Mayor of Jersey City v. Town of Harrison

62 A. 765, 72 N.J.L. 185, 43 Vroom 507, 1905 N.J. LEXIS 88
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 20, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 62 A. 765 (Mayor of Jersey City v. Town of Harrison) 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. Town of Harrison, 62 A. 765, 72 N.J.L. 185, 43 Vroom 507, 1905 N.J. LEXIS 88 (N.J. 1905).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Magie, Chancellor.

Four writs of error have brought to this court for review four judgments of .the Supreme Court. Two of the judgments were entered upoix certioraris (one allowed upon the prosecution of tire mayor and aider-men of Jersey City and the other allowed upon the prosecution of Martin V. Matthews), which brought into review in that court a resolution of the town council of the town of Harrison, adopted September 15th, 1903, and l’eseinding a resolution of that body adopted July 7th, 1903. The other two judgments were entered' upon certioraris (one allowed upon the prosecution of the mayor and aldermen of Jersey City and the other allowed upon the prosecution of Martin V. Matthews) to review a resolution adopted by the town council of Harrison, on September 15th, 1903, for a contract between the town of Harrison and the New Jersey Suburban Water Company for a water suppty, and the contract executed thereunder. The writs of certiorari in the two cases [187]*187first named were dismissed by the Supreme Court, and in the other two eases the resolution for a contract and the contract itself were adjudged to be valid and legal, and were affirmed.

All these cases have' been argued together and present but a single question, which is raised by the contention of plaintiffs in error that the resolution of the town council of the town of Harrison, adopted July 7th, 1903, and the acts of Jersey City thereon, disclosed by the affidavits, constituted a contract between the town of Harrison and Jersey City, and that in consequence thereof the town of Harrison possessed no power to pass the rescinding resolution of September 15th, 1903, and its action in the passage of that resolution should have been adjudged null and void. This also involves the contention that if the resolution of rescission is void the resolution of the town council, passed at the same meeting, for the execution of a contract with the New Jersey Suburban Water Company, and the contract1 executed in pursuance thereof, were ultra vires, and should have been avoided and set aside for that reason.

The resolution of July 7th, 1903, is in the following words:

“Resolved, That the president of the common council and the town clerk of the said town be and they are hereby authorized to execute on behalf .of the said town, and in common with the municipal authorities of Jersey City, for a new water-supply for the said town, to be furnished by the said Jersey City on the same terms and conditions and for a similar period of time as are contained in a certain contract made on the 31st day of July, 1885, between the mayor and aldermen of Jersey City and the said town of Harrison, with the following exceptions:

“First. That the price for the water to be supplied under the contract hereby authorized shall be at the rate of the sum of $84 per million gallons per day for that quantity of water shown to be consumed on the date of contract, and at the rate of $83 per million gallons when such consumption shall have increased to an average of five hundred thousand gallons daily above that consumption indicated on the [188]*188day of the date of contract, and at the rate of $78 per million gallons when the consumption shall have indicated a daily average increase of a second additional five hundred thousand gallons, and at the rate of $75 per million gallons for all water consumed in excess of three (3) million gallons daily.”

From the return to the writs of cerliomri which called for the resolution of July 7th, 1903, it appears that it was adopted by a unanimous vote of the members of the town council of Harrison. But there is nothing in the return to show that the town council directed that the resolution should be transmitted to Jersey City, or gave anyone authority to present the resolution to Jersey City for its action thereon.

It is, however, made to appear by the affidavits that the authorities of Jersey City did, in some way not explained, procure a certified copy of the resolution, and thereupon caused to be prepared and executed by such of its officials as might bind the city a paper purporting and claimed to be such a contract as was called for by the resolution. The paper thus executed was afterward presented to the town council of Harrison, and a demand was made on behalf of Jersey City that it should be executed by the officials of the town of Harrison who were named in the resolution. It had not been so executed when the rescinding resolution was adopted.

The claim on the part of Jersey City is that when 'the paper, drawn, as claimed, in accordance with the terms of the resolution and executed so as to bind Jersey City, was tendered to the town of Harrison, then, although it was not executed by the officials named in the resolution, or by anjrone on the part of that town,- a contract thereby came into existence, obligatory upon the town, which it could not avoid by repealing or rescinding the resolution giving authority to execute it.

Upon its examination of the alleged contract the Supreme Court reached the conclusion that such a contract between two municipalities for the sale and purchase of water, involving such amounts, was one within the provisions of the [189]*189statute of frauds, and to be binding must be in writing and signed by the party to be charged, or his agent lawfully authorized. With the Anew thus expressed Ave are in entire accord, and it has not been made jnatter of contest in the argument before us. The insistment is that such a contract in Avriting is disclosed. The appeal is to the well-settled doctrine, illustrated by a long line of cases, Avhich holds that a written proposition for a contract on specified terms and a written acceptance on those terms, constitute a contract in writing Avithin the statute. The contention is that the resolution was a proposition for a contract, and that the paper executed by Jersey City and tendered for execution to the town of Harrison made up a complete contract in writing.

The contention we find to be ineffective. The argument ignores two facts. The resolution of the legislative board of the town is not signed by the town, and this resolution contemplated a contract to be made and executed by certain persons expressly authorized to sign for the town. Donnelly v. Currie Hardware Co., 37 Vroom 388. In the next place, the proposition had not been communicated by Harrison to Jersey City. .A proposition for a contract, to be competent to be accepted, must be communicated to the party Avith whom the contract is proposed. It will not be sufficient that the latter acquire knoAvledge of it unless the knowledge is acquired Avith the express or implied intention of the proposing party. An owner of land, contemplating a sale thereof, might direct his stenographer or other agent to draft a contract for sale to a particular person on specified terms. If the owner has not communicated, or intended to communicate, the proposed contract to that person, the latter having acquired knowledge thereof, could not, by acceptance, bring the OAvner into a contractual relation of sale. The owner might leave his uncommunicated draft in his agent’s hands without liability and retract his agency and abandon his plan at any time. Hntil communication, there is no efficacious proposal which could be accepted. Potter v. Hollister, 18 Stew. Eq. 508; S. C., 1 Dick. Ch. Rep. 609. In like [190]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 A. 765, 72 N.J.L. 185, 43 Vroom 507, 1905 N.J. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-jersey-city-v-town-of-harrison-nj-1905.