Kiernan v. Mayor of Jersey City

78 A. 228, 80 N.J.L. 273, 51 Vroom 273, 1910 N.J. LEXIS 208
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 14, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 78 A. 228 (Kiernan v. Mayor of Jersey City) 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
Kiernan v. Mayor of Jersey City, 78 A. 228, 80 N.J.L. 273, 51 Vroom 273, 1910 N.J. LEXIS 208 (N.J. 1910).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Pitney, Ci-iancellojk.

This writ of error brings under review a judgment for the plaintiffs in an action of tort for a trespass upon certain lands in Jersey City. The trespass complained of was the laying of a public sewer under the authority of the municipal corporation, defendant. The plaintiffs showed title to the fee of the land, and the defendants sought to justify upon the ground that the locus in quo was a public street known as York street.

The history of the title was as follows:

Patrick Kiernan and others, by deed dated and recorded in the year 1888, conveyed a tract of land, including the locus in quo, to Salmon V. Hoyt and Joel Hoyt. The Messrs. Hoyt gave a purchase-money mortgage to Kiernan to secure, the payment of $7,500, which was duly recorded.

In the year 1880 Kiernan filed a bill in chancery to foreclose this mortgage, making the Messrs. Hoyt and certain of their grantees and judgment creditors parties defendant, and including the mayor and aldermen of Jersey City as a party. The averments of the bill will be referred to below.

The foreclosure resulted in a decree made March 28th, 1881, pursuant to which a writ of execution was issued to the sheriff of Hudson county, who sold and convejí-ed a portion of the mortgaged lands, including the locus in quo, to Patrick Kiernan.

Patrick Kiernan died in 1887, -and the property in question thereupon came to the plaintiffs through devise or inheritance.

While the Hoyts owned the equity of redemption, and in the year 1870 the municipal corporation laid out a street known as Cornelison avenue over a part of the mortgaged premises. Afterwards, and before the commencement of the foreclosure suit, and presumably about the year 1874 or 1875, the Messrs. Hoyt dedicated (so far as they had the right so [275]*275to do) a portion of tlie mortgaged premises for nse as a public street, to be known as York street, intersecting Cornelison avenue. It seems to be conceded that sucli dedication was evidenced by the public filing of a map or maps and the making of conveyances of portions of the property described as fronting upon York street, and identified by lot numbers, &c., as laid down on such maps. Me assume, for present purposes, that there was clear evidence of such dedication.

But there was no evidence that York street, .as thus dedicated, was accepted by tlie municipal corporation or used by the public prior to the foreclosure, or was ever laid out or opened upon the ground. Mor did it appear that the fact of dedication or the evidences of it were brought to the attention of Patrick Iviernan until the commencement of the foreclosure suit, nor that he assented to such dedication.

It is insisted by counsel for plaintiff in error that the trial judge erred in excluding certain evidence offered for tlie purpose of showing the assent of Patrick Eernan in his lifetime, and of the plaintiffs after his death. TVe think the evidence thus excluded had no legitimate tendency to show such assent. It is also urged that there was error in excluding certain evidence that would have tended, it is claimed, to show an acceptance of the dedication by the municipal authorities. Assuming that this evidence would have had such a tendency, its exclusion is not ground for reversal, because the city could not gain any rights for the public over the land as against tlie owners by accepting a dedication that had not been made by them or their predecessors in title.

The trial judge at the close of the case directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiff? for six cents damages, and tlie exception allowed to the defendants on this ruling furnishes the principal ground upon which a reversal of the judgment is asked for.

There was evidence from which it is contended that the jury might infer an actual user of York street by the public as a highway. The travel relied upon as evidential began some years after the death of Patrick Eernan, and while the plaintiffs were the owners of the property. It appears that [276]*276Montgomery street, a street running parallel with the proposed York'street, and two hundred feet distant northerly therefrom, was of such a grade that opposite to the premises in question it was carried upon an embankment, with retaining walls at the side. The foundation of one of the walls gave way, and the stone work settled down so as to render Montgomery street impassable. Pending the reconstruction of the retaining wall teams traveling that street were turned out across the-adjacent private lands, and so went diagonally across to about the line of York street, in order to reach Cornelison avenue. This user, however, was manifestly travel extra viam, due to the temporary necessity of having a way as a substitute for Montgomery street; as if the public were asserting a right to deviate u¡oon adjoining private property because of the highway being impassable. Ang. & D. High., § 254; Absor v. French, 2 Show. 28; Taylor v. Whitehead, Doug. 744, 749; Arnold v. Holbrook, L. R., 8 Q. B. 96, 100. We have not to pass upon the question whether this user was. rightful, for the course of the temporary wa3r did not at all correspond with the line of the alleged York street, and so-there is nothing in this evidence that tends to prove a highway in York street.

For evidence of dedication, therefore, we are confined to-the acts of the Messrs. IP03d already mentioned.

It is too plain for argument that the Hoyts, as owners of' the equity of redemption, could not impair the rights of' Kiernan, the mortgagee, by anything that they might do. Their acts of dedication, unassented to ly the mortgagee,, created no more than an equity in the public to have the land opened-for a highway, provided this did not interfere with the security of the mortgagee. See Vanatta v. Jones, 13 Vroom 561, 565; Hague v. Inhabitants of West Hoboken, 8 C. E. Gr. 354, 358.

The only debatable question is whether the foreclosure-proceedings taken by Kiernan were efficacious to cut off this equity and vest the title of the property in the purchaser thereunder so absolutely as to constitute the subsequent act of' the municipal corporation, in entering to open a sewer in the-[277]*277supposed street, an act of trespass as against the plaintiffs claiming under him.

As already mentioned, the municipal corporation was made a party defendant in the foreclosure proceedings. By virtue of the ample powers conferred upon it by the legislature in respect to the laying out, opening and maintenance of streets and highways, it was, on familiar principles, the proper party to assert and defend the public rights in tiiis behalf.

The bill of complaint sets up in the usual manner the indebtedness of the Messrs. Hoyt to the complainant, Patrick Kiernan, and the giving of the mortgage to secure the same; sets up sundry conveyances made by the mortgagors of portions of the mortgaged premises, and charges that the interests of the grantees and those claiming under them are subsequent to the encumbrance of the mortgage; sets up certain judgments, and charges that these likewise are subject to the mortgage.

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Related

Trenton v. Howell
27 A.2d 609 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1942)
Lehigh Valley Railroad v. Mayor of Jersey City
80 A. 228 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1911)

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Bluebook (online)
78 A. 228, 80 N.J.L. 273, 51 Vroom 273, 1910 N.J. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kiernan-v-mayor-of-jersey-city-nj-1910.