City of Newark v. Charles Realty Co.

86 A.2d 33, 17 N.J. Super. 351, 1952 N.J. Super. LEXIS 1275
CourtNew York County Court, Essex County
DecidedJanuary 17, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 86 A.2d 33 (City of Newark v. Charles Realty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York County Court, Essex County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Newark v. Charles Realty Co., 86 A.2d 33, 17 N.J. Super. 351, 1952 N.J. Super. LEXIS 1275 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1952).

Opinion

Erancis, J. C. C.

The defendant here was convicted in the municipal court of violating paragraph 2 of section 1044 of the Plumbing Code of the City of Newark. This paragraph provides as follows:

“The installation of water closets in the yard or on the piazza of any building is prohibited. The entrance to each water closet compartment shall be from the interior of the building, except when a compartment is supplied with adequate heating facilities to protect plumbing fixtures from freezing.
All existing installations of yard and piazza water closets, when not protected from freezing, shall be removed and new water closets placed in the building.”

[353]*353The complaint specifically charged the violation of this section and said:

“* * s jn this, that the aforesaid Charles Realty Company, a corporation of the State of New Jersey, being the owner of premises known as 28 Rutgers Street, Newark, consisting of a frame building occupied by two families, did fail to provide said building with water closet compartments, the entrance to which shall be from the interior of the aforesaid building.”

At the trial on this appeal the complaint was amended under Rule 2 :11 (7t) (2) by adding after “building”:

“And the pipes to the existing water closets not being protected from freezing did fail to place said water closets in the building.”

The proofs produced by the plaintiff demonstrated ownership of the building by the defendant; that there was a piazza water closet on each of the two floors of the building; that entrance to each compartment was from the porch; that there were no heating facilities within the water closet compartments to protect the pipes from freezing; and that the trap of the first floor toilet extended under the porch and was completely exposed to outside temperatures, while the trap from the second floor extended within the lower compartment and so was not exposed to the outside. Notice was given io defendant to provide toilet accommodations within the apartments. Failure to comply resulted in this complaint.

No evidence was offered by the defendant. Its motion for judgment of acquittal is founded upon the claim that the ordinance is invalid, because its provisions are unreasonable and vague.

The neglect charged against the defendant transgresses both requirements of the ordinance, but since the nub of each requirement is the protection of pipes and fixtures from freezing, the only questions before the court are whether the ordinance in that respect makes an unreasonable, demand and whether it is certain in its terms.

The defendant urges that it is unreasonable for the City of Newark to require removal of outside toilet facilities where [354]*354it is not made to appear that they have frozen, since the public health can be affected only by actual freezing. It brands as arbitrary an ordinance that empowers the health department to order the removal of outside facilities merely because there is a likelihood of freezing. And it is asserted that such a measure affords no opportunity to a landlord to “effectively protect” the pipes and that it operates against the landlord regardless of the means taken to prevent freezing. It is further argued that since there was no complaint of frozen toilets on the premises in question despite the existence each winter of temperatures considerably below freezing, the conclusion must be drawn that some effective means to prevent freezing were used.

Disposing first of the factual phase of the argument, it is sufficient to say that not only does it contain a non sequitur, but it outruns the evidence. The record is barren of testimony to indicate that the defendant took any steps to protect the installations from freezing.

Though it is.admitted that this building is not within the purview of the Tenement House Act,.that act, nevertheless, is used in order to show that the ordinance is unreasonable and arbitrary. It is said that the statute requires that the plumbing shall be effectively protected against freezing and that when such protection is found to be inadequate the board may direct that the water closet be placed in the house. It is argued that the statute gives a landlord opportunity to effectively protect the plumbing, while the ordinance affords no such opportunity. It is impossible to discern any such distinction between these enactments. Each imposes a duty to protect pipes against freezing, and provides for relocation of the facilities when such protection is not supplied. If anything, the ordinance is more certain in its provisions. It does not deprive one of the opportunity to take protective measures. Rather, it prescribes an explicit course of action in two possible situations. It deals first with future construction and (giving the language the most favorable interpretation to an owner) prohibits piazza water closets [355]*355unless the entrance thereto is from the interior of the building, except where the water closet compartment is supplied with adequate heating facilities to protect plumbing fixtures and pipes from freezing. And secondly, it deals with existing water closet installations and directs that when they are not protected from freezing, they shall be removed and placed in the building. In any event, the proof here does not demonstrate lack of opportunity to comply with the regulations. Notice of dereliction was given to the defendant on November 10, 1950; the complaint sets forth an offense on January 23, 1951; process did not issue thereon until June 13, 1951.

There was testimony to establish that the purpose of the ordinance was to forestall the filthy conditions which result when toilet pipes and fixtures freeze and feces and other waste material run over onto porch floors and even down to lower floors of a building. The measure is clearly designed to prevent the existence of such an unwholesome and unhealthful condition.

The contention that the city may not exercise its police power until harm has befallen lacks legal soundness. The major exercise of that power has always been in the field of prevention, to avert the occurrence of conditions that might put the well-being of the community to hazard. There is no appeal in the proposition that in a climate where freezing temperatures are frequently encountered, the city must stand by. helpless and without power to avoid the insanitary conditions that will certainly follow the freezing of unprotected water closets. Apt expression of the power .of a municipality to ward off the occurrence of conditions dangerous to public health is found in the case of Fenton v. Atlantic City, 90 N. J. L. 403 (Sup. Ct. 1917), where the court stated (at p. 406) :

“* * * it is a proper exercise of the police power in the interest of public health, as well as its duty, to prevent a condition likely to be detrimental as much as it is to abate such condition after its evil consequences appear, and a board of health would meet with merited condemnation if it stood by and took no steps to provide, [356]*356by the exercise of ordinary prudence, a sanitary condition which would prevent an epidemic of disease likely to grow out of known conditions.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 A.2d 33, 17 N.J. Super. 351, 1952 N.J. Super. LEXIS 1275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-newark-v-charles-realty-co-nyessexctyct-1952.