State ex rel. Board of Chosen Freeholders of Hudson County v. Layton

28 N.J.L. 244
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 28 N.J.L. 244 (State ex rel. Board of Chosen Freeholders of Hudson County v. Layton) 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
State ex rel. Board of Chosen Freeholders of Hudson County v. Layton, 28 N.J.L. 244 (N.J. 1860).

Opinion

The Chief Justice.

This cause was argued upon a motion to mate absolute a rule upon Sidney M. Layton [245]*245to show cause why a mcmdwrrms should not issue commanding him to vacate and surrender the office of jailer of the county jail of the county of Hudson, and surrender fio the board of chosen freeholders, or to such jailer as t >ey have appointed, or may see fit to appoint, the possession of the jail, workhouse, and dwelling house in the said county of Hudson. The object of the application is to compel the restitution of the jail, workhouse, and jailor’s house of the county of Hudson, by a person having them' in possession, and claiming to be jailer and keeper of the workhouse, to the hoard of chosen freeholders of the county.

On the 81st of October, 1856, an agreement was entered into, which is recited to be .made between Layton, of the one part, and the hoard of chosen freeholders of the county of Hudson, of the other part. It does not, however, purport to be executed by virtue of any corporate authority, nor is it under ihe corporate seal, hut is executed under the hands and seals of five individuals, who were probably a committee of the hoard. As the terms of the agreement appear to have been subsequently recognized by the board, and as no exception was taken to its validity upon the argument, it will be assumed, for the purposes of the present inquiry, to have been formally executed by the board, in its corporate capacity. By the agreement, Lay-to o stipulates, on his part, that he will, on the first of May, 1857, Lake the entire charge and management of the comity jail and workhouse for the county of Hudson, and by and with the consent and co-operation of the sheriff, will receive all persons that may be committed to said county jail and workhouse, and board and employ them upon certain specified terms. The hoard agree that Lay-ton, with the consent of the jailer, shall occupy the jailer’s house, and that they will erect for him a workhouse, as an addition to the jail, and supply it with certain machinery and power. Under this agreement, a workhouse was erected ; Layton took possession of the buildings, per[246]*246forming the duties of jailer and master of the workhouse, and has since continued in possession.

By an act of the legislature, passed on the 27th of February, 1857, the custody and charge of the jail of the county of Hudson was transferred from the sheriff, and declared to be in the board of chosen freeholders and such jailor as they should appoint. Pamph. Laws 1857, p. 40. The board of freeholders were, by the act, authorised to appoint the keeper of the jail, and to remove him by a vote of two-thirds of all the members of the board. The act further provides that the jailer shall be master of the workhouse, and that the workhouse shall be part of the common jail, and authorizes the board of freeholders to prescribe regulations for the employment and keeping of the prisoners and their contract for the labor.

This statute was passed after the date of the agreement with Layton, but before it went into operation. At the date of the agreement, the board of freeholders had no control of the jail and no power to enter into the stipulations respecting the jail contained in the agreement. The agreement was probably made in anticipation of the passage of the act of 1857, and relying upon that act for the sanction of the contract. It does not appear that any formal appointment of jailer was made by the board after the passage of the law, or that Layton ever gave bond for the performance of his duties as jailer under the provisions of the act.

If Layton held his office by appointment of the freeholders under the act of 1857, as seems to have been the understanding of both, he has been formally removed under the provisions of the act by a vote of two-thirds of all the members of the board. He is neither jailer nor keeper of the workhouse, and has no right to the possession of the buildings or to exercise the functions of either officer.

If he held his office not under the act of 1857, but under the act of 1799, for the establishment of workhouses, [247]*247it 16 equally clear that he had not, and never had any right whatever to the office of jailer or to the possession or control of the jail. That act provides for the establishment of workhouses in the several counties of the state. It places the workhouse of each county under the superintendence and government of the hoard of chosen freeholders, and gives to the corporation authority to appoint and hire some fit person to he master of the workhouse. It makes the workhouse, like a jail, a penal institution, and confers upon the keeper powers analogous to those of jailer. But the two institutions are totally distinct. Prior to the act of 1857, the jail continued under the control and government of the sheriff. He alone had the custody of the building and the power of appointing the jailer. The entire contract of the board with Layton, so far as it relates to the jail or jailer’s house, was a nullity; nor was its character at all altered by the intention of the clause providing for .the consent and co-operation of the sheriff. If the sheriff saw fit to constitute Layton his jailer, his authority to execute the office was derived exclusively from the sheriff, and ceased with the sheriff’s term of office. It was not in the least degree strengthened or confirmed by the contract with the freeholders.

But it is argued that the contract of the hoard with Layton, so far as it regards his employment as keeper of the workhouse and his right to the labor of the convicts, is a valid and subsisting contract, and cannot be annulled at the pleasure of the hoard; and that having been made for the period of five years, which is not yet expired, his amotion is unlawful. Whether the act of 1799 conferred forever upon the corporation to contract for the hoard and labor of the inmates of the workhouse for a term of years, is immaterial to the present inquiry. If the corporation liad a right to make, and did make a valid contract with Layton for the hoard and labor of the prisoners, which they have unlawfully violated or refuse to execute, he has his remedy upon the contract. That contract [248]*248lias no necessary connection with the office of keeper of the workhouse, and the simple inquiry is, whether the board of freeholders, under the act of 1799 for the establishment of workhouses, have a right to bind themselves, to appoint a keeper for a term of years, and thereby deprive themselves and their successors of the right of removal, and the consequent control of the officer.

The workhouse under our statute, unlike the workhouses of England, is essentially a penal institution. It contemplates the twofold object, the punishment of crime and vagrancy, and the relief of the community from the burthen of the expense by the labor of the inmates. The office of keeper is in many respects analogous to that of jailor. The workhouse, like the jail, is the prison of the county, in which convicts sentenced by the court to hard labor and imprisonment are to be imprisoned. This prison and these convicts are, by express provision of the statute, under the direction, superintendence, and government of the board of freeholders, who are empowered to make such regulations, ordinances, and by-laws relative to the well ordering and governing of the workhouse, and keeping the persons confined therein to labor, and the manner of their being confined, as they shall from time to time deem necessary or convenient.

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

Related

Valvano v. BD. OF CHOSEN FREEHOLDERS OF UNION COUNTY
183 A.2d 450 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1962)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 N.J.L. 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-board-of-chosen-freeholders-of-hudson-county-v-layton-nj-1860.