Coster v. Tide Water Co.

18 N.J. Eq. 54
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 18 N.J. Eq. 54 (Coster v. Tide Water Co.) 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
Coster v. Tide Water Co., 18 N.J. Eq. 54 (N.J. Ct. App. 1866).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The complainant, as devisee of John G. Coster, claims an undivided interest in fee, in thirty-nine hundred acres of marsh or meadow land, bounded in part by the Passaic river, Newark bay, the Hackensack river, and Saw-mill creek, a tide water tributary of the Hackensack, and in part, on the west side, by lands of Francis S. Lathrop. and others.

Peter C. Sclienck, and nine others of the defendants, by an act, claimed by them to be passed on the fourth day of [56]*56April, 1866, according to the constitution, were incorporated by the name of “ The Tide Water Company.” The preamble to this act recites that “the tide water marshes adjoining Newark bay, and its tributary streams, cannot profitably be drained by individual owners thereof; that the revenues of the state would be largely increased from the taxes on said marshes, when properly fitted for occupancy and use; that the maintenance of such drainage will be a public work, requiring continuous and constant care to protect the interests of the large number of persons who may use and occupy said lands, ánd who, by such use and occupancy, would add considerably to the wealth and population of the state; that the frequent overflowing of said marshes materially interferes with the construction, maintenance, and use of suitable highways of travel thereon, for the accommodation of the people; and that said marshes, in their present condition, are detrimental to the public welfare of the populous communities in their vicinity.

The sixth section of the act provides, that the company may reclaim and drain the wet or overflowed lands in and about the tide water marshes of Newark bay, and of the streams flowing into said bay, except those within the counties of Bergen and Essex, and receive an annual compensation therefor, as thereinafter provided, and may construct and maintain all works necessary or convenient thereunto.

The eighth section enacts, that any justice of the Supreme Court may appoint three commissioners of said lands, and fix their compensation, their term of office to be for nine years; thii’ty days notice of the application to be given in two newspapers in each county.

The ninth section provides, tliat said commissioners may contract with said company for the construction, maintenance, and management of suitable dykes, drains, ditches, dams, sluices, engines, pumps, and all other machinery, works, and structures, necessary or useful in the improvements required to fit said lands for occupancy and use, and for the maintenance of the drainage therefrom, and may contract for the [57]*57drainage thereof, and shall pay said company such annual compensation therefor as said contract shall specify; and they shall report said contract to any justice of the Supreme Court for confirmation, and it shall not take effect until confirmed.

The tenth section enacts, that said commissioners, after the reclaiming of said lands, or any part thereof, shall have been completed according to said contract, shall assess, upon the lands so reclaimed, a just proportion of the contract price, and of the expenses of said commission, and shall cause the same to be collected annually, and pay the stipulated compensation to said company; provided, if said company fail to keep any portion of said lands drained so as to he fit for occupancy and use, no tax shall be collected on such portion of said lands in the year or years when such failure shall happen.

The act provides for a collection of unpaid assessments by sale of the lands, which the company are allowed to purchase. It provides for locating the works of the company, and for obtaining the lands required for them by condemnation, declaring' that, by payment of the sum awarded, the company shall become seized in fee.

The fourteenth section requires the company, in one year after the completion of the work, to declare a dividend to the stockholders of the net proceeds thereof, and to declare like dividends semi-annually thereafter. The capital authorized is one million of dollars, with power to borrow, on bond and mortgage, a like amount. No capital is required to be paid in. The corporators are made the directors; and they continue such, until new ones shall be chosen in their places.

On the second day of June, 1866, Chief Justice Beasley, on application of the company, appointed Edward J. C. Atterburv, Henry W. Merrill, and Charles McIntosh, three of the defendants, commissioners of said lands, under the eighth section of said act.

Of this appointment no notice was given to the complain[58]*58ant, or the other land owners, except by advertisements, as provided in said act. The complainant, or his agents, did not know of it, and of course did not appear.

The commissioners gave public notice that they would meet at Jersey City, on the 17th of August, 1866, to consider and decide upon a contract with the company, and that the land owners might appear and would be heard. At this meeting, the complainant and other land owners appeared ; ■a draft of the contract, proposed to be entered into by said commissioners with the company, was exhibited, also a map of the lands proposed to be drained, and showing the works by which the company proposed to accomplish the draining; ■and these included the lands of the complainant. ■ The contract described particularly the location and dimensions of ■all the dykes, ditches, drains, and other works, proposed to be erected.

The amount of the compensation Avas in blank in the draft, which provided for the payment in each year for all lands drained by said company, as provided in the aforesaid act, at the rate of-dollars per acre, per annum; and for lands which now are, or may hereafter be built upon, the additional sum of-dollars per annum, for each building occupying at least one hundred, and not exceeding one thousand square feet of land; and for each additional one thousand square feet of land, or fraction thereof occupied by any such building, the, sum of-dollars per annum.”

The commissioners, at the request of some land owners, postponed making the contract until the twenty-seventh of August, refusing to grant longer time to the applicants, on the ground that it was too late in the season; the commissioners had no knoAvledge of the cost and expense of constructing and maintaining such Avorks, and had no funds to expend in discharging their duty.

None of the corporators own any land in the tracts proposed to be drained; none of the land oAvners applied for the act, or advocated it, but many of them who kneAv of it, opposed it strenuously. The bill was not signed by the Gov[59]*59ernor, but was returned by him to the senate, where it originated, with his objections thereto. On being re-considered by the senate, in due course, it was lost. On a subsequent day in the session, the vote by which it was lost was re-considered, anti it received a majority of the votes of the senate, and being transmitted to the house of assembly, it was there re-considered and passed.

These are the facts as stated in the bill. On presenting this bill, duly verified, a preliminary injunction was granted, restraining the commissioners from making any contract.

The cause is now before the court on a motion to dissolve the injunction; no answer has been filed, or depositions taken. Therefore, the facts stated in the bill must, for the purposes of this motion, be taken as true.

The complainant places his right to relief on two grounds.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Evans
966 P.2d 1252 (Washington Supreme Court, 1998)
City of Passaic v. State
103 A.2d 174 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1954)
St. John the Baptist, C., Church v. Gengor
180 A. 379 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1935)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 N.J. Eq. 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coster-v-tide-water-co-njch-1866.