West Long Branch v. Home Bldg., C., Co.

133 A. 758, 99 N.J. Eq. 738, 14 Stock. 738, 1926 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 146
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 133 A. 758 (West Long Branch v. Home Bldg., C., Co.) 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
West Long Branch v. Home Bldg., C., Co., 133 A. 758, 99 N.J. Eq. 738, 14 Stock. 738, 1926 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 146 (N.J. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Both these suits relate to the same subject-matter, but are exactly opposed with respect to the relief sought.

In the first suit the complainants seek an injunction preventing the defendant from selling any of its property for burial or cemetery purposes. In the second suit, which resulted from the first, the complainant asks to have the same defendant enjoined from selling any of its land for other than burial or cemetery purposes.

These two suits have been consolidated by order of this court.

This controversy arises from the following state of facts which I find from the testimony and evidence submitted herein:

In March, 1880, Charles Chasey laid out a cemetery on land owned by him, and filed in the office of the county clerk at Freehold, New Jersey, a map thereof entitled "A map of Greenlawn Cemetery, Long Branch, New Jersey." On January 28th, 1882, Charles Chasey and his wife, Mary H. Chasey, conveyed this property to Levice Chasey, who, three days later, conveyed to Mary H. Chasey. In these deeds the property is described as "being the same property whereon the said Charles Chasey now resides and including `Greenlawn Cemetery,' containing ten acres, more or less." From March, 1880, to September, 1922, Greenlawn Cemetery was operated by Mary Chasey and Charles Chasey, either one or both. About two hundred and fifty burial plots were sold by them out of the property shown on the original map. This map *Page 740 covered, approximately, three or four acres. Having disposed of all of the lots shown on that map in January, 1902, they had the adjoining lands, which were a part of the lands described in said deeds, laid out and mapped into lots numbered from 1 to 641, inclusive, and this map was entitled by the engineer who made it, and of his own volition, "an addition to Greenlawn Cemetery." It is claimed by the defendant, and not denied by the complainants, that this later map was filed in the office of the county clerk at Freehold in 1902, but it appears that no such map was there on file at the time this suit was instituted. A duplicate of the map has, however, since been filed in that office. After the making of the new map, and prior to September, 1922, the Chaseys sold to individual purchasers about two hundred and fifty burial plots as shown on that map, and bodies have been buried in practically the entire two hundred and fifty plots. The land shown on the two maps is separated by a roadway, which is now lined with maple trees, set out, approximately, twenty years ago. Prior to 1902 the lands which were mapped in that year were used by the Chaseys for farming and grazing purposes, and since 1902 and up to within the past ten or twelve years the unused portion of the lands shown on the later map — that is, the portion which has not been actually sold in burial plots, was also used for farming and grazing purposes. In September, 1922, Edward E. LaCour and Samuel Heimlich purchased the unsold lots shown on the map of 1902, and in November, 1922, conveyed those lots to the defendant company. Mr. LaCour is the secretary and treasurer of that company. Since the date of this latter conveyance the defendant has sold five lots for burial purposes, including the lot owned by the complainant Bruno. All of this land was originally located in the township of Eatontown until the incorporation of the borough of West Long Branch in 1908, when it became a part of that borough.

The whole property described in the deeds above referred to, with the exception of the Chasey dwelling-house and a small plot of ground adjacent thereto, has been exempted from taxation since 1880 by the municipal authorities of the *Page 741 township of Eatontown until the incorporation of the borough of West Long Branch in 1908, and since that time by the municipal officials of that borough. The whole tract, excepting the dwelling-house and lot, is shown on the tax map of the borough of West Long Branch as exempt, and is marked "cemetery." The defendant is organized under the General Corporation act, and objection is made by the complainants to the exercise by the defendant of the rights and privileges granted corporations under the Cemetery act. 1 Comp. Stat. p. 372. To meet this objection, since these suits were instituted, the Greenlawn Cemetery Association of Long Branch, New Jersey, has been organized under the Cemetery act, and the defendant company has agreed to convey these lands to the new association, although no such conveyance has yet been made. In view of that situation, this objection is now admitted by all counsel to be of no practical consequence is not pressed, and the question thereby raised has not, therefore, been considered. No formal application under the provisions of the Cemetery act was ever made to the municipal authorities of the township of Eatontown or of the borough of West Long Branch, either by the defendant or any of its predecessors in title, for the consent or approval of an extension or addition to Greenlawn Cemetery as shown by the map of 1902 until after the institution of the first suit. The complainants in the first suit contend that, without such consent having been first had and obtained, the defendant is without authority to sell burial plots or to conduct and operate a cemetery. The defendant contends that this was not necessary, because it was neither creating a new cemetery nor extending an old one, and that the mapping of additional lots, as shown on the 1902 map, was not an extension of or addition to an old cemetery, but was simply the laying out into lots of the land which had already been dedicated to cemetery purposes. After the institution of these suits, however, and at the suggestion of the late Vice-Chancellor Foster, by whom the application for preliminary injunction was heard, the Greenlawn Cemetery Association of Long Branch, New Jersey, was incorporated under the Cemetery *Page 742 act, and that company made formal application to the mayor and council of the borough of West Long Branch and the local board of health for permission to lay out and operate an addition to or extension of Greenlawn Cemetery. This application was in no sense an admission by defendant of any legal requirement therefor, express disclaimer of such requirement being made by the defendant. The permit was refused both by the mayor and council and by the board of health, and an appeal from that decision was taken to the state department of health. (That the applicant for the municipal consent was not the owner of the land intended to be used for cemetery purposes at the time of the filing of this application was no bar to the application or to a permit.Burdette v. Fairview, 66 N.J. Law 523.)

A hearing on this appeal was duly had before the state department of health, and on February 3d 1925, that department decided, on advice from the attorney-general, that it was without jurisdiction to reverse the decision of the municipal authorities or to grant a permit, because Greenlawn Cemetery had been in existence since 1880, and the land which were the subject of this controversy had been exempt from taxation for many years, thereby indicating that this particular land was a part of the original cemetery, and that there was no present intention to enlarge or extend the existing cemetery. In rendering this decision the state department of health acted judicially. Dodd v. Board,67 N.J. Law 463. It based its decision on a finding of fact. No appeal from that decision was taken. This finding of fact is, at least, evidential here.

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Bluebook (online)
133 A. 758, 99 N.J. Eq. 738, 14 Stock. 738, 1926 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-long-branch-v-home-bldg-c-co-njch-1926.