Wright v. Carter

27 N.J.L. 76
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 15, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 27 N.J.L. 76 (Wright v. Carter) 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
Wright v. Carter, 27 N.J.L. 76 (N.J. 1858).

Opinion

The Chief Justice.

By an act of the legislature, the Crosstvicks and Trenton Turnpike Company were authorized, by their charter, to construct a turnpike along a public highway, known as the White-horse road. The act required that the turnpike road should be constructed at least thirty-two feet in breadth along the middle, as near as may be, of said White-horse road. The act also provided that the turnpike company should not construct their turnpike along said highway until the same should be vacated as a public highway according to law. The public highway was vacated and the turnpike road was built, as directed by the statute. The defendants also erected within the limits of the ancient highway a toll-house, which is occupied by the defendant as the gate-keeper and toll-gatherer of said company. The toll-house stands in front of the enclosed lands of the plaintiff, and where the ancient Highway passes over his lands. The action is brought to recover a strip of land lying between that part of the old highway which was converted into a turnpike road by being bedded and faced with gravel and the line of the northerly side of said highway upon which the toll-house stands.

It is objected that the act is unconstitutional, because it authorizes a turnpike road to be constructed over the lands of the plaintiff without providing a compensation for the lands so taken and occupied. The act provides that compensation shall be made for all damages which [80]*80the owners of the land over which the road' passes, sustain by reason of the construction of the road, and also for all damages done to adjoining .lands, and all materials taken therefrom. But it provides no compensation, for the value of the soil occupied by the road. The title of the soil is not changed —it remains, as it was before, in the owner of the adjoining soil. He has precisely the same right to and control over the soil that he had before the passage of the act. The land was subject to the easement or right of way before the passage of the act, and continues subject to the same burthen still. The- right of' altering the construction and grade of the road was in the public, and might have been- exercised by them- to the damage of the landholder, without his being entitled to any redress for the injury thus sustained. That right is, by the act, vested in the'turnpike company; but with this difference, that- they are required to make compensation to the land-owner for all damages sustained by him by reason of the construction of the turnpike road.

It cannot be said, therefore, that the property of the plaintiff’ was, by virtue of the act, taken for public use without just compensation—nothing was in- fact taken from the plaintiff; as before the passage of the act, so after, the title- to the soil remained, in the plaintiff, the right of way in the public. Ail. that the legislature granted to the turnpike company was. the- easement or use of the ancient highway for the purposes of‘ their road:. The franchise of taking- toll, in nowise affected the property, of the plaintiff.

That the. legislature possesses the- power- to- permit a, turnpike corporation to- occupy a public highway for their road, is not questioned. The power has been frequently exercised in* tli-is state- and! elsewhere, and lias been sustained by- judicial decision. State v. Hampton, 2 New Hamp. 22.

The force- of' the argument on-, the. part of the plaintiff rests On the suggestion that the act- has authorized, a cor[81]*81poration, for their own gain and profit, to construct a way over the plaintiff’s lands, and thereby deprive the plaintiff of the occupancy and enjoyment of the land without compensation. But the plaintiff has the same use and enjoyment of the land now that he had before the passage of the act. The right of wa,y was already in the public ; and if any one is to be compensated for that right by the company, it is the public, not the land-owner. And this principle is adopted by the law of the Stale of New York, which prohibits turn-” pike and plank road companies from taking possession of any public highway until the Value of the public interest in the road is appraised and paid for as public property to the commissioners of highways, to be applied to the improvement of the roads in their respective towns. 1 Rev. Si. .715, c/t. 18, art. 2, § 29.

Tlie act does not authorize a change in the use of the road; it remains a public highway as before. Every traveler has the same right to use it as he has to use any other highway on paying the tolls established by law. Commonwealth v. Wilkinson, 16 Pick. 179; Benedict v. Goit, 3 Barb. 459.

The act has merely introduced a change in the mode of making and keeping the road in repair, authorizing individuals to do the work, and to reimburse themselves by taking tolls. In case they fail to keep the work in repair, the duty is devolved by law upon the overseers of the highways. Nix. Dig. 714, § 76.

Tlie case is not affected by the decision in Starr v. The Camden and Atlantic Railroad Co., 4 Zab. 592. That case simply decides that a railroad cannot be constructed across a public highway without making compensation for the injury thereby occasioned to the owner of the soil, when the act itself is silent upon the subject.

A serious difficulty in giving construction to the act arises from the sixteenth section, by which it is enacted that the company shall not construct their turnpike along said highway, until the same shall be vacated as a public [82]*82highway according to law. The case shows that proceedings were taken to vacate the highway agreeably to law, and that the road was vacated. The surveyors, by their return, adjudged the vacating of said road to be necessary for the purpose of carrying into effect the provisions of the act entitled, “An act to incorporate the Crosswicks and Trenton Turnpike Company;” and they do accordingly vacate such part of said road as appears to be necessary for the purpose afopsaid. It is obvious that the legislature never could have contemplated that the surveyors should vacate the ancient highway because they adjudged it to be unnecessary as a highway. The act itself, by authorizing a turnpike to be constructed upon the highway, manifests that it is an important line of travel and necessary to the public convenience. The legislature, in requiring the road to be vacated, had in view a twoffold object, viz., 1, to prevent the conversion of the ancient road into a turnpike, unless with the concurrence of the authorities of the township in which the road is situate; 2, to prevent any doubt as to the discharge of the township from all obligation to repair the road, or liability for want of repair. The mode, therefore, in which the road is vacated is in accordance with the spirit of the act.

But it is further insisted that, upon the road being vacated as a public highway, the land was discharged of the easement, and the title of the soil remained in the owner clear of the right of way, and-.it .was not in. the power of the legislature to restore that burthen, and thereby deprive the plaintiff of his property without compensation. But it is obvious that the design'of the legislature in having the road vacated as a public highway was not to discharge the land from the easement, but simply to transfer the duty of maintaining and repairing the road from the public to the corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
27 N.J.L. 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-carter-nj-1858.