Csaki v. Woodbridge Tp.

174 A.2d 271, 69 N.J. Super. 327
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedOctober 6, 1961
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 174 A.2d 271 (Csaki v. Woodbridge Tp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Csaki v. Woodbridge Tp., 174 A.2d 271, 69 N.J. Super. 327 (N.J. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

69 N.J. Super. 327 (1961)
174 A.2d 271

LOUIS M. CSAKI, GERALDINE CSAKI, MARGARET CSAKI, KARLEY INVESTMENT COMPANY, A CORPORATION, AND MARS REALTY COMPANY, A CORPORATION, PLAINTIFFS,
v.
TOWNSHIP OF WOODBRIDGE, A MUNICIPAL CORPORATION, DEFENDANT.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division.

Decided October 6, 1961.

*330 Mr. William S. Gurkin, attorney for the plaintiffs.

Mr. Stewart M. Hutt, attorney for the defendant.

SCHWARTZ, J.C.C. (temporarily assigned).

Plaintiffs are the owners of 212 lots, located southwest of Elm Street in Woodbridge Township, as shown on Map of Highland Road and South Cliff Road, Sanitary Sewer System (Exhibit P-1). Only one house is erected thereon and is serviced *331 by a septic tank. The defendant municipality adopted an ordinance on September 27, 1960 authorizing and appropriating funds for sanitary sewers. The ordinance authorizes services for the Highland Road area and the Victory Acres area of the Township. Sewering of plaintiffs' lands covers somewhat less than one-half of the total linear feet of sewer in the Highland Road area. The Victory Acres area is probably twice as extensive since the appropriation for the same is over twice that of the Highland Road area. Plaintiff produced no evidence of the situation on the Victory Acres area.

The improvement authorized by N.J.S.A. 40:56-1 as a local improvement contemplates assessment against lands to the extent benefited. Since the municipality had reached its debt limit the State Board of Health, finding that the "expenditure and every part thereof, is necessary to protect the public health and to prevent or suppress a present menace to the public health * * * and that no less expensive method of preventing or suppressing such menace exists," issued an order July 26, 1960 (N.J.S.A. 40:1-16(g)) permitting the municipal action.

Plaintiffs' complaint in lieu of prerogative writs seeks to repeal or modify the ordinance, to eliminate their lands from the project; a restraint against defendant's accepting bids, awarding a contract and assessing their lands, and judgment declaring the ordinance and proposed assessment unconstitutional.

It is contended that plaintiffs' lands are free of unsanitary conditions and no present menace exists requiring said lands to be sewered, and consequently the State Board of Health action was improvident and lacked factual basis so far as their lands are concerned.

Plaintiffs additionally maintain that they do not need the improvement, since they have no present intentions of building and sewers could be installed when and if needed in the future; and an engineer testified on their behalf that it would be sound engineering practice to bring the sewer up *332 to plaintiffs' lands and stop there. The municipal engineer, on the other hand, said it would be sound engineering practice to include plaintiffs' lands at this time to avoid piecemeal operation with consequent obvious municipal burdens. It is agreed that plaintiff received no notice and did not appear at the State Board of Health hearing. (No notice is provided under the statute.) Public notice of the ordinance is conceded, however, by publication, and proper procedural enactment and authority to take the municipal action is undenied.

There is no dispute that plaintiffs' lands are free of unsanitary conditions. In addition there is no contradiction or dispute that said lands are undeveloped (with exception of the one house above mentioned), overgrown with shrubs and trees, and no streets are laid out. Plaintiffs are builders and developers, have built 35 homes or so in the last six years, and built others prior thereto. Plaintiffs Michael Csaki and his son, as builders, have had dealings with the borough for years and both testified the township officials had been giving them a "hard time" for a long time, with undue delays in building permits and the like. Their testimony sought to establish ill will against them in support of such allegation in the complaint. (It appears however that the mayor and present committeemen, recently elected, represent a change in political administration.) Additionally, they stated that on September 27, 1960, the night of the meeting at which the ordinance was adopted on final reading, they objected to inclusion of their lands in the ordinance and the mayor assured them "it would be deleted" when informed it was vacant land. However, they also said the mayor told them he would look into it. They testified they felt assured and left, and first learned the ordinance was adopted, with their lands included, when, in May 1961, they noticed publication for bids. The mayor and engineer dispute any promise "to delete." The mayor testified that on September 20, and not 27, the Csakis appeared at a meeting and complained. He said he would direct the engineer to *333 look into the matter and report. This was done and the engineer reported unfavorably as to the elimination. The municipal engineer corroborated the mayor's version and further testified there were problems with developers seeking to install sanitary sewers in piecemeal fashion; that septic tanks are not successful due to high clay content of the soil; other sewer projects are proceeding simultaneously for over-all sewer service for the municipality; that he inherited these sewer plans from the engineer who was his predecessor; that it was a "bad septic area" and that there was "raw sewage in the streets," and there were recurrent requests by many residents for the sewer, the unsanitary conditions being a matter of general knowledge.

The plaintiffs' engineer stated "all the terrain is practically the same" and conceded he has designed sewer plans for municipalities where there was no immediate prospect of building houses.

The mayor stated no ill will or malice prevailed against plaintiffs and that all builders were treated alike.

The map of the area, the ordinance and the minutes of the September 27 meeting were marked in evidence as Exhibits P-1 and P-2 and D-1, respectively.

The minutes disclose no appearance or complaint by Csakis at the meeting on September 27 (indicating the mayor and municipal engineer were probably correct, that they appeared on September 20). This was vigorously denied with much examination and cross-examination directed at it. Credibility seemed to be the objective. It is significant that the complaint as filed alleged September 20 as the date.

I find that plaintiffs have not established that the municipal action was motivated by ill will of local officials against them. In any event, if there was legal power to adopt the ordinance, the motives of the members of the governing body are immaterial. Kerzenbaum v. Paulus, 57 N.J. Super. 80, at p. 84 (App. Div. 1959).

I further find that the mayor did not assure plaintiffs orally that their lands would be deleted from the ordinance. *334 Plaintiffs themselves gave inconsistent versions of the so-called promise "to delete." It is settled that a city cannot be bound by any such representation. Schacht v. City of Passaic, 11 N.J. Misc. 770 (Sup. Ct. 1933), in the absence of fraud, personal interest or corruption.

The legal issues are:

1. Are the plaintiffs barred by R.R. 4:88-15(b)(2) as being premature?

2. Are the plaintiffs barred as being out-of-time under R.R. 4:88-15(b) (4)?

3.

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

Related

Matter of Randolph
502 A.2d 533 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1986)
Allis-Chalmers v. City of Oxnard
105 Cal. App. 3d 876 (California Court of Appeal, 1980)
Guaclides v. MAYOR & COUN. OF ENGLEWOOD CLIFFS
291 A.2d 854 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1972)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
174 A.2d 271, 69 N.J. Super. 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/csaki-v-woodbridge-tp-njsuperctappdiv-1961.