City of New Brunswick v. Board of Conservation & Development

108 A. 865, 94 N.J.L. 46, 9 Gummere 46, 1920 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 92
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 16, 1920
StatusPublished

This text of 108 A. 865 (City of New Brunswick v. Board of Conservation & Development) 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
City of New Brunswick v. Board of Conservation & Development, 108 A. 865, 94 N.J.L. 46, 9 Gummere 46, 1920 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 92 (N.J. 1920).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Bergen, J.

The Elizabethtown Water Compaq, the Plainiield-Union Water Company, and the Middlesex Water Company, in conjunction with two other companies engaged in the same business, viz., furnishing the inhabitants of, primarily, the counties of Somerset, Middlesex, and Union with a supply of water for domestic and public uses, requiring an additional supply of water for that use, and proposing to obtain it by diverting water from the Raritan and Millstone [47]*47rivers near their junction in the county of Somerset, filed a joint petition accompanied with maps and plans indicating the method of diversion, as required by the statute, with the board of conservation and development, a state agency to which the legislature has delegated the power to approve plans in such cases, the statute declaring, “The approval of the commission shall constitute the state's assent to the diversion of water.” After notice to parties interested, and following a hearing, the state board approved the plans as to the three companies herein before specifically named and denied it as to the two other companies, and made an order to that effect, which is the matter brought under review by this writ. The plan as approved contemplates the erection of works sufficient to divert from the two rivers a quantity of water not in excess of twenty million gallons per diem. The order challenged recites that it was made subject to certain terms and conditions, those pertinent being (a) that it shall constitute the assent of the state to the diversion of water from the rivers to the extent above stated, but shall not be construed to increase any rights of the petitioners which they had under any statute enacted prior to chapter 252 of laws of 1907, nor should its acceptance be taken to be a waiver by the petitioners of any such rights; (5) that the order should not limit the right of the state to grant its consent to others to take water from either of the rivers or their tributaries; (c) that the order should not be taken to grant to either of the petitioners a right to supply water in any territory in which they had not then such right; (d) that the board reserved the right to provide for the storage, in the future, of the storm waters along the rivers or their tributaries. if that should become necessary to provide the amount required to supply water to those lawffullv entitled to take it, and to apportion the expenses of providing the storage bettveen the petitioners and other lawful applicants in such manner as may be equitable. This order, subject to such limitations and conditions, was properly accepted by the defendants. The junction of the two rivers is in the county of Somerset, and thereafter the water of the twro flows, under [48]*48the name of the Raritan river, easterly and southerly between the counties of Somerset and Middlesex until it passes the city of New Brunswick, and is finally discharged into the ocean. The evidence in this ease is plenary that all that portion of the state lying between the proposed intake and Staten Island sound, especially in the counties of Middlesex and Union, is quite densely populated, and that the present source of water supply is becoming so scanty that some other means must be taken to furnish the required quantity, and that the proposed method is the most available, if not the only reasonable source of supply, and that if the flood waters of the two rivers should be empounded and stored to prevent their waste, the supply would be, according to present foresight and knowledge, ample for' the territory proposed to be supplied. The meritorious objection, distinguished from the legal aspect of this controversy, as advanced by the prosecutor, is that the city of New Brunswick has a legislative grant to divert the water of the Raritan river for the domestic and public uses of its citizens, and that the diversion of the quantity of water allowed by the order will injuriously interfere with such grant, and that it should not be deprived of water flowing by its door in a natural water course for the benefit of others less fayorably situated. The state board found, and there is evidence to support it, that this claim was not true in fact and that the quantity of water to be withdrawn will not appreciably interfere with the grant to the city, and with this finding we agree. It is admitted that the Raritan river is subject to the ebb and flow of ocean tides along the city of New Brunswick and for a considerable distance beyond, but to what extent it is impregnated with salt water the evidence does not show with any clearness, but common knowledge teaches that the flow of the river in the neighborhood of New Brunswick must be influenced by such tides.

In support of this -writ the prosecutor urges that under the statute only one person or corporation can present a plan for approval of the state board, and therefore, although these three applicants are now acting in conjunction and propose to use one main.pipe to distribute the water, under contracts [49]*49between them, there can be no joint application for the approval of single plan applicable to all. To this we do not accede, for the ninth section of “An act relative to statutes” (Comp. Stai. p. 4972) provides that any word used in- a statute importing a singular number shall be construed to include plural numbers. In this case, as we understand it, the diversion is to be made through connecting pipes, one being for the benefit of the other two under contracts, which the respective parties have a right to make, and manifestly the amount of water which the board would be justified in consenting, on behalf of the state, to be 'diverted would depend upon the interest to be served, and it is quite proper that all of these companies who are to participate in this diversion should jointly apply in order that the board might have before it all the conditions to which the diversion petitioned for was intended to apply.

The next point urged by the prosecutor is that the conditions set out in the order are illegal. On this branch of the case it is urged that the condition that the petitioners will not be held to have waived, by the acceptance of the order, other legal rights which they claim to possess, is an admission by the state board that the petitioners did not need the consent of the state for the proposed diversion. If this be granted we fail to see how the prosecutor i-s injured, but as we view this condition or reservation it is nothing more than saying that the board will approve the plans, and give the consent of the state to the diversion, but do not intend thereby to increase or affirm any rights you claim to have,'nor will you be held to have waived any such rights by the acceptance of the order, leaving all such to be settled in the proper forum. We see no error in this.

It is next urged by the prosecutor that the Elizabethtown Water Company is limited by its charter to obtaining water for distribution to that which it may obtain in the county of Union, and therefore not entitled under the law to go into the county of Somerset and obtain any additional supply therefrom. The Elizabethtown Water Company was incorporated in 1854 (Pamph. L., p. 203) and that charter does [50]*50not limit the company to obtaining water in the-county -of Union.

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108 A. 865, 94 N.J.L. 46, 9 Gummere 46, 1920 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-new-brunswick-v-board-of-conservation-development-nj-1920.