State v. Town of Union

40 A. 632, 62 N.J.L. 142, 33 Vroom 142, 1898 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 77
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 13, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 40 A. 632 (State v. Town of Union) 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. Town of Union, 40 A. 632, 62 N.J.L. 142, 33 Vroom 142, 1898 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 77 (N.J. 1898).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Van Syckel, J.

This certiorari was sued out to test the validity of a sewer assessment in the town of Union.

[143]*143The sewer was constructed under an act entitled “An act providing for sewerage in and through certain towns in this state,” approved April 20th, 1886. Pamph. L., p. 243.

The towns to which it applies are those described :

First. “ That whenever any town in this state is or may be so located that one or more large unimproved and intervening tract or tracts of land lie between said town and tidewater.”
Second. “And by reason thereof no main outlet sewer or sewers can be constructed from said town across or through said tract or tracts of land without either the consent, of said landowner or owners and the municipal authorities (if any) intervening between said town and tidewater, or first legally acquiring, at large expense, the lands and outlets necessary for said sewer or sewers.”
Third. “And said owner or owners of said intervening tract or tracts may hereafter determine, in the improvement of their said lands, to construct and build, at his or their own expense, one or more main or outlet sewer or sewers, and of such size, dimensions and kinds as such landowner or owners may deem sufficient for the proper drainage and sewerage of his or their said land or lands in, through and over the same to said tidewater or to some other sewer or sewers running to said tidewater.”
Fourth. “ He or they furnishing or securing the necessary lands and outlets for the same and procuring such municipal or other consent thereto as may be necessary.”
Fifth. “And in that event it might be to the great advantage and benefit of any such town, or one or more portion or portions thereof, that the said proposed sewer or sewers be built and constructed in such manner and style, and of such increased extent, size and dimensions, with the necessary laterals and appurtenances, as to afford and provide one or more main outlet sewer or sewers and the necessary drainage and sewerage, not only for said land or lands of such owner or owners, but for so much of the drainage area of said town as can or may be by or into, the same.”

It is declared to be lawful in any such case, and the neces[144]*144sary power and authority is granted, for the town council or governing body of any such town in this state, if deemed for the best interest of said town or any portion thereof, to make or enter into a contract or agreement, in the name of the said town, for the building and construction of the sanie as hereinafter provided.

The prosecutors insist that this classification is illusory, and therefore that this act is local and special and unconstitutional.

In Van Riper v. Parsons, 11 Vroom 1, it was contended that the word “ towns ” did not embrace “ cities,” but Chief Justice Beasley said: “This argument is founded on the false basis of looking only at the letter of the law and turning away from its spirit. It is true that if the letter of the law were absolutely unambiguous and definite, and were susceptible of but a single meaning, the clause would have to be read in such sense, no matter to what fatuity it might lead. But such is not this case; the word town has no such fixed signification as this, for though in its narrower sense it denotes something other than a city, in its broader scope it comprehends such a municipality.”

In Pell v. Newark, 11 Vroom 550, the late Chief Justice stated that he had again carefully considered the grounds of his former conclusion, and that he still adhered to his view that “towns,” in its largest signification, included “cities.”

Mr. Justice Dixon, in Banta v. Richards, 13 Vroom 497, says: “The word ‘towns’ is sometimes employed in a broad, generic sense, embracing both townships and cities, and the whole range of bodies corporate, less than counties, established for local government.”

Again, in Broome v. Telephone Co., 20 Vroom 624, Mr. Justice Dixon says the word “towns” must be accorded this broad meaning whenever there is reason for so doing.

In the recent case of Stout v. Glen Ridge, 30 Vroom 201 (in the Court of Errors and Appeals), the present Chief Justice, in delivering the opinion of the court, referred with approbation to the view expressed in the cases before cited.

[145]*145The word “towns” being susceptible of a construction which will make the act general, and not special and local, and therefore unconstitutional, we must presume that the legislature adopted the word in its larger and not in its narrower signification, and conclude that the act of 1886 applies to the whole range of bodies corporate less than counties.

The act is, therefore, unquestionably general in form, extending its provisions to all municipalities which now or hereafter may find it necessary to invoke its aid.

This court cannot say in how many localities besides the town of Union it may be wholly impracticable to secure sewerage without the benefit of this legislation. It will be practically impossible for places within the description of this enactment to perfect a drainage system in any way other than that thereby provided or by some like scheme.

I am not prepared to hold that the inhibition of special legislation was intended to render the legislature incapable of granting the only relief that seems to be practicable in this case, even though, at present, no other municipality may be in a position to adopt the provisions of the law.

The act is for a special class of local governments so situated that lands owned by individuals, or other municipalities intervene between them and tidewater, and it embraces all that could use its provisions. This is the only quality descriptive of the character or location of the municipalities for which the act is designed, and that is not illusory; it is the circumstance which renders the legislation necessary.

All the other conditions recited in the enactment pertain either to the election of the constituted authorities to adopt the provisions of the act or to the steps which must be taken to put it in force and make it available.

Cities and towns not so situated can have recourse to other existing legislation, which is inadequate for the relief of the defendant in this case.

In my judgment, the act of 1886 furnishes a legal basis for the proceedings which have been certified.

The proceeding was begun under the act of 1886, the com[146]*146missioners having been appointed in 1894, and it is argued that the assessment is illegal and in violation of the contract between the town and the owners of the lands adjoining the town, because prospective benefits were assessed against such owners on their lands within the town under the act of February 19th, 1895. Gen. Stat., p. 2138.

That act is general, superseding all other methods of assessing such benefits. The only difference introduced by the act of 1895 was that when the trunk sewer was completed the assessment for laterals was to be made at once, but to be payable in futuro,

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Bluebook (online)
40 A. 632, 62 N.J.L. 142, 33 Vroom 142, 1898 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-town-of-union-nj-1898.