Ronade Associates, Inc. v. Department of Conservation & Economic Development

72 A.2d 355, 7 N.J. Super. 132, 1950 N.J. Super. LEXIS 760
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMarch 29, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 72 A.2d 355 (Ronade Associates, Inc. v. Department of Conservation & Economic Development) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ronade Associates, Inc. v. Department of Conservation & Economic Development, 72 A.2d 355, 7 N.J. Super. 132, 1950 N.J. Super. LEXIS 760 (N.J. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Eastwood, J..A. D.

This is an appeal from the judgment of the Division of Water Policy and Supply of the State Department of Conservation and Economic Development denying appellant’s application for a permit to construct a building over a small stream with a supporting pier in the middle of the stream.

The appellant is the owner of a tract of land situate in the City of Plainfield and the Borough of North Plainfield, through which flows a non-tidal stream known as “Green Brook” which forms the boundary line between the aforementioned municipalities. Desiring to construct a one-story building over Green Brook, appellant filed the following appli[135]*135cation with the Department of Conservation and Economic Development, Water Policy and Supply Division (hereinafter referred to as the “Council”) :

"In compliance with the provisions of Title 58:3-26 of the Revised Htatiites Rokade Associates, Isro. 26 Journal Square, Jersey-City, N. J. hereby makes application for the approval of plans and for the issuance of a permit for the construction of a Bridge supporting a Store Building in, along or across Green Brook at a point AVatehung Avenue Plainfield * * * in accordance with drawings and other data filed with this application and made part hereof.

A public hearing was held and evidence was proffered by the proponents and the objectors. According to the plans submitted with the appellant’s application, to support its structure, the proposal contemplated the construction of a central pier in the bed of the stream. The only question for the Council’s determination was whether the proposal as submitted by appellant should be granted.

The Borough of North Plainfield and the City of Plainfield opposed the granting of the requested permit on the grounds of alleged interference with the flow of the stream under flood conditions, danger arising from the impounding of the waters by such a structure and the resulting damages therefrom, and conflict with proposed plans of the City of Plainfield to widen Watehung Avenue and construct an elevated through-way over Green Brook.

The Council denied appellant’s application and judgment was entered determining that:

“* * * from the testimony presented before this Council and in file opinion of said Council, that the granting of the permit sought aforesaid would be contrary to public interest, and that the erection of such a structure over a stream of the magnitude of Green Brook in the developed areas of Plainfield and North Plainfield, New Jersey, would increase danger from waters impounded or likely to be impounded or affected by such structure and would create a hazard to such municipalities and the public and property owners at large in said municipalities in case of flood as aforesaid; * * *”

The appellant contends that the Council’s statutory authority under R. S. 58 :l-26 is merely regulatory and it has un[136]*136lawfully extended its jurisdiction by prohibiting the construction of a building over Green Brook; that the bed of the stream above tidewater is within its ownership and the Council’s judgment depriving it of the use of its land without just compensation is in violation of Article I, Paragraphs 1 and 20, of the Constitution of New Jersey and the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. The respondent vigorously disputes appellant’s contentions.

R. S. 58 :l-26 is the controlling statute and provides, inter alia:

“No structure within the natural and ordinary high water mark of any stream shall be made by any public authority or private person or corporation without notice to the commission, and in no case without complying with such conditions as the commission may prescribe for preserving the channel and providing for the flow of water therein to safeguard the public against danger from the waters impounded or affected by such structure, and this prohibition shall apply to any renewal of existing structures. No such approval by the commission shall impair or affect any property rights, otherwise existing, which might be invaded by the construction or maintenance of any such structure.
“The commission may, whenever in its judgment public safety so requires, and after a hearing either on its own motion or upon complaint, make and serve an order directing any person, corporation, officer or board constructing, maintaining or using any such structure in any of the waters of this state to rejnove or repair it within such reasonable time and in such manner as shall be specified in the order, and every such person, corporation, officer or board shall obey, observe and comply with the order and With the conditions prescribed by the commission for preserving the channels of streams and for safeguarding the public against danger from waters impounded by structures hereinbefore referred to.”

The structures “within the natural and ordinary high water mark” of Green Brook according to the plans submitted, are the erosion walls and the central supporting pier. The testimony before the Council, upon which the denial of the permit was predicated, impressed the Council that such a construction was against the public interest in that it “* * * would increase danger from waters impounded or likely to be impounded or affected by such structure and would create a hazard to such municipalities and the public and property owners at large in said municipalities in case of flood * *.

[137]*137In support of its application, Mr. Robert S. Goldfarb, president of the appellant corporation, and its architect, Herbert F. Verse, testified to preliminary conferences with Mr. George E. Shanklin, Assistant Chief Engineer for the Council. Conforming to Mr. Shanklin’s suggestions, plans for the building in question were prepared and an application based on those plans was submitted to the Council. Mr. Shanklin was called as a witness for the appellant and corroborated generally the testimony given by Mr. Goldfarb and Mr. Verse, but testified that he had no authority to bind the Council; that plans based on his recommendations were required to be submitted to the Chief Engineer and final action was subject to the approval or disapproval of the Council. Mr. Samuel Meyers, owner of a building in the neighborhood of appellant’s property, testified that his building had not suffered from any of the flood conditions during his ownership covering a period of approximately twenty years, and that he favored the construction applied for. Mr. Meyer admitted, however, that he was planning to submit a somewhat similar application to the Council to construct a building over Green Brook on a part of his property. Tn opposition to the application, Mr. John L. McDermott, an architect and engineer, Chairman of the Planning Board of the City of Plainfield, testified that in his opinion such a structure would aggravate flood conditions and, in addition to the community danger, would place the building itself in jeopardy because of the floor elevations in that the building would act as a dam and thereby seriously aggravate a flood upstream. Mr. McDermott’s testimony was supported by Mr. Oscar 0. Kuentz, member of the Plainfield Planning Board and a United States engineer officer with considerable flood control experience. Mr. George R.

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Bluebook (online)
72 A.2d 355, 7 N.J. Super. 132, 1950 N.J. Super. LEXIS 760, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ronade-associates-inc-v-department-of-conservation-economic-njsuperctappdiv-1950.