Calligy v. Mayor and Council
This text of 665 A.2d 408 (Calligy v. Mayor and Council) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
THOMAS P. CALLIGY, PLAINTIFF,
v.
THE MAYOR AND COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF HOBOKEN, DEFENDANT.
Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division Hudson County.
*366 Thomas P. Calligy, Attorney, Pro Se.
*367 David F. Corrigan for defendant (Murray, Murray & Corrigan, attorneys).
D'ITALIA, A.J.S.C.
This is a taxpayer action challenging an ordinance of the City of Hoboken that creates the offices of municipal court judge and additional municipal court judge "in the Department of Administration" of City government. Plaintiff argues that the assignment of the municipal court to a department of municipal government, a practice which has existed in Hoboken under various ordinances since at least 1959, violates the separation of powers doctrine. This matter is before the court on cross-motions for summary judgment.
The amended sections of the Hoboken Code about which complaint is made provide in pertinent part:[1]
Sec. 4-22. Municipal Court Judge.
There is hereby created in the Department of Administration the office of Municipal Court Judge, who shall be responsible for all judicial and administrative functions of the Municipal Court.
Sec. 4-23. Additional Municipal Court Judge.
There is hereby created in the Department of Administration the position of Additional Municipal Court Judge assigned to the Municipal Court, who shall be an attorney at law of the State of New Jersey.
The City asserts that N.J.S.A. 40:69A-43 requires the municipal court be assigned to a department. This statute, part of the Faulkner Act, provides, among other things:
(a) The municipality shall have a department of administration and such other departments, not less than two and not exceeding nine in number, as council may establish by ordinance. All of the administrative functions, powers and duties of the municipality, other than those vested in the offices of the municipal clerk and the municipal tax assessor, shall be allocated and assigned among and within such departments.
The City's reliance on the cited statute is misplaced. The statute addresses only the allocation of the administrative functions, *368 powers and duties of municipal government. It does not at all encompass the judicial functions, powers and duties of the municipal court which exist wholly apart from and independent of the municipal governing body.
The municipal court is an integral part of a state-wide judicial system and the judicial power exercised by municipal court judges is the judicial power of the State. Kagan v. Caroselli, 30 N.J. 371, 377, 153 A.2d 17 (1959). As Chief Justice Weintraub pointed out in Kagan:
The Constitution provides [that] "[t]he judicial power shall be vested in a Supreme Court, a Superior Court, County Courts and inferior courts of limited jurisdiction." Art. VI, Sec. I, par. 1. The Municipal Court, as an inferior court of limited jurisdiction, shares in this single power.
[Ibid]
The dispute in Kagan involved competing claims to the office of magistrate (now office of the municipal court judge) in Jersey City. The City was governed by a Board of Commissioners, pursuant to the Walsh Act, N.J.S.A. 40:72-1 to 19. Plaintiff relied on appointment by action of the Board of Commissioners and defendant claimed appointment through the Director of Public Safety to whose department the office of magistrate had been assigned at the organization meeting. The Walsh Act has a provision somewhat similar to the Faulkner Act that requires the Board to distribute the executive, administrative, judicial and legislative powers among departments. N.J.S.A. 40:72-4.
In ruling that the Board of Commissioners was the appointing authority, the Supreme Court differentiated between the judicial power of the office of magistrate and the judicial authority exercised by a department director incidental to its internal and administrative functions. The latter authority is a prerogative of local government required to be allocated by the Walsh Act; the former is not. The Court's articulation of the independence of the municipal court from administrative control by local government applies equally to Faulkner Act municipalities and bears repeating:
*369 The powers and duties of the office of magistrate are not appropriate to any of the departments of local government. Indeed, they are not appropriate to the board of commissioners itself. The Constitution places the administrative control of the municipal court in the Supreme Court and the Chief Justice. Art. VI, Sec. 2, par. 3; Art. VI, Sec. 7, par. 1. There is no room for divided authority. The constitutional plan assures to the magistrate independence of local government and the 1948 statute was designed to preserve it. See In re Klaisz, 19 N.J. 145, 148 [115 A.2d 537] (1955).
The appointive power was not given to local government because it is inherently appropriate to place it there ... The legislative decision in the 1948 statute to repose the power in the governing body was, wisely or not, a concession to those who thought a voice in the matter should be given to the municipalities. But the power to appoint did not make the functions of a magistrate a phase of local government. Rather, in exercising the appointive power, the governing body acts merely as a statutory agent.
[Kagan, supra, 30 N.J. at 379, 153 A.2d 17]
Thus, in Kagan the Court settled both that municipalities possess no judicial power distributable to their departments and that administrative control of the municipal courts rests in the Supreme Court. The Court has remained consistent in reading and interpreting the New Jersey Constitution as leaving:
not the slightest doubt that [the] Court possesses plenary authority with respect to all matters touching the administration of the court system of New Jersey. Upon it also rests the concomitant responsibility to see that the public interest is fully served by the proper functioning of this vital branch of our government.
[Passaic County Probation Officers Ass'n v. County of Passaic, 73 N.J. 247, 252-53, 374 A.2d 449 (1977)]
In exercising its rulemaking authority, the Court has determined that the Chief Justice shall be responsible for the administration of all courts in this State, R.1:33-1; has directed the Chief Justice to designate an Assignment Judge for each vicinage, R.1:33-2; and has determined that "the Assignment Judge shall be the chief judicial officer within the vicinage and shall have plenary responsibility for the administration of all courts therein, subject to the direction of the Chief Justice and the Rules of the Supreme Court." R.1:33-4. These rules are applicable to the municipal courts. R.1:1-1.
The municipalities are not, however, without duties, functions and responsibilities with respect to the municipal courts. For example, every municipality is required to establish a municipal *370 court or enter into an agreement with another municipality for a joint municipal court. N.J.S.A. 2B:12-1.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
665 A.2d 408, 284 N.J. Super. 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calligy-v-mayor-and-council-njsuperctappdiv-1995.