Mayor of Jersey City v. Flynn

70 A. 497, 74 N.J. Eq. 104, 4 Buchanan 104, 1908 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 77
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 2, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 70 A. 497 (Mayor of Jersey City v. Flynn) 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
Mayor of Jersey City v. Flynn, 70 A. 497, 74 N.J. Eq. 104, 4 Buchanan 104, 1908 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 77 (N.J. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Stevens, V. C.

On August 1st, 1905, the complainant filed its bill against the defendants, Patrick H. Flynn and the Jersey City Water-Supply Company, praying that they might be decreed to convey to it the water works constructed by them, or so much of them as they were able to convey, upon payment by the city of such part of the consideration ($7,595,000) as might be ascertained to be due. The bill further prayed that the suits at law to recover the price of water that was being furnished by the million gallons should be restrained.

The suits were restrained on equitable terms, pending the decision on the merits.

Prior to October 12th, 1895, Jersey City had obtained its water-supply from the Passaic river, near Belleville. As the river water below Paterson had, by that time, become unfit for domestic purposes, Jersey City, on that day, contracted for a temporary supply to be furnished by the Bast Jersey Water Company. By this contract and by supplementary ones this supply was continued until May 23d, 1904, when the new supply obtained from the defendants’ works was turned on.

The original contract looking to such a supply was made between the city and Flynn on February 28th, 1899. Flynn thereby agreed “to construct a new system of water works for Jersey City and to supply said city therefrom with pure and wholesome water” in two years and a half thereafter, i. e., by August 28th, 1901. After doing some work he assigned the contract to the Jersey City Water-Supply Company. By a supplementary contract, made on March 31st, 1902, the time for completion was extended to December 25th, 1903. 'It was not, in fact, completed to such an extent that the water could be turned [109]*109on until May 23 d, 1904. Since that time the city has received its water-supply from the new works, which are still in the possession of the water-supply company.

The water is taken from the Rockaway watershed, one hundred and twenty-two and one-half sqiiare miles in extent above the intake, or reservoir, at Boonton. Its principal sources are Green pond, Denmark lake, Split Rock lake, Dixon’s pond, Shongum lake and other smaller ponds and brooks. Rising in the Longwood valley, the Rockaway flows in a circuitous course past the towns of Port Oram, Dover, Rockaway and Boonton, and it finally empties into the Passaic at a point about seven and a half miles (in an air line) above Little Falls, and about twelve miles (in an air line) above Paterson. The plan adopted was to construct a reservoir just below Boonton, which would be both an intake and a storage reservoir, capable of containing above the effluent pipes seven thousand three hundred and sixty-two million gallons, and capable of supplying fifty millions of gallons a day. Jersey City, at the time of the writing of this opinion, uses about forty millions of gallons daily. From this reservoir the water is conducted through a steel pipe and through tunnels to Jersey City by gravity. The old Belleville mains have been abandoned.

The case involves a variety of questions, nearly all of them depending upon the proper construction of the contract of February 28th, 1899, and of three other contracts supplemental thereto. Some of these questions are, by no means, easy of solution.

The contract of February 28th, 1899, is based upon the act of 1888 (P. L. 1888 p. 366). This act reads as follows:

“That it shall be lawful l'or the board of aldermen, common council, city council, aqueduct board, board of public works, water commissioners, township committee, town committee or other board, body or department of any municipal corporation in this state, having the charge or control of the water supply of any such municipal corporation to make and enter into a contract or agreement with any water company or other company, contractor or contractors for one year, or for a term of years, for the obtaining and furnishing of the supply, or a further or other supply of water to such municipal corporation, for the purpose of extinguishing fires and for such other lawful uses and purposes as may be deemed necessary or convenient; and any such contract and [110]*110agreement, when so made, shall be the valid and lawful contract of such municipal corporation, as well as of any such water company or other company, contractor or contractors, according to the tenor thereof, and the sum or sums of money in such contract agreed to be paid in each year by any such municipal corporation, or by any board, body or department thereof, or so much thereof as may be necessary, after appropriating to the payment thereof the water rents or proceeds of sales of water collected by such municipal corporation applicable to that purpose, shall be annually appropriated, levied, assessed and collected as a tax upon the real and personal estate within such municipal corporation and liable to taxation for other municipal purposes, and the said real and personal property is hereby made liable to and for the assessment and collection of such tax; provided, however, and it is hereby expressly enacted, that no such agreement and contract shall be made for a period longer than twenty-five years in any one term; and provided further, that in any municipal corporation having a board of public works and a board of finance and taxation, if the contract and agreement be made and entered into by any such board of public works, it shall not be binding upon such municipal corporation until the same shall have been approved by such board of finance and taxation; and provided further, that such contract may contain an option for the acquiring by such municipal corporation of the land, water and water rights for such supply, on terms to be fixed in said contract.”

This act, it will be seen, authorizes two things — first, a contract for a water-supply to be furnished by the owner of the works for a term of not more than twenty-five years; second, a contract for an option for the purchase of the land, water and water rights (including, of course, the works erected in connection therewith). The validity and efficacy of this act was affirmed in Slingerland v. City of Newark, 54 N. J. Law (25 Vr.) 62, and in Van Reipen v. Jersey City, 58 N. J. Law (29 Vr.) 262.

The contract in question provides for a twenty-five years’ supply and it also contains an option. It is admitted by both sides that the original contract as made conforms to the provisions of the act. By act of 1895 (P. L. 1895 p. 775) it was provided that the question of purchase, according to the option, should be submitted to a vote of the people of the city. This was done. The voters voted to accept, and formal notice of the result was given to the water company. Now, counsel differ widely as to the effect of this vote and notice upon the status of the parties. Counsel for the city contend that its effect was to abrogate or nullify the provisions of the contract in reference to the supply [111]*111of water for a -term of years and to put tbe city in the position of one who had merely agreed to purchase, while counsel for the water company contend that the provisions relative to the quarter-yearly payments of water continued in force until the price of the works ($7,595,000) was actually paid or tendered by the city. Obviously, this question can only be solved by con•sidering the terms of the agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
70 A. 497, 74 N.J. Eq. 104, 4 Buchanan 104, 1908 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-jersey-city-v-flynn-njch-1908.