North Jersey Street Railway Co. v. Board of Street & Water Commissioners

67 A. 691, 73 N.J. Eq. 106, 3 Buchanan 106, 1907 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 42
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedAugust 1, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 67 A. 691 (North Jersey Street Railway Co. v. Board of Street & Water Commissioners) 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
North Jersey Street Railway Co. v. Board of Street & Water Commissioners, 67 A. 691, 73 N.J. Eq. 106, 3 Buchanan 106, 1907 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 42 (N.J. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Emery, Y. C.

Since 1898, the complainant, the North Jersey company, has maintained, and for at least thirty years previously its predecessors in title maintained, the existing curved rail connections of the street railway tracks on Broad and Market streets, and complainant and all of these companies seem to have maintained and continued them under a claim of right derived from legislative acts or city ordinances, or both. After this long period this right of location of the tracks is now, for the first time, questioned.

[109]*109The board of street and water commissioners of the city of Newark, which has control of the streets, on February 28th, 190?, adopted a resolution which, after reciting that it was advised that these curved rails and connections were laid without right or authority in law, and are now maintained by complainant without right or authority in law, and that they are a nuisance, dangerous to life and limb, and interfere with the free and uninterrupted use of the streets by vehicles, directed and required complainant, within thirty days to take up and remove these rails and connections, and to restore and repair the pavement in the streets after removal. It was further resolved, that on the complainant’s failure to remove the rails and connections, as directed, the superintendent of the board should remove them and repair the streets at the expense of the complainant. The resolution, which was approved by the mayor and served on complainant on March 1st, seems to have been passed without any notice to the complainant or any hearing.

The power of the board of street and water commissioners over nuisances does not extend to the removal, arbitrarily, or until after trial in a competent court, of a structure of this character maintained in a public street under such a claim of right. Hutton v. City of Camden, 39 N. J. Law (10 Vr.) (Court of Errors and Appeals, 1876). Complainant mignt, by certiorari, apply to have the resolution of the board for the removal of the tracks vacated, as made without notice or hearing (Jersey City, &c., Railway Co. v. Passaic, 68 N. J. Law (39 Vr.) 110 (Supreme Court, 1992), but, as the decision of the board, if made after notice and hearing, would not, under the decision in Hutton v. Camden, supra, be conclusive on this question of right, complainant may, without waiting for such hearing or attacking the validity of the resolution as made without notice, apply to this court to enjoin the removal pending the trial of the right to remove, either in this court or at law. And on presenting a case showing the right to such trial, the removal pending trial should be enjoined, as there can be no question that the removal of the rails will seriously affect the operation of complainant’s system of roads as at present carried on.

[110]*110Complainant’s right to . maintain the, curved ■ connections is based on title derived from -three different sources.' • •

First. From the Orange and Newark Horse Railroad Company, chartered on March 15th, 1859, and the Broad Street Railroad Company^ chartered March 21st, -1860, which were consolidated by an act of March 24th,-1863. The sixth section of the Broad Street Railroad Company charter (P. L. 1860 p. 467; MacL. Comp. p. 26, &c.) expressly authorized this company to construct a railway through Broad street from the Morris and Essex railroad depot to Clinton township, “and branches from Broad street to the railroad depots of the New Jersey Railroad and Transportation Company.” One of these depots was the Market street station, and this charter therefore authorized the construction of the branch from Broad street through Market street, subject, however, to the further provision of section 6, that the company • . . . -

“shall not lay rails in or along any street in said city of Newark without first obtaining the permission of the common council, upon such conditions and restrictions as the council shall designate and impose.”

No consent or permission to lay the fails for this branch to the Market street station seems to have been expressly given by the common council to the Broad Street company, by ordinance or other formal official action, before the consolidation of the two companies in 1863; but the Orange and Newark Railroad Company had previously constructed a double-track road in Market street from the Market street depot, up Market street to South Orange avenue, under the authority of its charter and an ordinance of March 7th, 1859, giving the consent of the city to- this construction. McFarland v. O. & N. H. R. R. Co., 13 N. J. Eq. (2 Beas.) 17 (March Term, 1860); affirmed, on appeal, 13 N. J. Eq. (2 Beas.) 561 (November Term, 1860). And'on November 1st, 1861, the .common council, by ordinance,, by a supplement to this ordinance of March 7th, 1859, authorized the Orange and Newark Ilofse railroad to construct a track for a horse railroad on Broad street, “commencing 'at Market street and running up Broad to Orange street,”'&c. Whether the Orange and Newark company was, under its own original charter, authorized [111]*111to construct two routes to Orange, one by way of Market street and another by way of Broad and Orange streets, might, perhaps, have been questioned, but by the consolidation of the two companies, the Orange and Newark company became vested with the rights and franchises of the Broad Street company (P. L. 1868 p. 1/.62 § 2; MacL. p. 18) and, as above stated, the franchises of the Broad street company included the express right to construct a branch from Broad street to the Market street depot, and to lay the track, on obtaining consent of the common council. The Orange and Newark company, before the consolidation, had the consent of the council to lay the track “commencing at Market street and running up Broad street.”

The connection of the Market street track with the Broad street track, running north by the curved rails, was made by the Orange and Newark Railroad company, as is admitted by the answer, but whether made before or after the consolidation does not appear. This connection of the tracks by the curved rails, being one which connected two railroads of the same company, was not within the provisions of the fifteenth section of the general ordinance prohibiting any connection of one railroad with another from being made without the consent of the council. This section, as will appear from its provisions, related to the connection of a railroad owned by one company with a raiL road owned by another company. Considered, therefore, as a connection of the Broad street and Market street railroad tracks of the same company, the question is whether the lawfulness of this connection or its continued location can now be questioned by the city. My present view is that it cannot, and certainly the right to question the legality of the original location at this late date, is so open to doubt that the complainant is entitled to enjoin the removal pending the final trial of the right, and the production of all the evidence obtainable as to the circumstances of the original location. The reasons, shortly stated, are these. The consent of the city required by the charters of the Orange and Newark railroad and Broad Street railroad seems to relate only to the laying or construction of the tracks, not'to the power or franchise of operating a railroad for transportation and tolls, when it had been constructed, which power was given by other [112]

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67 A. 691, 73 N.J. Eq. 106, 3 Buchanan 106, 1907 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-jersey-street-railway-co-v-board-of-street-water-commissioners-njch-1907.