Board of Chosen Freeholders v. Tilton
Board of Chosen Freeholders v. Tilton
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Application is made on behalf of the board of chosen freeholders of the county of Atlantic, for a mandamus to compel the collector of the town of Hammonton, in said ■county, to collect a tax ordered by the board of freeholders of said county to be raised for the support of the poor in the county poor-house.
The proportion of tax ordered by the freeholders to be assessed upon the town for the year 1876, was assessed by the assessor of the town, but the collector refuses to collect the assessment. This refusal is based upon the alleged ground that, by the provisions of the act entitled "An act to incorporate the town of Hammonton, in the township of Mullica, in the county of Atlantic,” the general law providing for the support of poor-houses in the counties, by taxation upon townships in the counties, is repealed as to that town. By the twenty-ninth section of the charter of Hammonton, (Pamph. Laws, 1866, p. 202,) it is enacted that " the legal voters may, at their annual charter election in each year, raise by a plurality of votes, such sum or sums of money as they may think proper and necessary for the support and maintenance of the poor of said town.” And by the thirty-third section of the same act, it is enacted that “ from and after the passage of this act, all acts or parts of acts inconsistent with or repugnant to the provisions hereof, the same be and they are hereby repealed, so far as they might otherwise relate to the town of Hammonton hereby created.” It is claimed that the thirtieth and thirty-second sections of the act to incorporate the chosen freeholders in the respective counties in -this state, (Rev., p. 127,) which provides for the purchase or erection of county poor-houses, and levying tax, by order of the freeholders, for their support, are inconsistent with and repugnant to the
It is a rule of statutory construction that where contrary laws come in question, the general law yields to the special, and that regardless of the order of time of their passage State v. Clark, 1 Dutcher 54; State, Taintor, pros., v. Morristown, 4 Vroom 61. Unless, by the general law, the legislature manifests the intent to repeal the special law. State, M. & E. R. R. Co., pros., v. Commissioner of Railroad Taxation, 9 Vroom 472.
A special local law that is positively repugnant to a former general law, and not either confirmative, cumulative or auxiliary to it, repeals the old law to the extent of the repugnancy. McGavisk ads. State, M. & E. R. R. Co., pros., 5 Vroom 511.
This act respecting the town of Hammonton, contains a repealing clause of all inconsistent legislation. But is this legislation inconsistent with the provisions of the act giving power to the board of freeholders of the respective counties to build poor-houses and provide for their support, or is it merely a provision of law, conferring upon that town power in reference to its poor, such as is given to all the towns and townships in the state by general law, auxiliary to the relief provided in the freeholders’ act?
An examination of the legislation for the support of the poor will, I think, show the latter to be the correct view.
On March 11th, 1774, the colonial legislature passed “An •act for the settlement and relief of the poor.” It embodied all previously existing laws on that subject, with some important additions. Allinson’s Laws, p. 412.
By the twenty-first section, overseers of the poor in any city, town corporate, township, or precinct, with consent of the major part of the inhabitants thereof, were empowered to build, purchase, or hire and pay for, out of the moneys provided for the relief of the poor, any house or houses in such city, &g., in which to keep and relieve their poor. The thirteenth section provided for the assembling of the inhabitants in town meeting, and deciding upon the sum or sums to be
The first general provision for the erection and maintenance of county poor-houses, is found in the act to incorporate the chosen freeholders of the respective counties of the state, passed Februrary 13th, 1798. Pat. Laws, p. 265. By Sections 30, 31, and 32 of that act, power is given to the freeholders of the respective counties to build or purchase county poor-houses, and to direct, by their order, the amount of money for the cost of building and for the support of the poor, to be raised and apportioned between the townships of the county. Within a few days thereafter, (oh the 21st of February, 1798,) theaet incorporating the inhabitants of townships, was passed. By the eleventh section of that act, the persons qualified to vote at town meeting were empowered, at the annual or other town meeting, to vote, grant, and raise such sums of money for the maintenance and support of the poor as they or the major part of them should deem proper and necessary for the maintenance and support of the poor (and other specified purposes), and provided for raising the money by tax upon the townships. These three enactments, passed into the revision of Judge Paterson, in 1800, as they were enacted, except that the thirteenth and fourteenth sec-' tions of the act of 1774, providing for raising the money for poor purposes, were omitted, provision for that purpose being-found in the eleventh section of the township act. The provisions in the freeholders’ act, for the erection and maintenance of county poor-houses by taxation upon the county, was not then considered inconsistent with the provisions of the poor law, permitting the hiring or purchase, by cities, towns corporate, or townships, of buildings in which to keep their poor, and paying for the same out of the poor money, nor with the provisions of the township act, empowering the inhabitants of townships to order and raise, at town meetings, money for the support of the poor. Then, as the law stood, the board of freeholders of each county had power to build poor-houses for the county, and order the cost thereof,
The county of Atlantic has a poor-house, and, under the law, all the townships in that county are, on the order of the board of freeholders, liable for taxes for its support. The town of Hammonton says it is not liable for that tax, because the legislature, in the act creating it a separate corporation,, conferred upon it power to raise money for the support of the poor; and that this is legislation inconsistent with the right, of the county to order levied on the newly created town taxes for the support of the county poor. It seems to me that that legislation does no more than give to Hammonton the same power conferred by the general law upon the towns and townships in the state to raise money for the support of the poor and as that provision of the general law has never been regarded as conflicting with the right of the freeholders, I cannot see how the legislation for Hammonton is in conflict with it; nor do I perceive in it the legislative intent to relieve the town from the duty of bearing its share of the county tax with other towns aud townships in the county, all of which possess the same power to raise money for themselves, conferred upon them in terms almost identical with those used by the legislature in the town charter.
To exempt the town from sharing with like municipalities
A peremptory mandamus should issue.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- THE BOARD OF CHOSEN FREEHOLDERS OF ATLANTIC COUNTY v. PETER S. TILTON, COLLECTOR OF HAMMONTON
- Cited By
- 1 case
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- Published