Mayor & Common Council of Newark v. Pennsylvania Railroad

86 N.J.L. 575
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 10, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 86 N.J.L. 575 (Mayor & Common Council of Newark v. Pennsylvania 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
Mayor & Common Council of Newark v. Pennsylvania Railroad, 86 N.J.L. 575 (N.J. 1914).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Gummebe, Chief Justice.

The city of Newark brought ejectment to recover possession of three separate tracts of land lying within the limits of that city, claiming that each of them had been dedicated to public use for highway purposes, that such dedication had been accepted by the city, and that the occupation of them by the defendant constituted an unlawful invasion of the public light. A plea of not guilty having been filed the case came on to be tried at the Essex Circuit. At the conclusion of the evidence on both sides the court was requested to direct a verdict in favor of the defendant company Ss to all three tracts. It did so as to tract No. 2, but refused to comply with the request as to tract Nos. 1 and 3. As to the latter tract (No. 3) it directed a verdict in favor of the city, and as to tract No. 1 left it to the jury to determine, on the evidence submitted, whether the railroad company or the city was entitled to the possession thereof. The jury found in favor of the city as to tract No. 1, and followed the instructions of the court with relation to tracts Nos. 2 and 3.

The defendant, on this appeal, challenges the. action of the trial court both in directing a verdict against it as to the third tract, and in refusing to direct a verdict in its favor.as to the first tract.

Tract No. 1 is a parcel of land seven hundred and forty-three feet in length and twenty-nine feet in width, extend[577]*577ing from Market street to Hamilton street. The city contends that this land lies within the lines of New Jersey Railroad avenue, which was dedicated to public use as a highway by one Pruden Ailing about the year 1833, or earlier — be then being the owner thereof. New Jersey Railroad avenue as dedicated extended from Market street in a southerly direction to the Essex and Middlesex turnpike, was one hundred and twenty feet in width throughout its whole length and included tract Ho. 1.

On August 1st, 1835, Ailing and ins wife conveyed to the New Jersey Railroad and Transportation Company (the predecessor in title to the present defendant) a strip of land sixty-six feet in width, thirty-three feet on each side of the centre line of New Jersey Railroad avenue, and extending through its entire length. On this strip the railroad now operated by the defendant wars constructed, and has ever since remained. On the same day Ailing and wife conveyed to Russel II. Hevins and Elihu Townsend a parcel of land which included tract Ho. 1 in the present controversy. This tract abuts upon the sixtv-six-foot strip conveyed to the New Jersey Railroad and Transportation Company, and lies to the west thereof. On June 1st, 1837, Hevins and Townsend conveyed this tract to the New Jersey Railroad and Transportation Company, and it has ever since been in the exclusive possession of that company and its successors, and has been continuously devoted to railroad uses.

The dedication was clearly proved, and, although it had not been accepted by the city at the time of the conveyances of tract Ho. 1, as above set out, the railroad company took that tract: subject to the right of the city thereafter to accept the dedication, if it considered it desirable to do so. South Amboy v. New York and Long Branch Railroad Co., 66 N. J. L. 623.

In 1819, the legislatnre, by the fifth section of a supplement to the charter of the city of Hewark (Pamph, L., p. 203), empowered common council to cause surveys to be made of streets and alleys which had theretofore been dedi[578]*578eated to public use, and which that body thought proper to recognize and determine as public. Pursuant to such authority common council later in the same year caused a survey to be made of New Jersey Railroad avenue. This survey, known as the Dunn survey, describes New Jersey Railroad avenue as beginning at the junction of said avenue with the Essex and Middlesex turnpike, thence running northerly one hundred and twenty feet in width to Hamilton street, and thence the same course to Market street twenty-seven feet m width from the easterly line thereof; excepting and reserving to the New Jersey Railroad and Transportation Company for their use the middle portion of said avenue sixty-six feet in width. It was received and approved‘bv common council, and such action by that body constituted an acceptance of the Pruden Ailing dedication to the extent of the lands embraced within the lines of the survey (Schmidt v. Spaeth, ante p. 179), assuming, as counsel for the appellant concedes, that the law permits such a partial acceptance. This municipal action, however, did not constitute an acceptance of the dedication of the locus in quo to public use, that not being embraced within the lines of the survey.

Later, and in the year 1856, common council, assuming to act under the same legislative authority, caused a second survey to be made by the then city surveyor, Mr. Edward Carter. This second survey showed New' Jersey Railroad avenue to be a highway one hundred and twenty feet wide throughout its whole length from Market street to the Essex and Middle-sex turnpike. It, also, was received and approved by common council.

The city bases its claim of right to the possession of tract No. 1 for public uses upon the Pruden Ailing dedication, and the survey and acceptance thereof of 1856.

It was argued with great force by counsel for the defendant that this second survey, and the action of council upon it, was entirely nugatory. That with respect to the lands embraced within the Dunn survey, they were already a public highway, having become so by the dedication of Ailing, and [579]*579the acceptance of that dedication by the action of council in 1849. That as to the locus in quo, the action of council, in 1849, in excluding it from their acceptance, constituted a refusal by that body to accept the dedication thereof to public use; the argument being that, although a dedication once made is irrevocable until acted upon by the public authorities, yet, when such action is had it is final and conclusive, whether the offer of the dedication be accepted or rejected; and that when rejected the dedicator, and those claiming under him, hold the lands thereafter free from any subsequent right of user by the public. The reasoning of Chief Justice Whelpley, delivering the opinion of this court in Jersey City v. Howoth, 30 N. J. L. 521, is quite persuasive of the soundness of this contention; but because of facts immediately hereinafter recited we do not find it necessary to pass upon it.

In the. year 1901, the city of Newark entered into a contract with the present defendant, and its lessor (the successor in title to the New Jersey Railroad and Transportation Company), under the authority of an act of the legislature approved March 19th, 1874 (Pamph. L., p. 45), and the various supplements thereto, the purpose of which was to eliminate grade crossings in the municipality by the elevation of defendant’s railroad throughout the city limits. The contract provided that the work of elevation should he done in conformity with certain plans and specifications referred to in the contract, and made a part thereof. At the time of making this agreement the Market street station of the defendant company stood upon a part of the locus in quo.

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Related

Schneider v. Town of West New York
201 A.2d 63 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1964)

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Bluebook (online)
86 N.J.L. 575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-common-council-of-newark-v-pennsylvania-railroad-nj-1914.