Mayor of Jersey City v. American Dock & Improvement Co.

23 A. 682, 54 N.J.L. 215, 25 Vroom 215, 1892 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 98
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 23 A. 682 (Mayor of Jersey City v. American Dock & Improvement Co.) 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 of Jersey City v. American Dock & Improvement Co., 23 A. 682, 54 N.J.L. 215, 25 Vroom 215, 1892 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 98 (N.J. 1892).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Beasley, Chief Justice.

On the 4th of April, 1872, a statute was enacted, whose title is in these words, viz.: “An act to cede to the mayor and common council of Jersey City certain lauds of the state now and heretofore under the tide waters of Communipaw bay, and to establish a tide water basin adjacent thereto.”

Then follows the preamble and first section, which reads thus:

“Whereas, the riparian commissioners of the State of New Jersey, in their reports for the. years 1871 and 1872, have called the attention of the legislature to the fact that Jersey City is without public docks, and have recommended that a part of the large basin, laid out by the commissioners in 1864, be conveyed to the mayor and aldermen of Jersey City for public uses; therefore,
“1. Be it enacted,” &c.: “ That the said state doth hereby grant to the mayor and aldermen of Jersey City, in fee simple, so much and such parts of the lands which are now under tide water, or were heretofore under tide water, of said Communipaw bay, commencing,” &c.

In the second section it is provided “ that the mayor and aldermen, by their appropriate board, shall have full control and regulation of the basin and wharves and land conveyed to them; ” and they shall be and are hereby required to improve the same with all convenient despatch, in such manner that at least one-third of the area of said lands shall be flowed by the tide water and made navigable for such vessels as the citizens or inhabitants of said city, or persons doing business therein, may, under the control and regulation of said board, desire to use said basin.

Section 4 relates to the consideration of the grant, and is expressed in the following terms;

[217]*217That for the title hereby conveyed the city shall pay into the treasury of the state, or give to this state, a bond for such sum of money and on such terms as to payment and interest as the board of riparian commissioners shall, under all the circumstances of the case, and taking into consideration the public purposes to which said lands are to be applied, fix and determine as a proper and equitable compensation to the state for such title, and until the giving of such bond, or the payment of such money, said city shall not enter on said lands,” &c.

By the fifth section of this act it was further provided that there should be established, adjacent to the submerged lands just mentioned, a tide water basin — a certain tract of land under water, which is particularly described — and declaring that the above tide water basin in this act described shall be and remain, and the same is hereby dedicated as and for, a tide water basin.

Before leaving this act, and in this connection, the first objection interposed in the cause by the defendant may here be commodiously disposed of. That objection was, that as this statute makes provision for the creation of wharves and also of a basin, the act is in conflict with that provision of the constitution of the state which requires that every law shall embrace but one. object.”

Upon this point it is enough to say that this subject was considered, in its relation to this same enactment, in the case of The Easton and Amboy R. R. Co. v. The Central R. R. Co., 23 Vroom 267, and this court then concluded that the exception in question had no legal basis. We then thought, as we think now, that this act embraces but one purpose and one scheme, and that the erection of these wharves and this basin is the appropriate effectuation of such purpose and scheme. For. present purposes, therefore, this act will be deemed to have all the force of constitutional legislation.

Viewing it in this light, it becomes of the first importance to ascertain its exact legal effect. That effect, as it seems to me, was plainly and incontestably this: It vested, at the instant [218]*218that it became a law, the title to the tract of submerged land now in controversy forever in the mayor and aldermen of Jersey City. That the statute has this immediate force is not questionable, for the reason that its expression “that the said state doth hereby grant,” &c., in foe simple, is susceptible of no other meaning. It was in this sense that these words were interpreted by this court in the case just cited.

And while it is thus clear that this was a legislative conveyance of an estate in fee in presentí,, it is equally clear that it had not the force of vesting in the city this tract as its private property. The municipality was made the recipient and custodian of it exclusively for public uses. This purpose is expressly declared in the preamble above cited, and it is likewise expressed in all its regulations and provisions. The proposition is self-evident.

Being invested, then, with the fee, and holding the premises in trust for the public, the conclusion, so decisive of most of the issues in this case, necessarily results, that the municipality was and is devoid of all capacity to impair the interests thus committed to its keeping. The grant had been made to it without its assent; it was not necessary for it to accept it; it had not the competency to refuse to execute its duties with regard to it which the law-making power had seen fit, in the plentitude of its authority, to impose upon it. The beneficial interest in the property had been given to the public, and consequently the city could not alien it, nor could it be taken in execution for the payment of the municipal debts. In my opinion, it is entirely clear that such an interest as this could in no wise be impaired either by lapse.of time or by the acts or neglects of the muncipal body to whom it had been confided. Unless the legislature itself interfered, it would remain forever unalterably devoted to the purposes that had been the motive for its creation. These legal rules are too thoroughly established to justify the citation of authority showing their prevalence.

Regarding, then, this grant to' Jersey City as possessed of the nature and qualities thus imputed to it, and considering it [219]*219in relation to the facts present in the record before us, it has not seemed to me that any legal question of considerable difficulty or abstruseness remains for solution.

The essential features of the ease are thus presented.

The action is in ejectment by Jersey City to recover the submerged lands embraced in the legislative grant just explicated.

The statute, of course, forms the basis of the plaintiff’s title, but under the terms of the act the city could not recover unless its right to the possession of the premises was made to appear. This could not be done without proving a compliance with the requisition of the third section of this law. It will be remembered that the regulation therein contained is to the effect that the city should pay into the state, or give to the state a bond for such sum of money, and on such terms as to payment and interest, as the board of riparian commissioners should, under all the circumstances of the case, and taking into consideration the public purposes to which said lands were to be applied, fix and determine as a proper and equitable compensation to the state for such title. Following this direction, the section then ordains “that until the giving of such bond, or the payment of such money, said city shall not enter on said lands.”

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Bluebook (online)
23 A. 682, 54 N.J.L. 215, 25 Vroom 215, 1892 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-jersey-city-v-american-dock-improvement-co-nj-1892.