McCrory Stores Corp. v. S. M. Braunstein, Inc.

134 A. 752, 102 N.J.L. 590, 1926 N.J. LEXIS 204
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedOctober 10, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 134 A. 752 (McCrory Stores Corp. v. S. M. Braunstein, Inc.) 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
McCrory Stores Corp. v. S. M. Braunstein, Inc., 134 A. 752, 102 N.J.L. 590, 1926 N.J. LEXIS 204 (N.J. 1926).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Gummere, Chief Justice.

This is a proceeding instituted in the Supreme Court, under the provisions of a statute passed in 1924, entitled “An act concerning declaratory judgments and decrees” (Pamph. L., p. 312), and referred b}' that tribunal to the Circuit Court of Atlantic county for hearing and determination. Its purpose is to have judicially declared the true contruction of a provision in a lease under which the McCrory Stores Corporation is occupying a store in Atlantic City belonging to the Braunstein company. The lease is for a term of twenty years, running from October, 1915, to October, 1935. The rental was fixed at $15,000 per year, plus an addition thus provided in the portion of the lease which the court is asked to construe: “And the said party of the second part (that is, the tenant) hereby covenants and agrees that it will pay all the increase in taxes on and after October 27th, 1920; which said increase in taxes shall be considered as so'much rent due and payable within thirty days after the same becomes due and payable to the city of Atlantic City.” It appears that the taxes assessed upon this property for ‘the year 1920 were considerably in excess of those assessed upon it for the year 1919, and the contention of the lessor is that, by the provision of the lease which has been recited, all increases over the assessment of 1919 are to be paid by the lessee. The lessee, on the other hand, contends that it is the increase over the assessment of 1920 that it is obligated to pay. The Circuit *592 Court considered that the true construction of this provision of the lease was that contended for by the tenant; and, upon so advising the Supreme Court, a declaratory judgment was there entered in accordance with that view. From this judgment the lessor has appealed.

The appellant, when the case was moved in the court below, challenged its jurisdiction to determine the subject-matter involved in the proceeding, upon the ground that, by force of article 6, section 1, of our constitution, only “judicial powers” could be vested in our courts by legislative enactment; that the statute under which the proceeding was instituted violates this constitutional provision, for the reason that it attempts to impose upon our courts the performance of acts non-judicial in character, by conferring upon them power to make binding declarations of rights as to matters which are not presently involved in any pending litigation, and which declarations, when made, are unenforceable by execution or other final process, and are therefore in no sense judicial judgments. This contention having been resolved against the appellant by the Circuit Court, it is now urged before us as a reason for reversing the so-called judgment now under review.

The Declaratory Judgment act, by its first and second sections, confers upon our courts of record, within their respective jurisdictions, power to declare rights, status or other legal relations, although no further relief is or could be claimed; and empowers those courts, among other things, to determine any question of construction or validity arising under a deed, will or written contract, and declare the rights, status or other legal relations thereunder of the parties thereto. Such declarations, by the express language of the statute, are given the force and effect of final judgments or decrees. It is true that they are not enforceable by execution or other final process, but relief, based thereon, may be granted, whenever necessary or proper, on application to a court having jurisdiction to grant such relief. Section 8.

Declaratory judgment statutes similar to, if not identical with, that now under consideration have been enacted by *593 the legislatures of many of our sister states; and have been the subject of much discussion by the courts of several of those states in considering the question whether challenges to the validity of such legislation, similar in essence to that interposed by counsel for the defendant, rest upon a sound' legal basis. The great majority of those courts have held that the powers conferred upon judicial tribunals by these statutes, and the duties imposed upon them in the exercise of those powers, were not violative of constitutional principles. State v. Grove, 109 Kan. 619; 201 Pac. Rep. 82; Board of Education v. Van Zandt, 234 N. Y. 644; 138 N. E. Rep. 481; Blakeslee v. Wilson, 190 Cal. 479; 213 Pac. Rep. 495; Braman v. Babcock, 98 Conn. 549; 120 Atl. Rep. 150; In re Petition of Kariher (Penna.), 131 Atl. Rep. 265; Miller v. Miller, 149 Tenn. 463; 261 S. W. Rep. 965. The reasoning contained in the opinions upon which this conclusion is rested is to us convincing of the soundness of that conclusion. To appropriate that reasoning in extenso as the basis of our own determination in the present case would be an act of doubtful propriety, to say the least. We content ourselves, therefore, with saying, in addition to our concurrence in the views expressed by the courts of our sister states, that, in our opinion, the underlying principle involved in the present decision is that expressed in the case of In re Public Utility Board, 83 N. J. L. 303; a proceeding instituted in the Supreme Court, by the attorney-general, pursuant to the mandate of the governor of the state, the purpose of which was to obtain from that court a declaration as to whether or not a given statute had been duly and constitutionally passed by both houses of the legislature. The proceeding was instituted under the authority of an act passed in the year 1873, which conferred upon the Supreme Court jurisdiction and power to make the investigation applied for by the attorney-general, pursuant to instructions received from the governor, and, in case it was made to appear to the court that the statute, which was the subject of attack, had not been constitutionally passed, to declare such statute null and void. In dealing with the question of the validity of the power conferred by *594 the act of 1873, the court used this language (at p. 307) : “It is true that ordinarily the court is required to exercise this function [that is, the function of passing upon the constitutionality of statutes] only in cases where the question arises in litigation inter partes;

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Bluebook (online)
134 A. 752, 102 N.J.L. 590, 1926 N.J. LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccrory-stores-corp-v-s-m-braunstein-inc-nj-1926.