Stockton v. Mayor of Newark

42 N.J. Eq. 531
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 42 N.J. Eq. 531 (Stockton v. Mayor of Newark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stockton v. Mayor of Newark, 42 N.J. Eq. 531 (N.J. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

This suit is brought by the attorney-general, by information, at the relation of Henry Congar and others, and by the relators, as complainants, against the mayor and common council of the city of Newark, to establish a trust in certain land in Newark, known as the old burying-ground,” and to restrain the defendants from removing from that land the remains of persons buried there, and to compel the defendants to keep and maintain the ground in decent and proper order, so as to protect the remains and memorials therein from desecration. The bill states that the relators and complainants are citizens of Newark and heirs and descendants of the old settlers of the town of Newark, and they bring suit, not only for themselves, but also for the benefit of all such other citizens, heirs and descendants, as may be made parties, and for the protection of the charitable use to which the burying-ground was, as they allege, devoted. The bill states that on the 10th of December, 1696, shortly after the settlement of the town, the proprietors of the province of East New Jersey, in pursuance of the concessions to actual settlers thereof theretofore made by them, granted to John Curtis, John Treat, Theoph-[533]*533ilus Pierson and Robert Young, of the town of Newark, certain parcels of land in Newark for public use, among which was a tract including the land in question, which tract is described in the deed as—

A stable and dwellings for the men employed in the cemetery is an inconsistent use, People v. Cemetery Co., 86 111. 886. And a building for the transaction of the business of the city which holds by dedication, Rousseau v. Troy, 49 How. Pr. 492. A school-house is not an inconsistent use, In re Bellison, L. R. (4 Ad. & Ee.) 294; Beatty v. Kurtz, 2 Peters 566; Pott v. Pottsville, 4® Pa. St. 132; see Rector <£c. v. Stewart, 2 Sir. 1126; Brown v. Imiheran Church, 23 Pa. St. 495 ; Jeffreys v. Pittsburgh (Pa.), 26 Alb. L. J. 203; nor a church, Sehoonmaker v. Reformed Protestant Church, 5 How. Pr. 265; Price v. Methodist Church, 4 Ohio 515; or chapel, Reg. v. Twiss, 10 B. & S. 298; or Sunday-school and lecture-room, Craig v. First Presbyterian C'hurch, 88 Pa. St. 42; or mortuary, Handsard v. St. Matthews, L. R. (4 Prob. Biv.) 46. The legislature may, under the exercise of 'the police power, and for the sake of protecting the public health, control or prohibit the use of lands in the populous part of a city as a cemetery, or may authorize the city itself to exercise such power, Sohier v. Trinity Church, 109 Mass. 1; Coates v. New York, 7 Cow. 585; Charleston v. Baptist Church, 4 Slrobh. 306; New Yorky. Slack, 3 Wheeleds Or. Cas. 237; Kincaid’s Appeal, 66 Pa. St. 4H; Craig v. First Presb. Church, 88 Pa. St. 42; see Reg. v. Justices, 5 El. & Bl. 702; Foster v. Dodd, 8 B.&S. 842, L. R. (3 Q. B.) 67.
“ All that small tract therein allotted for the burying-plaee, taking in the ■pond and meeting-house, being seven chains in length and four in width, ■bounded west by John Treat, south by John Johnston, north and east by highways.”

That as to that land the grant was made and was in the deed •declared to be made to the grantees and their heirs, to the only-proper use, benefit and behoof of the old settlers of the town ■of Newark, their heirs and assigns, forever, in common, and that it was also therein declared that the land was granted to be •and remain for the use in the deed expressed, and to be appropriated to no other use or uses whatever. The complainants allege that the greater part of that tract was then and thereafter used for and devoted to the use of a burial-place for the people ■of the town, those who settled the place — the old settlers — and their heirs and assigns, and that it has been reserved and kept [534]*534for suck purpose and has been known as “the old burying-ground,” and that there have been buried in it, from time to time, deceased persons, people of the town, old settlers and their heirs and descendants, and that the memorials of such deceased persons have been erected there, and that some of them still remain ; that about the 15th of February, 1804, the legislature of the state, for the purpose of vesting the legal estate in the property upon the same trust and to the same use" upon and to which it had been granted, passed an act by which it was recited that the inhabitants, the first settlers of Newark, on their first settlement, after purchasing all the lands lying within the bounds of the town, of the native Indians, proceeded to parcel them out among themselves and such settlers as thought proper at various-times to settle in the town, according to the rules and regulations-established by the first settlers respecting their admission, at the-same time reserving certain portions of land in various parts of' the town for public purposes; and that doubts having arisen as-to the validity of the Indian title, it was afterwards thought advisable by the inhabitants of the town to take a grant from the proprietors of East New Jersey for the confirmation of their [535]*535rights to that public land, and that as the inhabitants of the town were not incorporated, and were incapable of taking a legal estate, it was thought advisable to take the grant in the names of certain trustees for the use of the inhabitants, which grant was accordingly taken on the 10th of October, 1696, in the names of John Curtis, John Treat, Theophilus Pierson and Robert Young, to have and to hold, to them, their heirs and assigns, forever, to the only proper use, benefit and behoof of the old settlers of the town, their heirs and assigns, forever, in common (the lands) granted, to be and remain to and for the several uses therein particularly expressed, and to be appropriated to no other use or uses whatsoever; that the original trustees were all dead, and the heir of the survivor not known to be resident in Newark, and that, through the ignorance of those infant times, the use created in the grant, although really meant for the benefit of the inhabitants of the town of Newark and their successors, yet was so inartificially expressed as to render it difficult for the then inhabitants of the town, as incorporated by law, to assert their ■ rights to the premises; by means whereof the lands contained in the grant, and originally reserved by the first settlers for public purposes, were exposed to encroachments and other injuries, without a competent remedy therefor either in law or equity; and it was thereby enacted that the trust estate vested in the trustees, their heirs and assigns, forever, by the deed from the proprietors, for the only proper use, benefit and behoof of the old settlers of the town of Newark, their heirs and assigns, forever, should thenceforth cease and be void, and that the estate so vested in those trustees, their heirs and assigns, forever, should be vested in the inhabitants of the township of Newark, in the Gounty of Essex, as incorporated by law, and their successors, forever; and that they were thereby vested with the legal title thereto as fully and absolutely as though they had been originally named in the grant in the place of the original trustees, saving the rights of dona fide purchasers without notice of the trust

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Bluebook (online)
42 N.J. Eq. 531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stockton-v-mayor-of-newark-njch-1887.