Rosencrans v. Township of Eatontown

77 A. 88, 80 N.J.L. 227, 51 Vroom 227, 1910 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 74
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJuly 19, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 77 A. 88 (Rosencrans v. Township of Eatontown) 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
Rosencrans v. Township of Eatontown, 77 A. 88, 80 N.J.L. 227, 51 Vroom 227, 1910 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 74 (N.J. 1910).

Opinion

Voorhees, J.

The motion to vacate the writ as improvidently granted is based upon the fact that no proceedings have been actually 'instituted against the prosecutor under the ordinance, but merely a notice has been given to him from the public authorities calling his attention to the fact that the license fee must be paid. It is further urged that he was not at the time of the issuance of the writ a resident of the township nor has he since been.

Assuming that it was incumbent upon the prosecutor to show his residence, if that were material, and that such proof is lacking, yet he has shown a property interest in the township which, is injuriously affected by the ordinance, as is hereinafter alluded to, and which for the purposes of this case we may conclude will secure to him a status to prosecute the writ.

As to the other ground for dismissing the writ, the defendant relies upon Hamblet v. Asbury Park, 32 Vroom 502. Up to the time of the decision of that case, certain dicta had appeared in cases cited in that opinion, intimating that an ordinance passed without power would be set aside at the instance of a person affected, although no attempt had been made to enforce it against him.

Cases so holding are examined in the Hamblet ease. It will be noted that the ordinance under review in that case imposed a license fee upon a variety of vocations. The prosecutor was engaged in but one, and it was assumed that the license fee imposed against the prosecutor’s calling would be unlawful. But it at once became apparent, upon that assumption, .that it would be necessary to conclude in advance that the court in enforcing the penalty would take an illegal view of the law and would enforce the ordinance unlawfully, a presumption not to be indulged in. Therefore, it was held that [231]*231certiorari would not lie in advance of judicial action taken under the provisions of a by-law.

The court cited Pennsylvania Railroad v. Jersey City, 18 Vroom 286, as authority for the doctrine thus stated. That was a case in which the railroad sought, before conviction, to set aside an ordinance because it exposed the company to a penalty for obstructing certain streets under certain circumstances.

It was there pointed out that conceding the contention that in one view of the law the ordinance was unreasonable, yet Chief Justice Beasley continued:

“Such a vice * * * would not render it [the ordinance] generally but only specially inefficacious, that is, the court would not vacate the entire ordinance, but merely refuse to put it in effect in that part of it that was thus unreasonable.” And in such cases it was held that “the remedy is to object to the validity of the ordinance in the penal suits for the obstruction of the streets referred to, and in that mode place before the courts the limited question, whether the ordinance be not a nullity with respect to that particular locality. But the ordinance, in its general effect, is unobjectionable, and therefore cannot be totally set aside.”

In the case sab judice, however, the ordinance relates to a single business, and has but one object, viz., the licensing of biLlposting.

The prosecutor is possessed of property in the township adapted for this business only, which will be depleted in value and rendered useless in that locality if the ordinance stands and is enforced. In this regard this case may be distinguished from Kendall Manufacturing Co. v. Jersey City, 36 Vroom 123. I do not understand that Unger v. Fanwood, 40 Id. 548, is to the contrary. That case brought under review an ordinance regulating the speed of automobiles, and until the violator of the ordinance was convicted, he clearly had no right to test its validity; for he was not subject to its ban until'there had been a violation of its provisions, but in the case in hand, the prosecutor must stop his business or pay the license fee demanded. If the ordinance is wholly without [232]*232warrant of law and illegal, there is no middle ground for the assertion that it may be reasonable under certain circumstances, although unreasonable under certain other circumstances, as appeared by the facts in the case cited as authority for holding that the writ was prematurely allowed.

Therefore, the pith of the principle, as enunciated by Mr. Justice Garrison in the Hamblet ease, that “conviction alone can furnish evidence that the ordinance affected the prosecutor,” cannot be said to apply in the present instance, a distinction pointed out by the same learned justice in Central Railroad Co. v. Elizabeth, 41 Vroom 578.

It seems to me therefore that the prosecutor has a direct interest in setting aside the ordinance, and if any of the reasons for so adjudicating are valid, and, at the same time, is a cause for which the court will vacate the ordinance in toto, the court may adjudge it to be void before any action to enforce it has been begun.

Turning, then, to the reasons and considering those which appear to have substance, we notice first the sixth reason. It is claimed that the ordinance is void for the reason that “it leaves it to the discretion of the justice to impose a penalty to any amount not exceeding $100, or imprisonment in the county jail for a term not to exceed thirty days, or both, because no such authority is given by the statute to the township committee;” and the seventh reason, “because it also leaves it to the discretion of the justice to determine whether the penalty shall be fine or imprisonment, and the amount of such fine, and if by imprisonment, the term thereof, within the limits prescribed, no authority being conferred upon the township pommittee to fix and prescribe a penalty either by fine or imprisonment.”

The legislative warrant for the township committee to pass ordinances is first found in the act of 1899. Pamph. L., p. 385.

The power to prescribe penalties for violating any ordinance is found in section 22 of that act (p. 380). That section enacts that “the township committee may, by ordinance, prescribe a penalty * * * by fine not exceeding $100, or [233]*233by imprisonment * * * not exceeding ninety days and until the costs are paid, or by both fine and imprisonment as hereinafter mentioned. Such ordinance may prescribe the amount of the fine or the term of imprisonment, or it may provide that the justice * * * shall determine whether the penalty shall he by fine or by imprisonment, and i E by fine, the amount thereof, and if by imprisonment, the term thereof, within the limits above prescribed, * * * and may further provide that the justice may fix the amount of the fine and commit the defendant * * * to * * * jail until the fine be paid, with costs.” It will be noted that the double penalty of fine and imprisonment is not authorized by the act generally, and that in no case can there be both fine and imprisonment.

The justice must adjudge either one or the other of the two, and having so done, he must then fix the amount of the fine or the length of imprisonment, within the maximum limits prescribed by the act. He may likewise adjudge (if the ordinance prescribe it, which the one under review does not), having fined the defendant, that he he committed to jail until the fine be paid. This is the only instance where both fine and imprisonment may be imposed.

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Bluebook (online)
77 A. 88, 80 N.J.L. 227, 51 Vroom 227, 1910 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosencrans-v-township-of-eatontown-nj-1910.