Wheeler v. Essex Public Road Board

39 N.J.L. 291
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 39 N.J.L. 291 (Wheeler v. Essex Public Road Board) 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
Wheeler v. Essex Public Road Board, 39 N.J.L. 291 (N.J. 1877).

Opinion

[293]*293The opinion of the court was delivered by

Beasley, Chief Justice.

The defendant in this case is a road board, specially incorporated to lay out or widen certain roads and avenues in the county of Essex, among which was one denominated “Bloomfield.” Near to Bloomfield avenue, as it subsisted in its former condition, was a dam over a stream, which operated to keep the water in a pond from Avhich the plaintiff’s mill was supplied. The defendant, in AAÚdening this avenue, took in the space occupied by this dam, and, of necessity, removed it. At this point, over the stream, a bridge was built in the avenue, and connected with the piers of this bridge, the defendant built a semi-circular dam, to take the place of the one destroyed. This new dam was outside of the limits of the avenue, and was upon land that was not oAvncd by the plaintiff but by a third party. This substituted dam, after serving its purpose for some time, gave Avay, in consequence, as the evidence showed, of defective Avorkmanship in its construction. By the carrying aAvay of this structure the mill of the plaintiff Aras deprived, for several Aveeks, of its supply of Avater, and stood still; and it Avas for the loss thus occasioned that this suit Avas brought. These facts being developed at the trial, the presiding judge ordered a non-suit to be entered, and this present review is sought in order to test the legality of that ruling.

In his argument here, the counsel of the plaintiff insists that this action is sustainable on one of two grounds. He urges, first, that the negligence of the defendant in the putting up of the dam erected by it, lays a legal basis for this suit.

But there is a plain fallacy in this contention. It is perfectly obvious that the defendant did not owe any duty, Avith respect to this dam, to the plaintiff; it was under no obligation to put it up, nor had it any authority so to do ; the doing of the thing was simply ultra vires. I do not see how there can be any doubt whatever upon this subject, for the charter creating the defendant prescribes precisely Avhat ought to have been done upon the taking down of the dam of the plaintiff. The fifth section of the supplement of the act approved Feb[294]*294ruary 16th, 1870, declares that “the owners of that part of the lands over which said avenues are authorized to be laid, which is not already lawfully in public use, shall be entitled to compensation for the use thereof hereby authorized, and the owners of every building or part thereof, or other improvement which it shall be necessary to remove, take down or destroy, shall be entitled to compensation for such building or part thereof so to be removed, taken down or destroyed.” Then follow provisions for the ascertainment of the damages thus to be compensated. Therefore, the proper and only course to have been taken in this exigency was, to have the damages occasioned to the plaintiff by the removal of the dam and the appropriation of the land upon which it stood to the public use, ascertained and paid for in the mode prescribed. The defendant had no shadow of authority to substitute, in lieu of payment, the erection of a new dam in the place of the one demolished. If the mill of the plaintiff instead of the dam had been embraced within the bounds of the avenue, and the necessity for its destruction had thus arisen, it would never have occurred to any one that it was competent for the defendant to re-construct it on a new site; and yet such act would have manifestly been just as lawful as that act which, in the course of this transaction, was done. It is not pretended that there is any express power conferred upon this board, by its charter, to build this structure, and the only suggestion made by counsel, of a power by implication, is, that the dam may be regarded as a breakwater, or appurtenance to the bridge erected in the avenue. But this suggestion does not seem to me even specious. The dam is not of any service to the bridge or road, nor was it designed for any such purpose. Its entire removal would be an advantage to the public, as the stream would then flow, as it would seem, through the culvert under the bridge, without impediment, in its natural course. Nor would the act in question be legalized by the circumstance, if such circumstance existed, that it was done as a breakwater for the protection of the bridge, the reason being, that still the putting up of such structure [295]*295would be ultra vires. The defendant is not empowered to perform any act outside of the bounds of the avenue. Ho ability is conferred to acquire land for such a purpose, and the dam in question is upon land in which the public have no right whatever, so that its existence is a continuing wrong. It is altogether impossible to hold, upon legal principles, that the defendant owed it, as a duty to the plaintiff, to keep securely up an erection, the entire existence of which, from first to last, was and is a tort.

Ho rule of law is better seated, in theory and in decision, than the proposition that a public corporation cannot be liable to an action for negligence in the performance of any act which it has not the authority to do. Any other doctrine would be fraught with much public inconvenience; it would remove, in a great degree, the circumscription on corporate power which springs from the rule that no power exists, except such as is conferred by the charter, and it would obliterate, almost entirely, the salutary principle that an act which is beyond the corporate competency is, for all purposes, null. And it is likewise, from these same considerations, that the doctrine of estoppel, which is invoked in the brief of the counsel of the plaintiff, cannot be applied to such a state of affairs as is here presented ; though it may be remarked, in regard to the position so taken, that it is not perceived how the doctrine of estoppel is to be brought into the case, inasmuch as the plaintiff has not changed his position, nor waived any right in consequence of the line of action pursued by the defendant.

The principle just stated, that in order to make a neglect of a public corporation actionable, there must be a duty due from it to the person suing, is exhibited in the case of Mayor of Albany v. Cunliff, 2 Comst. 165, in a point of view that renders it peculiarly illustrative in the consideration of the present subject. The suit was for damages inflicted by the falling of a public bridge, which had been put up by the defendant by virtue of an act of the legislature, which it was decided was unconstitutional; the act of the defendant, there[296]*296fore, in building this structure, was not warranted by any law. It was a pure case of ultra vires, and on this ground it was decided that the action would not lie, in the leading opinion read, it being said, “ the rule seems to be well settled, that to charge a person in an action on the case for negligence in the performance of any public work, whereby any person has sustained any special damage, the law must have imposed a duty on him so as to make that neglect culpable.” This authority, in principle, is plainly in point; in that case, the building of the bridge, and in this, the building of the dam, was wholly without any authority, and, consequently, the duty of carefulness in doing the work did not arise, in either instance, in favor of any one. A similar view prevailed in Anthony v. Adams, 1 Metc. 284.

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

Related

Farkas v. Middlesex Board of Freeholders
139 A.2d 779 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1958)
Milmar Estate, Inc. v. Borough of Fort Lee
115 A.2d 592 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1955)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 N.J.L. 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeler-v-essex-public-road-board-nj-1877.