In re Proceedings to Condemn Lands Taken by the Port Reading Railroad

68 A. 219, 75 N.J.L. 430, 1907 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 48
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 11, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 68 A. 219 (In re Proceedings to Condemn Lands Taken by the Port Reading Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Proceedings to Condemn Lands Taken by the Port Reading Railroad, 68 A. 219, 75 N.J.L. 430, 1907 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 48 (N.J. 1907).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Reed, J.

The important question in this matter is whether the railroad company had a right to abandon the condemnation proceedings on May 18th. The proceedings were taken under the act to regulate the ascertainment and payment of compensation fox property condemned or taken for public use (Pamph. L. 1900, p. 79), and the supplement to same (Pamph. L. 1906, p. 99).

Section 15 of the original act reads as follows: “Any proceeding to condemn taken under this act may be abandoned at any time within twenty days -after the filing of the report of the commissioners, upon payment to the owners and other parties who have appeared before the commissioners, of their [433]*433reasonable costs and expenses, to be determined by a justice of the Supreme Court, and upon filing a discharge of the lien of the notice of Us pendens

It is perceived that there is no provision in the_ original section for the abandonment of proceedings after twenty days have elapsed from the filing of the report of the commissioners, and it was held in Walsh v. Board of Education of Newark, 44 Vroom 643, by the Court of Errors and Appeals that, where the twenty days had expired, the condemning party could not abandon the proceedings, although an appeal had been taken. The court proceeded to discuss, but expressed no opinion, respecting the ability of the condemning party, particularly if a public agent, to abandon after a verdict had been returned upon the appeal. This case was decided on March 5th, 1906. On April 2d, 1906 (Pamph. L., p. 99), a supplement to the fifteenth section of the original act was approved. The supplement is in the following language: “Any proceeding to condemn taken under this act may be abandoned at any time within twenty days after filing of the report of the commissioners, or if the issue shall be tried by a jury, within twenty days after the rendering of the verdict of the jury, upon payment to the owners and other parties who have appeared before the commissioners, or the jury, of their reasonable costs, expenses and counsel fees, to be determined by a justice of the Supreme Court, and upon filing a discharge of the lien of the notice of Us pendens

It is first insisted that section 15 applies only to municipalities and other agencies of the state, and does not embrace gwm’-public corporations.

The language of the last clause of section 15, both as originally enacted and as amended, is that “any proceeding to condemn, taken under the act, may be abandoned at any time within twenty days after the verdict rendered.” The insistence is that this language is limited by the preceding clause, which clause is confined in its operation to municipal corporations and state agencies.

The two clauses of section 15 are distinct and refer to different phases of the legislation.

[434]*434The first clause is directed to the preservation of the right of municipal corporations and state agencies to take possession of property in advance of compensation.

The second clause deals with the right of abandonment of condemnation proceedings, and confers that right on all bodies having the ability to exercise the power of eminent domain.

The clauses are so distinct that the semicolon separating them in the printed act should be a period. It seems manifest that railroad companies are included within the class of corporations having the right to abandon under the provisions of the second clause of section 15.

Having reached this conclusion, it is at once observable that, conceding the validity of the legislation, the right of the company to abandon the condemnation proceedings on May 18th is plain. The -statute, however, is challenged as violative of the constitution.

It is first insisted that the title to the act is insufficient to permit the. inclusion in the statute of a provision for the abandonment of any proceedings once begun under it. The argument is that the title gives notice that the purpose of the act is to regulate the ascertainment and payment of compensation for property condemned, and it is insisted that the abandonment of such a proceeding is in direct opposition to the purpose indicated by the title, which is to ascertain and pay damages.

AVe think there is no substance in this argument.

The purpose of all provisions to condemn is to fix and pay a price for the property taken for public use. If the title of the act had been “An act to regulate proceedings for the condemnation of property for public use,” the title would have been the equivalent of the title as it now exists. An act to regulate the procedure in conducting actions at law would undoubtedly cover provisions for the discontinuance of actions, although the purpose of every action is to ascertain and compel the-payment of a debt or of damages.

It is next insisted that a construction of the act which would include private corporations within its operation ren[435]*435ders the statute void. This point is rested upon that provision of the act which permits the condemning party to enter into possession of the property and thereafter abandon the proceedings to condemn. The argument is that if the petitioner may enter into possession before the proceeding is finally determined, and hold possession until an appeal is noticed, an issue framed and a trial had, and then until twenty days have elapsed, it leaves the landowner remediless for the intervening possession, and that such permitted possession becomes a taking of the property without compensation.

The provision for taking possession is found in sections 7 and 14 of the statute. Section 7 provides that “upon the filing of the report of the commissioners, and upon the payment or tender of payment of the amount awarded, &c., the petitioner is entitled to enter upon and take possession of the land for the purposes for which the same was authorized to he taken.”

Section 8 provides that “in case the owner refuses to receive the same, the amount may be paid into the Court of Chancery with the same effect as if paid to the owner.”

Section 14 provides that “the taking of an appeal by either party shall not prevent the petitioner from taking the land or other property, upon filing the report of the commissioners, and payment to the owner or payment into court of the award, at any time before the verdict of the jury on appeal; that the party entitled to receive the award may receive it without being barred from his appeal, and that upon the finding of the jury the amount so found, or so much thereof as shall not have been paid, shall be tendered and paid, or paid into court, and if possession shall not have been taken before the finding of the jury, then the petitioner, upon the payment of the amount of the verdict, may take possession.

It therefore appears that the scheme of the statute respecting the right to take possession of the property to be condemned is that by the first clause of section 15 the right of municipal corporations and other agencies of the state to [436]*436enter into possession is reserved to such corporations as such right existed before the statute.

Respecting corporations of the class of the petitioner in this case, possession can only be taken upon the payment of the amount awarded by the commissioners, or of the amount of the verdict found by the jury.

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Related

Packet Co. v. Keokuk
95 U.S. 80 (Supreme Court, 1877)
Railroad Companies v. Schutte
103 U.S. 118 (Supreme Court, 1881)
Van Valkenburgh v. City of Milwaukee
43 Wis. 574 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1878)
Walsh v. Board of Education
64 A. 1088 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 A. 219, 75 N.J.L. 430, 1907 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-proceedings-to-condemn-lands-taken-by-the-port-reading-railroad-nj-1907.