State v. Blake

35 N.J.L. 208
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 15, 1871
StatusPublished

This text of 35 N.J.L. 208 (State v. Blake) 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 v. Blake, 35 N.J.L. 208 (N.J. 1871).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Van Syckel, J.

By an act of the legislature of this state, approved April 21st, 1868, the owners of wet and marshy lands lying on the upper Passaic and its tributaries, in the counties of Morris and Somerset, were authorized to institute a system of drainage, and assess the cost of making the same upon the owners of the lands drained, according to the benefits conferred.

The act provided for the election of three managers, to hold their office for one year, and until others were elected in their stead. These managers were authorized to purchase the property described in the twelfth section of the act as “Dunn’s mill property,” and to pay for the same out of the moneys raised by assessment.

In June, 1868, the first managers were elected, and there[210]*210upon they proceeded to make», or cause to be made, a survey and assessment of the lands benefited by the scheme of drainage which they adopted, a copy of which assessment was filed in the office of the clerk of Morris county, and also in the office of the clerk of Somerset county, November 21st, 1868.

In July, 1868, the managers made a contract for the purchase of Dunn’s mill property, which they alleged to be the premises described in the act as Dunn’s mill property, the conveyance to be made in the following January.

On the 26th day of December, 1868, at which time the assessments were all due, the prosecutors, in connection with a large number of other land-owners, filed their bill in the Court of Chancery, to enjoin the managers from taking any proceedings for the purchase of said Dunn’s mill property, or from carrying out the contract concerning the same, or applying any of the moneys raised by the said assessment to such purchase, on the ground — First. That the purchase was not authorized by the legislative act; and, Secondly. That it was not necessary for effecting its object. An injunction issued in accordance with the prayer of the bill, December 28th, 1868, and was served December 29th, 1868. The managers being required by their contract to complete the purchase of the mill property on the 1st day of January, 1869, procured the title to be made to one Craig, who executed to them a written declaration of trust.

At the time the bill was filed, about $2000 of the assessments had been paid, and, pending the litigation in that case, the additional sum of $5000 was collected.

The suit in chancery was brought to hearing upon bill, answer, and proofs, and an agreement in writing was signed by the counsel of the respective parties, that if the Cliancellor should be of opinion that the managers were empowered to purchase Dunn’s mill property, a decree should be made that said managers hold said property in trust under the provisions of the legislative act. The Chancellor, being of opinion that the act in question authorized the purchase, by his decree bearing-date June 16th, 1869, dissolved the injunction, and [211]*211ordered, by the consent of parties in open court, that the managers should hold the mill property in trust for the purposes of said act.

The money collected under the assessments was afterwards applied to the payment of the purchase price of this property.

The assessment made by the managers is removed into this court, and sought to be set aside by a writ of certiorari allowed October 4th, 1869.

The reasons assigned for reversal which I deem necessary to consider are:

1. That the assessments were made upon an erroneous principle, and not in proportion to the benefits conferred. This reason is not supported by the facts in the case. The evidence shows that no one was assessed in excess of the extent to which, in the opinion of the managers, he would be benefited.

2. The relators charge that by the provisions of this act private property is taken for private use, and that, therefore, the act is unconstitutional. This branch of legislative power which regulates the construction of ditches and sewers and the drainage of meadows and marshy'lands has been exercised so long, and is so fully recognized, that it is now too late to call it in question. It is clearly affirmed in the Tidewater Co. v. Coster, and cannot be opened to discussion.

It is true that the seventh section of the act in question does not expressly limit the assessment to the extent of the benefits to be conferred, but authorizes the entire cost of the improvements to be levied upon the lands benefited in proportion to the benefits derived, so that the land-owner may possibly be burdened in excess of the advantages actually realized from the work. But it will be observed that such a contingency is not contemplated by the law, and that is not the theory upon which it is framed, and upon which measures of like import have been sustained. The whole project is within the control of the parties to be affected by it, and the presumption is, that they will enter upon no undertaking which will not prove amply remunerative in its results, in [212]*212which event the benefits will always be at least equal to, if not in excess of the assessments. The opposite result can only follow an injudicious use of the authority granted, and cannot impeach the integrity of the law.

The constitutionality of this law is also denied, because it contains no clause giving the land-owner an appeal from the assessment.

There is in our organic law no limitation of power which restrains the law-maker to guarantee an appeal in these instances, and it will be found upon an examination of our statute books, that hundreds of these acts have been passed, which give no review; among others is the act to drain the Riser in Bergen county, (Laws 1850, p. 292,) which was held to be constitutional by Chancellor Williamson, in Berdan v. The Riser Drainage Co. (See case referred to in 3 C. E. Green 69.)

3. It does not appear upon the face of the assessment, or by any certificate of the managers, that they pursued their authority strictly, by imposing the assessments according to their judgment of the benefit which would accrue to each land-owner. This objection to the validity of the proceedings rests not upon the failure of the managers'to proceed upon a correct principle, but upon their omission to certify the rule which guided their action.

Even though there be uniformity in the assessment in this respect, this exception ought not to be entertained at this stage of the case. Before suing out the writ of certiorari they have permitted a large portion of the assessment to be collected and applied to the purchase of Dunn’s mill property, which, by a decree of the Court of Chancery, made under their own agreement, is now held in trust for their benefit. To set aside this assessment upon the application of the relators, while they retain the trust property, would be an act of manifest injustice.

This court will always exercise a proper discretion in withholding an opportunity of reviewing the proceedings of inferior tribunals, where there has been unreasonable-delay, and they may quash a writ for such cause upon the argument of the merits. Haines v. Campion, 3 Harr. 49; State v. Everitt, [213]*2133 Zab. 378; State v. Water Comm’rs, 1 Vroom 247; State v. Newark, 1 Vroom 304.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 N.J.L. 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-blake-nj-1871.