Cline v. State Highway Commission

6 N.J. Misc. 331
CourtNew Jersey Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 6 N.J. Misc. 331 (Cline v. State Highway Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cline v. State Highway Commission, 6 N.J. Misc. 331 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1928).

Opinion

On petition of relators an alternative writ of mandamus issued out of the Supreme Court commanding respondent to proceed to condemn certain lands described therein, in the event that it intended taking such lands for highway purposes, or to show cause why it should not be required so to do. Respondent answered that the land comprising the locus in quo was in fact part of a turnpike or toll road duly laid out in pursuance and by virtue of a special act of the legislature, entitled “An act to incorporate the Washington Turnpike Company, approved March 3d, 1806; that the road had been surrendered to the public, and the rights and privileges therein had been acquired by respondent by legislative au[332]*332thority as a part of the state highway system. Eelators filed a reply traversing the alleged facts set forth in the answer; whereupon, on the issues thus raised in the pleadings, the proceeding was noticed and came on for trial before the court and a jury at the Warren Circuit. On motion for the direction of a verdict in favor of respondent the court disposed of it as follows:

Lawrence, J.

It appears here that in 1806 certain gentlemen were authorized by special act of the legislature to incorporate the Washington Turnpike Company, for the purpose of operating a toll road approximately twenty-five miles long over a route set forth in the act. It was comprehensive in that it provided for the details of organization, the survey, the acquiring of the necessary land and laying out of the road, such provisions, in other words, as are usually found in the general road acts. Those pertinent to this issue were that within two years surveyors, or, as they were called, commissioners, appointed at the request of the turnpike company, were to lay out the turnpike as the statute provided; that it should not be less than four rods nor more than six wide, and in the middle of such turnpike, so referred to in the act, there should be built an artificial road thirty feet in width with a hard surfaced center of twenty feet. It appears that the survey was made by commissioners duly appointed and filed as required in the office of the secretary of state; that thereupon, the undisputed proof establishes, the turnpike company opened the road in accordance with the act, the artificial portion of which was thirty feet wide with twenty feet thereof hard surface. After being so built, as further provided, the company requested the governor to appoint three commissioners to ascertain whether the road had been actually laid out and built in compliance with the provisions of the statute. Such commissioners were appointed by Governor Bloomfield in 1810, and they certified to him that they had viewed the road and found that the work had been done in strict accordance therewith, whereupon the governor issued a certificate authorizing the company to collect tolls as contemplated by the [333]*333act, and the proofs show that it proceeded to do so. In actual operation, the traveled portion, undoubtedly, was the thirty feet mentioned in the statute as the artificial part of the turnpike, but I am inclined to the view, as a matter of law, that the actual possession under the survey was four rods wide in the section indicated therein as including the locus in quo and six rods as set forth in other parts of the route shown in such survey. I see no difficulty in arriving at this width. It contains a center line and, under the statute, the width of the turnpike was to be not less than four nor more than six rods wide. At the point of the locus in quo, the land claimed by the relators, it appears it was four rods wide under the survey, and, therefore, a measurement from the center line of the artificial part of the turnpike thirty-three feet on either side would sufficiently and adequately designate the side lines at the locus in quo, that is to say a width of four rods. I am disposd to disagree with counsel for the relators, consequently, that the survey should have been accompanied by a map showing side lines.

And so it appears that this turnpike was opened with the permission of the governor and toll taken for a period of years. Evidently the enterprise was not a financial success, for it further appears that in 1815 the property of the company was sold by the sheriff to an individual and that that individual held title for about eleven years, when he reconveyed it to the company, and it is fair to assume that they retained possession and operated the turnpike for four or five years more, when it was again sold to another person by the sheriff, and this time title was held for fourteen years, when the company recovered it, as indicated by the county clerk’s record. Then, in 1853 (Pamph. L., p. 60), a supplement to the act of 1806 was enacted by the legislature for the purpose of enabling the turnpike company to change the road from a dirt highway to a plank road, upon the condition that there be raised, through the sale of its bonds, to defray the necessary expense, a capital fund of $100,000. It appears, however, that the scheme did not materialize, and it is again assumed that the company was unable to raise the necessary [334]*334fund. The result was that in 1854 it formally surrendered all its rights and privileges to the public by a cerificate in writing filed in the office of the clerk of Warren county. This was permitted by the supplement of 1853 and the turnpike accordingly became a public highway or road to be “used and maintained and repaired as other roads or highways of this state.”

The question now arises whether anything more was legally surrendered than the traveled or beaten pathway of this turnpike. It is conceded that this, traveled portion was at least thirty feet wide. In any event there seems to be no dispute that the thirty feet held as an artificial roadway is that to which reference has been made as thirty feet and the center line of which is the form for measuring the width of the turnpike as contemplated by the act of 1806. Therefore, it is a question of law whether or not the turnpike company surrendered the additional right or privilege it had to keep the entire width as contemplated by the act — not less than four nor more than six rods — and whether the public as represented by the various townships at the time, acquired anything more than the thirty feet of artificial roadway in the center of the so-called turnpike.

I am constrained to resolve that question in favor of the state for the reason that there was no throwing back of any land, no recapture of any land occupied by the turnpike by the property owners. It became a public highway; that is the law. There was no reversion of any portion of the turnpike, either of the artificial center theretofore made or of the adjoining width. I therefore determine the question as to what became a public highway in favor of the public as represented at that time by the various townships through which the route of the road ran. Later, so far as the locus in quo is concerned, the road was acquired and worked by the county and so held until 1917, when it became a part of the state highway system as route 12. Pamph. L., p. 25; see, also, Pamph. L. 1926, p. 377.

Now, I may say, it has been argued here that there is no proof that land to the extent of four rods or six rods was [335]*335ever acquired by this turnpike company; that, as a matter of fact, all it did was to build the artificial roadway of thirty feet.

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Bluebook (online)
6 N.J. Misc. 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cline-v-state-highway-commission-njcirct-1928.