George W. Armbruster, Jr., Inc. v. City of Wildwood

41 F.2d 823, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2186
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedMay 29, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 41 F.2d 823 (George W. Armbruster, Jr., Inc. v. City of Wildwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George W. Armbruster, Jr., Inc. v. City of Wildwood, 41 F.2d 823, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2186 (D.N.J. 1930).

Opinion

AVIS, District Judge.

The bill filed in this ’ case asserts that George W. Armbruster, Jr., Inc., one of “the plaintiffs, is the owner in fee of four certain tracts of land located in the eity of Wildwood, county of Cape May, and state of New Jersey, lying easterly or oceanward of an avenue, known as Beach avenue, whieh avenue was originally laid out parallel, or practically parallel, with the high-water line of the Atlantic Ocean, and that the plaintiff Shore Resort Company is the owner of another tract of land similarly located.'

The bill further alleges that the municipality, city of Wildwood, the defendant, has illegally constructed, or caused to be constructed, a certain boardwalk 40 feet in width upon a portion of the bed of Beaeh avenue, and extending from Cedar avenue on the north to Montgomery avenue on the south, a distance of between 2,300 and 2,400 feet, whieh prevents the plaintiffs from having a right of ingress to and egress from their lands on the oceanward side of the boardwalk of the eity of Wildwood, and that the erection of the boardwalk on an alleged pub-lie highway is a purpresture, or nuisance, and that the plaintiffs are specially damaged thereby, not only because of the fact that it interferes with their ingress to and egress from their properties, but that they have a right to have Beaeh avenue, within the bounds hereinbefore referred to, opened for use as a public highway, and that its erection interferes with their right to light, air, and view.

The prayers for relief contained in the bill are:

(1) Eor an injunction commanding and enjoining the eity of Wildwood to desist and refrain from continuing the existence of the boardwalk from Cedar avenue to Montgomery avenue.

(2) For -a mandatory injunction to compel the city of Wildwood to remove the boardwalk between Cedar and Montgomery avenues.

(3) For an injunction commanding and enjoining the city of Wildwood from preventing and.obstructing vehicular traffic over Beach avenue and the avenues running at right angles thereto by reason of the existence of the boardwalk.

(4) For an injunction commanding and-' enjoining the city of Wildwood from pre *825 venting and obstructing ingress to and egress from the lands of the plaintiffs by the presence of the boardwalk.

The facts appear to be that in 1881 or 1882 Holly Beach City Improvement Company, the then owner of a tract of land which included the lands in question in this suit, laid it out into streets and building lots, and caused a map of the same to be prepared and filed in the Cape May county clerk’s office. On this map, Beach avenue is shown as being 70 feet in width, continuing uninterruptedly along the line of the lands now owned by the plaintiffs, and practically parallel with high-water mark of the Atlantic Ocean. At the time this map was prepared and filed, there was a tract of land to the easterly or oeeanwardly of the easterly line of Beach avenue, which was about 250 feet in width between the easterly lino of Beach avenue and high-water mark of the Atlantic Ocean. After the land was laid out and the map prepared, several residences or cottages were erected on the westerly side of, and facing, Beach avenue. It appears by the evidence that at the time the map was filed, Beach avenue was actually staked out, but it was never in any way improved.

Subsequently, about the year 1885, by reason of ocean tides a portion of the land oeeanwardly of Beach avenue was encroached upon by the sea, and eventually the southerly portion of Beach avenue was washed away, and also some portion of Beach avenue bounding upon the property now owned by the plaintiffs. Later, as I recall the testimony, about the year 1917, the United States government erected a jetty at Cold Spring- Inlet for the purpose oí! constructing a harbor, about three miles along the coast southerly from the city of Wildwood, and, according to the evidence, by reason of this erection the lands owned by the plaintiffs, and some portion of the ocean-front theretofore laid out and known as Beach avenue, filled with sand, became high land, and in the year 1929, it would appear from the testimony of the engineer's, the high-water mark at Cedar avenue was about 175 feet easterly of Beach avenue, and at Montgomery avenue the high-water mark covered a portion of Beach avenue; that at Baker avenue, the first'avenue northerly of Montgomery avenue, the high-water mark was 10 feet or more easterly of the easterly line of Beach avenue, and that the line of high water between these two extreme points was practically straight and uniform.

The boardwalk between Cedar and Montgomery avenues was constructed by the city of Wildwood in 1919. This was a wooden structure supported on piles; according to the testimony, 6 or 7 feet in the clear above the grade of the streets on the westerly or land side of Beach avenue. Later, in the early part of the year 1927, a concrete extension of the boardwalk was built southerly from Montgomery avenue to Crease avenue. There is no contention in this suit, however, with relation to any obstruction by the portion of the boardwalk so built in 1927.

In the pleadings and brief of counsel for the defendant, the court’s jurisdiction is challenged upon two grounds:

1. It is alleged that the bill is predicated upon the assumption of a legal duty on the part of the defendant to remove the public boardwalk because it is a purpresture upon Beach avenue, and that if this is true there is an adequate remedy at law by mandamus, and this court is without jurisdiction. It is evident that federal courts have no jurisdiction in original cases of mandamus.

“The circuit courts of the United States have no jurisdiction in original eases of mandamus, and have only power to issue such writs in aid of their jurisdiction in eases already pending, wherein jurisdiction has been acquired by other means and by other process.” Covington & Cincinnati Bridge Co. v. Hager, 203 U. S. 109, 27 S. Ct. 24, 51 L. Ed. 111.

This power can be exercised only in aid of its appellate jurisdiction, except mandamus may be issued by the Supreme Court “to any courts appointed, or persons holding office, under the authority of the United States,” In re Green, 141 U. S. 325, 12 S. Ct. 11, 35 L. Ed. 765; or in matters relating to interstate commerce and other cases strictly federal in their character, when it would appear that the federal courts have such jurisdiction, Stephens v. Ohio State Telephone Co. (D. C. N. D. Ohio) 240 F. 759.

The fact that mandamus proceedings cannot be prosecuted in a federal court, does not, and cannot, take away from this court its jurisdiction to give relief, if it is proper to do so under the equity jurisdiction of the court. The case is properly here by reason of diversity of citizenship of the parties, and the amount in dispute. This court will therefore take jurisdiction of the ease so far as the objection concerns or relates to the claim that the suit is cognizable in a court of law, and that the remedy is by mandamus.

“The adequacy or inadequacy of a remedy at law for the protection of the rights of -one *826 entitled upon any ground to invoke the powers of a federal court is not to be conclusively determined by the statutes of the particular state in which suit may be brought.

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Bluebook (online)
41 F.2d 823, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-w-armbruster-jr-inc-v-city-of-wildwood-njd-1930.