Clayton v. Kervick

244 A.2d 281, 52 N.J. 138, 1968 N.J. LEXIS 230
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 28, 1968
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 244 A.2d 281 (Clayton v. Kervick) 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
Clayton v. Kervick, 244 A.2d 281, 52 N.J. 138, 1968 N.J. LEXIS 230 (N.J. 1968).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Jacobs, J.

The defendant John A. Kerviek, State Treasurer of New Jersey, appealed to the Appellate Division from a partial summary judgment entered in the Law Division. We certified the matter before argument in the Appellate Division.

In June 1963 Governor Hughes announced the appointment of a committee to review New Jersey’s higher education facilities with a view towards overall policy recommendations. In due course, the committee submitted a report which noted that New Jersey’s higher education program was “gravely inadequate to meet the needs of its citizens and satisfy the demands of a rapidly growing industrial state.” Though the State’s educational system was supplemented by what was described as “many fine private colleges,” the total picture in higher education was said to remain “woefully deficient when measured against the needs.” The committee made many significant recommendations including one which suggested that New Jersey study the possibility of creating an independent Authority, comparable to the New York State Dormitory Authority (N. Y. Public Authorities Law § 1675 et seq. (McKinney's Consol. Laws, c. 43-A, 1957)), [141]*141with sufficient power to effectuate expansion projects for both public and private colleges and universities. See Gen. Stat. Conn. Sec. 10-335 et seq. (1965).

In response to the foregoing, the Legislature enacted the statute which established the New Jersey Educational Facilities Authority. L. 1966, c. 106; N. J. S. 18A :72A-1 et seq. See also L. 1966, c.c. 107-110. The Authority, which consists of seven members including the Chancellor of the Department of Higher Education and the State Treasurer, ex officio, was declared to be a “public body corporate and politic” and an instrumentality exercising “public and essential governmental functions.” N. J. S. 18A :72A-4. It was empowered to borrow money and issue bonds which, however, were not to be deemed “a debt or liability of the state or of any political subdivision thereof or a pledge of the faith and credit of the state or of any such political subdivision.” N. J. S. 18A :72A — 10. The bonds were to set forth on their face that neither the State of New Jersey nor the Authority shall be obligated to pay them or interest thereon “except from revenues or other moneys of the authority and that neither the faith and credit nor the taxing power of the state of New Jersey or of any political subdivision thereof is pledged to the payment of or the interest on such bonds.” N. J. S. 18A :72A-10. It was further provided that the issuance of the bonds “shall not directly or indirectly or contingently obligate the state or any political subdivision thereof to levy or to pledge any form or taxation whatever therefor.” N. J. S. 18A :72A-10.

The Authority was empowered, inter alia, to construct projects for participating educational institutions and to enter into leasing and subleasing arrangements with self-liquidating goals. Thus section 11 (N. J. S. 18A:72A-11) empowered the Authority to fix rates, rents, fees and charges sufficient with other revenues, if any, to pay the cost of maintaining the project, to pay the principal and interest on bonds issued in connection with the project, and to create and maintain [142]*142the reserves required in any resolution authorizing the issuance of the bonds for the project. Insofar as the public colleges were concerned, the Legislature apparently contemplated that projects undertaken by the Authority for them would be in connection with “revenue-producing facilities” such as dormitories, etc.; this is the position taken by the Attorney General and it receives some measure of support from the tenor of the provisions in N. J. 8. 18A :72A-26, 37, 37.1. Insofar as the private colleges were concerned, the Authority was broadly empowered to construct projects “for the use and benefit of the participating college and the students, faculty and staff of such participating college.” N. J. 8. 18A :73A-30. In addition, the Authority was empowered to make loans to private colleges in accordance with N. J. 8. 18A:72M-31 through 35.

The 1966 statute creating the Authority appropriated $250,000 to enable it to get under way, and during the following year a similar sum was appropriated by the Legislature. On March 22, 1967 the plaintiff Joseph E. Clayton, Acting Commissioner of Education, addressed a letter to the defendant John A. Kervick, State Treasurer, certifying that the sum of $100,000 was required by the Authority for the preliminary planning of needed projects and requesting that the stated amount be transferred to the Authority. On the following day the State Treasurer denied the request because of his “uncertainty as to the legal and constitutional propriety of the expenditure of public moneys in connection with the contemplated leasing of projects by the Authority to state colleges. (See McCutcheon v. State Building Authority, 13 N. J. 46 (1953); Art. VIII, § II, paras. 2 and 3, New Jersey Constitution 1947).” He also noted his uncertainty as to the legal and constitutional propriety of the expenditure of public money in connection with any project which involves “the donating of funds, or the providing of any material or services, to private colleges of both denominational and non-denominatioual character. (See Art. I par. 4 and Art. VIII, § III, par. 3 New Jersey Constitution, [143]*143and the First Amendment, Constitution of the United States).”

After the State Treasurer denied the request for transfer of the funds, the plaintiff Clayton, along with the Authority as an additional plaintiff, filed a complaint seeking a declaratory judgment (N. J. S. 2A :16-50 et seq.) that the New Jersey Educational Facilities Authority law is valid and constitutional in all respects, and an order requiring the defendant Kerviek to take all appropriate actions required of him under the law. Special counsel was appointed to represent Mr. Kerviek and leave to intervene as a party-plaintiff was granted to the Association of Independent Colleges and Universities in New Jersey. Leave to intervene as parties-defendants was granted to Howard and Jacqueline Levine and Joseph and Belle Marzell who, as taxpayers, assert the unconstitutionality of the law insofar as it may authorize aid to colleges or universities “under the control or direction of a religious denomination or in which denominational tenets or doctrines are taught.” The parties agreed to defer this issue because it requires further factual development, whereas the other issues raised by the defendant Kerviek are now susceptible of resolution. To that end they entered into a stipulation which set forth that cross motions were being filed for partial summary judgment with respect to the constitutionality of the Authority’s powers regarding “the public institutions of higher education and those private institutions of higher education which are not sectarian.” For purposes of the motions alone the parties stipulated that the statute was of no effect “insofar as it authorizes the Authority to enter into programs with private, sectarian institutions of higher education.”

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Bluebook (online)
244 A.2d 281, 52 N.J. 138, 1968 N.J. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clayton-v-kervick-nj-1968.