Cartan v. Cruz Construction Co.
This text of 215 A.2d 356 (Cartan v. Cruz Construction Co.) 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
RENSSELEAR L. CARTAN, PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT,
v.
CRUZ CONSTRUCTION CO., ET AL., DEFENDANTS-RESPONDENTS.
Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.
*416 Before Judges GOLDMANN, FOLEY and COLLESTER.
Mr. Ralph S. Heuser argued the cause for appellant (Messrs. Heuser & Heuser, attorneys).
Mr. Martin Gelber argued the cause for respondents.
The opinion of the court was delivered by FOLEY, J.A.D.
Plaintiff appeals from a judgment entered in the Law Division upon a jury verdict in favor of defendant. The single question involved is whether the court erred in its charge in respects hereinafter noted.
Plaintiff was the owner of acreage in the Borough of Matawan. The municipality was engaged in a project which involved the laying of a sewer line over plaintiff's property. Defendant corporation is a construction company which had been engaged by the municipality to install the sewer. The individual defendant is a principal of that company. For the purposes of this opinion the company and the individual will be referred to as "defendant."
In the course of executing its contract with the borough, defendant cleared the easement which the borough acquired over plaintiff's lands for the sewer installation, in order that an engineering firm engaged by the borough might place *417 grade stakes therein. In the course of this work defendant cut a wide swath through plaintiff's property and at places markedly altered the grade of the land.
In order to bring into focus plaintiff's contention on this appeal it is necessary for us to briefly review the pleadings and pretrial order and to advert to pertinent testimony given in the trial.
Plaintiff's complaint sounded in trespass. Inter alia he alleged:
"5. The defendants by themselves, their agents and servants entered into and upon the lands of the plaintiff destroyed the tree growth gave the wood away, ruined the root structure of trees and bushes which were holding up the embankment, cut the embankment with bulldozers and removed hundreds of cubic yards of dirt, cut thru a portion of the balance of the property uprooting and destroying trees.
6. All the above was done without the permission of the plaintiff and much of the damage was done even outside the area over which the Borough of Matawan was asking an easement."[1]
Defendant's answer denied the quoted allegations of the complaint.
The factual contentions of plaintiff, revealed by the pretrial order, were essentially a reiteration of the allegations of the complaint. Defendant's contentions in pertinent part were:
"3. Deft states that plf gave him permission to proceed on his land for the purpose of installing certain sewers in accordance with work done for Boro of Matawan, and that plf was aware at all times that this work was being done in accordance with a right-of-way given by him to Boro of Matawan. Furthermore, that the deft did not proceed out of the right-of-way and did not do the damage as stated in complaint."
At the trial plaintiff testified that either in late December 1961 or early in January 1962 Cyrus K. Brown, then sewer inspector of the Borough of Matawan, brought Cruz to plaintiff's office. According to plaintiff, Brown introduced Cruz as *418 the new sewer inspector and said that Cruz wanted to know if he could store some equipment and some pipe in the rear of plaintiff's property. Together they went to the property and selected a site where the pipe could be stored "as an accommodation." This site appears to be about 200 feet distant from the sewer right-of-way, according to a map which was offered in evidence. With further respect to the conversation between the parties, plaintiff said that Cruz was "terrifically excited in [sic] this pipe, because the pipe was coming in on a Sunday, as I remember, and he had to have some place to let them unload it, and it was agreed it would be unloaded" at the point indicated as "S" on the map. Plaintiff denied that anything was said respecting a right-of-way through his property, or the new sewer line; that the conversation was entirely concerned with the storing of pipe and equipment at the place designated; and that the permission which he granted to Cruz was limited to the storing of pipe and equipment at that point and nothing else.
The testimony of Cruz was vastly different. He testified specifically, and in total effect, that he and Brown told plaintiff he wished to put sewers through the right-of-way and that plaintiff said: "Go ahead; we can't stop progress." He testified also that his operation, which resulted in the conditions of which plaintiff complains, was observed by plaintiff while it was in progress and that the latter made no objection to it.
Brown partially supported defendant's version of the conversation. He testified:
"I told Mr. Cartan that the borough, as he already knowed, the borough was running a sewer line to connect to the immediate plant down there and Mr. Cruz was going to start to cut some underbrush through the tract so that the surveyors * * * could come up and put the grade stakes, and I asked him would it be all right and he said yes, and well, I said, `You understand that they're not sure as to whether they have the old easement or not, which they are looking it up and there might be they might have to come before you for an easement,' and he said, `Well, I can give you a letter,' and I says, `You better not do that until you consult your attorney.' * * * And he says, `Well, all right, then. Go ahead.' * * *."
*419 Patently, the factual issues arising from these conflicts in the proofs involved the nature and extent of plaintiff's grant of permission to defendant to enter upon his lands, and the portions or areas within such lands which were the subject of the permitted use. In other words, did plaintiff, as he contends, merely permit defendant to store pipes and equipment at a definitely designated place, or did he, as defendant urges, grant to the latter the privilege of clearing and preparing the sewer right-of-way preparatory to the installation of the sewer line? Regardless of which of these contentions was accepted by the jury, or even if the jury inferred from the testimony of Brown that the permission given went no further than the clearing of underbrush on the right-of-way so that grade stakes could be inserted, it is clear that when defendant first stepped upon plaintiff's lands he was a licensee not a trespasser. Whether he thereafter became a trespasser by exceeding the bounds of the license granted to him depended upon what the jury found the license to have been.
A simple license associated with the use of land is in the law a mere privilege or permission which confers upon the licensee no intangible interest in the land to which it is related. Moore v. Schultz, 22 N.J. Super. 24, 28 (App. Div. 1952), affirmed o.b., 12 N.J. 329 (1953). It may be granted by parol. Forbes v. Forbes, 137 N.J. Eq. 520, 522 (Ch. 1946). In 33 Am. Jur., Licenses, § 95, pp. 401-402, it is said:
"If a license is valid and effectual and its conditions are complied with, it constitutes a complete defense at law for action taken thereunder.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
215 A.2d 356, 89 N.J. Super. 414, 1965 N.J. Super. LEXIS 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cartan-v-cruz-construction-co-njsuperctappdiv-1965.