Coast Co. v. Mayor of Spring Lake

36 A. 21, 56 N.J. Eq. 615, 1898 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 70
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedDecember 12, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 36 A. 21 (Coast Co. v. Mayor of Spring Lake) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coast Co. v. Mayor of Spring Lake, 36 A. 21, 56 N.J. Eq. 615, 1898 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 70 (N.J. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Reed, V. C.

The question litigated at the trial was whether the site upon which the complainant was erecting the structures, was public ground. Apart from the merits of its cause upon this ground, however, the complainant insists that it is entitled to a decree restraining the defendants from carrying out their purpose. It is pressed as a.tenable proposition that, even if it be admitted that the locus in quo has been dedicated to public use, nevertheless the.defendants had no authority to interfere with complainant’s buildings, and that this court will restrain their threatened attempt to do so. The mayor and members of the common council, it is argued, cannot invoke any official authority to justify their proposed acts; that it therefore follows that they must be regarded not as officials, but only as citizens of the borough, and that as citizens they have no right to abate a public .nuisance unless it inflicts some special private injury upon them distinct from that of the public.

If the first step in these series of propositions is admitted, the others legally follow.

It is entirely settled that the authority of a private person to abate a public nuisance arises entirely from the fact that it interferes with some special individual right possessed by him distinct from the general rights of the public. Brown v. De Groff, 21 Vr. 411. It is clear that nothing appears in this cáse to exhibit the existence of any special injury to any one of the defendants likely to flow from the presence of those buildings. The defendants, therefore, must justify by virtue of some official authority. Indeed, the defendants do not pretend to claim a power to do the proposed acts as private citizens, but they claim to have been invested with an official character by which, as the representatives of the people, they possessed authority to abate [619]*619public nuisances within the borough. Upon this point the parties are at issue.

It is admitted that the defendants were officers of a going municipal corporation organized under the general statute (P. L. of 1891 p. 280), and that under this general charter these officers had power to pass ordinances, inter alia, for preventing or removing all obstruction, encroachment, encumbrances and nuisances from the streets, roads, highways, sidewalks, alleys and enclosures and lands in the said borough.

It is thus perceived that upon the mayor and common council was conferred a general authority over nuisances existing upon the streets and elsewhere. It is upon this power that they put their jurisdiction for the acts proposed in the resolution of the mayor and common council.

The complainant, however, denies that the pretended resolution possessed any official quality whatever. Its denial is put upon two grounds — -first, that the act under which the borough of Spring Lake was organized, and. which purports- to confer upon the mayor and common council this power over obstructions in the streets and other public places, is unconstitutional; second, that if the act itself cannot be attacked upon this ground in this suit that then the charter of this municipality has defined the manner in which the power is to be exerted, namely, by ordinance, while in fact the common council, in this instance, had attempted to exert it by resolution.

In support of the first of these propositions I am referred to the case of State v. Borough of Cape May Point, in which it was held by the supreme court, on the authority of the case In re Ridgefield Park, 25 Vr. 288, that the act of 1891, under which this borough was erected, is unconstitutional. In the case of State v. Borough of Cape May Point the attorney-general had permitted an information to be filed in his name to test the legality of the corporate existence of the borough, and the court held adversely to the existence of the municipality attacked.

I am unable, however, to perceive in what way the decision in that case can, in this suit, introduce the question of the corporate existence of the borough of Spring Lake. The force of [620]*620the judgment in the preceding case was spent when it annulled the corporate existence of the borough of Cape May Point. It is of course obvious that the decision in that case will be controlling as a precedent whenever the question of the constitutionality of the same act arises in a shape to be passed upon. The question can be raised- by an attack upon any step taken to organize a borough under the provisions of the act by means of a certiorari allowed before the corporation has become an existing entity.

After the corporation has been organized its existence can be called in question only by an information in the nature of a writ of quo warranto allowed by permission of the attorney-general. No unconstitutional feature in the scheme provided by the legislature for the institution of such a municipal corporation can be made a ground, for refusing to recognize the corporate function of a municipality so created when the corporate existence is involved in a collateral proceeding. Harvey v. Philbrick, 20 Vr. 374; Steelman v. Vickers, 22 Vr. 180.

No matter how clearly unconstitutional are the provisions of the general act providing for the organization of a municipality; no matter if in some other suit similar statutes or the same statute have been decided to be inimical to the constitution, nevertheless such a municipality is a de facto corporation until its municipal existence is annulled by a direct proceeding instituted for that purpose. The borough of Spring Lake, in this proceeding, must be regarded as a de facto corporation possessing the powers conferred upon it by its charter.

The second ground taken against the legality of the proceedings of the mayor and common council of Spring Lake is that they did not pursue the course marked out in their charter, in their attempt to cause the removal of complainant’s buildings. It is insisted that the proceedings should have been by ordinance and not by resolution.'

Now, it has been decided over and over again that when a charter prescribes that a municipal action shall be taken by ordinance, it cannot be exercised by resolution. But the answer made to this point is that the complainant cannot avail itself of [621]*621this irregularity in a suit in equity; that the question of irregularity can only be raised on certiorari; that, therefore, although it may be admitted that the course taken was irregular, yet, if there resided in the borough authorities a right to cause an obstruction upon the public domain of the city to be removed as a nuisance, and if these buildings are of this character, in such case this court will not restrain the borough from pursuing its object, notwithstanding the fact that it is not proceeding in the manner pointed out by its charter.

In further pursuance of this line of argument the defendant insists that, aside from the power conferred upon the borough which is exercisable by ordinance, it has a special interest in the public property within its limits, which invests the municipal authority with the right to abate any encumbrance upon or obstruction to its use by the public. It is, therefore, insisted that this court will pass upon the question whether the site upon which these buildings are placed is dedicated land, and that if it should be found to be such the court will dismiss the complainant’s bill.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 A. 21, 56 N.J. Eq. 615, 1898 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coast-co-v-mayor-of-spring-lake-njch-1896.