same may also be said of the requirement of R. S.

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

Related

Pub. Serv. Elec. v. NJ DEPT. OF ENVIRON
501 A.2d 125 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1985)
Schinck v. BD. OF ED. OF WESTWOOD CONSOL. SCHOOL DIST.
159 A.2d 396 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 A.2d 837, 15 N.J. 581, 1954 N.J. LEXIS 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borough-of-kenilworth-v-raubinger-nj-1954.