Ocean City Land Co. v. Ocean City

63 A. 1112, 73 N.J.L. 493, 1906 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 181
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 26, 1906
StatusPublished

This text of 63 A. 1112 (Ocean City Land Co. v. Ocean City) 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
Ocean City Land Co. v. Ocean City, 63 A. 1112, 73 N.J.L. 493, 1906 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 181 (N.J. 1906).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Garretson, J.

The Ocean City Association, the owner of a large tract of land in Ocean City, dedicated to certain uses, by filing maps and by oral and written statements, certain of those lands, which it is now sought to free from the public right in them.

The prosecutors own lands, part of the original tract of the Ocean City Association, which they claim are entitled to have such dedication maintained.

This dedication has been before the courts in the cases of Lennig v. Ocean City Association, 14 Stew. Eq. 606, and in Bridgewater v. Ocean City Railway Co., 17 Dick. Ch. Rep. 276, and the right of the purchasers of lots from the Ocean City Association to prevent that association from devoting [494]*494the dedicated lands to any other use than that for which they were dedicated has been sustained.

It is sought to vacate the public rights under the provisions of an act of the legislature entitled “An act-relative to the vacation by the governing body of any city, town, township, borough or other municipality of this state of any land situated in such municipality and wholly or partially dedicated or devoted to public use and the extinguishment of all public rights therein,” approved March 30th, 1904. Pamph. L., p. 366.

This act authorizes the governing body of any of the municipalities mentioned, whenever any land devoted wholly or partially to public use shall be considered or deemed by the governing body of such municipality to be unsuited to or undesirable for such public use, or otherwise useless, burdensome or disadvantageous to the public or such municipality, by ordinance, and on such terms as it shall prescribe, with the consent of the owner in fee, to vacate or extinguish the public rights in and to any land 'dedicated or devoted wholly or partially to public use, and to restore the said land to the holder of the legal fee thereof freed, and discharged from all such public rights therein as if such public rights therein had never existed. Other provisions in the act require the proposition to vacate to be submitted to the qualified voters of the municipality, and that the ordinance shall become effective only when approved by a majority of the qualified voters voting at the election.

On the 10th of October, 1904, the Ocean City7- Association presented a proposition to the city council of Ocean City proposing terms on which the council would co-operate with the association in removing the restrictions on the camp ground.

On the same day the council passed a resolution to accept certain parts of the proposition of the association.

On the same day an ordinance was introduced, entitled "An ordinance relative to the vacation of certain lands situate, lying and being at Ocean City, Cape May county, New Jersey, between Fifth and Sixth streets, and extending from [495]*495the Atlantic ocean to Beach thoroughfare (an arm of Great Egg Harbor bay), dedicated to public use and the extinguishment of all public rights therein.”

This ordinance was adopted at a special meeting held October 11th, 1904, and approved the same day.

It contains recitals that the Ocean City Association recorded a map in June, 1880, which shows an open space between Fifth and Sixth streets, marked “Camp Ground,” in the centre of the block; that in 18S1 the association issued a pamphlet which referred to said camp ground and also referred to the map comprising nine hundred and ninety-five lots, besides the camp ground, tenting ground and parks; that in 1882 the association published a pamphlet and referred to the camp ground park as follows: “The camp ground park, extending from Fifth to Sixth streets and from Asbury to Wesley avenues, has been fully graded and laid out Into plots,” &c., and in the last-mentioned pamphlet was contained a printed plan of a portion of the camp ground park referred to and on which plan was printed the words “Park,” “Auditorium” and “Grove,” &c.; that in 1883 the association filed another map, on which the space between Fifth and Sixth streets is indicated to be open from the bay to the ocean, making in all seven blocks; that two of the blocks in said •open space are marked “Park” and one of them is marked '“Grove,” and the block between Wesley avenue and Asbury avenue and Fifth and Sixth streets is marked with the words '“Auditorium” and “Camp Ground;” that it is alleged and claimed that the whole of said lot of land between Fifth and Sixth streets, and extending from the Atlantic ocean to said Great Egg Harbor bay, or arm or part thereof, has been wholly or partially dedicated or devoted to public use by virtue of said maps, publications and other acts of said association; that all of said land, excepting the square or block bounded by Wesley and Asbury avenues and Fifth and Sixth ■streets, is deemed by the governing body of the city to be un■suited to and undesirable for such public use, and the maintenance of the same in its present condition considered to be ■otherwise burdensome and disadvantageous to the public and [496]*496tlie said municipality, and in pursuance of the act of 1904, supra, ordains, in section 1, that the plots or lots of ground at Ocean City located between Fifth and Sixth streets and extending from Beach thoroughfare to the Atlantic ocean, with the exception of the square or block bounded by Wesley avenue and Asbury avenue and Fifth and Sixth streets, are, in their present condition, unsuited to and undesirable for public use, &e., as in the recital.

In section 2 it is ordained that, with the consent of the association, the owner of the legal fee of said ground, and in consideration of the said owner of the fee making certain grants and conveyances in the ordinance afterwards set forth, the rights of the public and the municipality of Ocean City, and all other public rights other than those of the holder of the fee, be and they were thereby vacated and extinguished in the tract described, and were thereby restored to the association, the holder of the legal fees thereof, freed and discharged from all public rights therein as if such public rights therein had never existed, as provided by the act of 1904, supra.

In section 3 it is ordained that, in consideration of such vacation and extinguishment, and on the proper and lawful removal of the said alleged dedications and restrictions now affecting the same, the association shall convey by deed, in the usual form, to Ocean City, eighteen lots, describing them, subject to a restriction that none of them shall be leased or used for baseball, football or other athletic purposes; further, that the association shall pay $10,000 in cash to Ocean City, to be used in the erection of two school buildings; further, that the association, within one year, is to make improvements on the land so vacated by the erection of houses or other buildings thereon, to the amount of at 'least $10,000, and further, that immediately after the passage of the ordinance the association is to grant and convey to Ocean City the right to erect a plank or boardwalk, of a width of thirty-two feet, over and across any of the property of the association at Ocean City on the beach front, between Fifth and Seventeenth streets, according to the plan of the municipality.

[497]*497Section 4 provides .'that the ordinance shall not be effective, until submitted to and approved by the .voters of Ocean City.

Section 5

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 A. 1112, 73 N.J.L. 493, 1906 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ocean-city-land-co-v-ocean-city-nj-1906.