Harrison Land Co. v. Crucible Steel Co.

89 A. 41, 82 N.J. Eq. 414, 12 Buchanan 414, 1913 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 16
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedNovember 28, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 89 A. 41 (Harrison Land Co. v. Crucible Steel 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
Harrison Land Co. v. Crucible Steel Co., 89 A. 41, 82 N.J. Eq. 414, 12 Buchanan 414, 1913 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 16 (N.J. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Emery, Y. C.

The standing of Harrison Laird Company, the sole original complainant in this case, is based on its right to equitable relief by preliminary injunction as necessary to protect its property from being taken by the defendant municipality without compensation on its vacation of a street. The bill prays an injunction against the passage by the common council of an ordinance vacating portion of a street sixty feet wide, called Cumberland street, lying between Fourth street and lands now or formerly occupied by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, as the lessee of the United New Jersey Eailroad and Canal Company, about two hundred and thirty-seven feet east from Fourth street, at which point Cumberland street, so far as it is a recognized public street, now terminates. From this location, where the public street terminates, the Harrison Land Company, by virtue of a written agreement made on May 17th, 1901, between the United New Jersey Eailroad and Canal Company of the first part and the Crucible Steel Company of the second part, and the executors of Henry Young (complainant’s predecessors in title) of the third part, and the devisee of William H. Draper of the fourth part, have a right of way over a strip of land sixty feet in width, an extension of Cumberland street easterly across the lands of all the parties to the agreement. The lands of the United railroad and canal company immediately adjoined the easterly terminus of Cumberland street as laid out, and the lands of Young’s estate (now complainants’), adjoined the United Companies’ lands on the east. This strip of land, [416]*416sixty feet in. width, called by the parties in the agreement “an extension of Cumberland street,” was, by the agreement, “dedicated and appropriated as a road.” The agreement recited that lands owned by all of the parties were part of a tract known as the Preston tract, that no public streets or' highways existed on these tracts owned by the parties, that the Young estate and Draper estate claimed rights of way over the United Companies’ property in the Preston tract, and that it was for the interest of all the parties “that some recognized way to and through such properties be established and that all claims of the parties to private rights of way over such properties or any of them be extinguished,” and, in consideration thereof, the parties covenanted and agreed each with the others and with each

“fhiat a strip of land sixty feet in width, an- extension of Cumberland-street easterly across the said lands of the parties hereto, be and the same is hereby dedicated' and appno-priated as a road', the strip of land so dedicated beginning east of Fourth street, at the end1 of Cumberland street as laid out on the Gilbert map, and- running thence easterly between- the northerly and southerly lines of Cumberland street produced across the lands of the parties,” &e.

The parties of the second, third and fourth parts, it was further stated, “do hereby release and surrender to said party of tbe first part (the United Companies) all rights of way over the Preston tract or any part of it;” and it was further agreed that any of the parties to the agreement might fill in and grade the said road, and that the agreement should be binding upon successors, heirs and assigns. There has been no acceptance by the public of this extension of Cumberland street made by tbe parties, and the rights of the complainant over the extension of Cumberland street are derived solely under the agreement and by virtue of its express or implied covenants. But since the execution of the agreement, and by reason of tbe release thereby of any right of way to other public streets, complainant Land Company now has no right of way or access other than through this extension to any public highway or street of the town. Its property, however, has access to a river front on the Passaic river. The town of Harrison, by ordinance now on third and final reading before its common council, proposes to vacate this [417]*417portion of Cumberland street two hundred and thirty-seven feet from Fourth street, the vacation, however, to be "subject to the agreement made the 17th day of May, 1901,” between the parties above stated. Proceedings for the vacation were instituted by the application of the Crucible Steel Company, a party to the agreement, which has purchased and now owns also part of the United Companies’ land north of the centre line of the extension, and also owns or controls the lands covered by the street to be vacated. For the vacation of Cumberland’ and other streets named in their application, the Crucible Steel Company offered to pay to the town of Plarrison $8,000, the town, to give in return a quitclaim deed on all the streets vacated. Since filing the original bill, the streets other than Cumberland have been vacated, and the full sum of $8,000 has been paid to the town by the Crucible Steel Company, which also, in connection with this vacation of the other streets, agreed to defend the present suit and to bear the entire expense of defending it, whether Cumberland street should or should not be' vacated. These facts are set up in the supplemental bill.

After the filing of the bill Booth & Flinn, Limited, contractors, who had a previous permit from the Pennsylvania Bailroad Company to deposit waste material on its lands lying on the southerly side of this extension of Cumberland street, procured from the Harrison Land Company a like permit to fill in their lands and also permitting the contractors as the agent of the land company to fill in and grade the street known as Cumberland street or any portion thereof. Booth & Flinn, Limited, have a contract for the construction of a portion of the sewer for the Passaic valley sewerage commissioners, and the securing of space for the deposit of material is a material convenience in this construction. At the time oli securing the Pennsylvania permit, May 20th, 1913, they were assured that Cumberland street was a public street and might be used by them for access to the lands of the railroad company located on its extension. The agreement with the Harrison Land Company, however, was made after the bill was filed. All the lands lying east of Fourth street, including the portion of Cumberland street laid out as a public street, are low-lying, marshy lands, wholly unimproved.

[418]*418The filling up and grading provided for by these permits will do something toward preparing them for useful occupation, as well as material]}'' accommodate the contractors. The contractors were allowed to intervene as co-complainants and join in the application for preliminary injunction. Complainants seek injunction against the town from vacating the street and executing a deed therefor to the Crucible Steel Company, and that the steel company may be restrained from preventing the use of Cumberland street. So far as the contractors’ rights of passage over Cumberland street are the rights of passage over a highway which is common to the public, and the injury to them, in legal contemplation, is not different in character from that which every other citizen sustains, they have no standing for special protection by injunction. H. B. Anthony Shoe Co. v. West Jersey Railroad Co. (Court of Errors and Appeals, 1898), 57 N. J. Eq. (12 Dick.) 607, 617; Young v. Pennsylvania Railroad Co. (1905), 72 N. J. Law (43 Vr.) 94; Grey, Attorney-General, v. Greenville and Hudson R. Co. (1900), 59 N. J. Eq. (14 Dick.) 372, 377.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 A. 41, 82 N.J. Eq. 414, 12 Buchanan 414, 1913 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-land-co-v-crucible-steel-co-njch-1913.