Shepard v. Mayor of East Orange
Shepard v. Mayor of East Orange
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The writs in this cause remove to this court for review an ordinance passed by the city council of East Orange on April 28th, 1902, approved by the mayor of that city on May 3d, 1902, granting permission to the Consolidated Traction Company to construct, operate and maintain a double-track electric street railway, by the overhead trolley system, on Central avenue, between the Newark city line and the Orange city line, in the city of East Orange, and prescribing the location of tracks and poles, and imposing terms and conditions. The authorizing legislation is “An act to regulate the construction, operation and maintenance of street railroads in this state,” approved April 26th, 1-896. Pamph. L., p. 329.
I will take up the objections urged against the legality of the ordinance in the order of the brief of counsel for the prosecutors.
The provision of the statute is “that such permission to construct, maintain and operate a street railway shall in no case be granted, in whole or in part, until there shall be filed with the clerk of such governing body or other equivalent officer the consent in writing of the owner or owners of at least one-half in amount of lineal feet of property fronting on the streets, highways, avenues and other public places, or upon the part of the street or streets, highway or highways, avenue or avenues and other public place or places through or upon which permission to construct, operate and maintain a street railway is asked, and any such consent may be signed by an attorney in fact, thereunto duly authorized by any owner, or by an executor or trustee holding'the legal title or having power of sale, which consents shall be executed and acknowledged as are deeds entitled to be recorded.”
There is dispute as to measurements, but I will take those of the prosecutors. The requisite frontage, according to the brief of their counsel, is seven thousand one hundred and fifteen feet. Consents for five thousand nine hundred and sixty-nine and seventy-four hundredths feet are conceded to be valid. Others are challenged. One of those is that for the “Cemetery of the Holy Sepulchre,” for nine hundred and sixty-nine feet, and if it is not sustained the prosecutors must prevail, for without it there would not be consent by the owners of one-half in amount of lineal feet of property fronting on Central avenue along the line of the proposed railway. If sustained, it is needful to look only for valid consent for one hundred and seventy-six and twenty-six hundreths feet. There is much more than that frontage as to which, in our opinion, the objections of the prosecutors are untenable. One case will suffice—that of William Seyd, whose consent for one hundred and eighty-nine and sixty-six hundredths feet was duly signed and acknowledged and
The consent for the cemetery property is challenged because not filed with the city clerk before the introduction of the ordinance and because Bishop- O’Connor, who signed and acknowledged it, had not, up to the time of the passage of the ordinance, legal title to the property.
The first ground of challenge may be disposed of adversely to the prosecutors, on the authority of Hutchinson v. Belmar, ubi supra. It was held in that case (at p. 450) that it is sufficient if the required written consents are at hand when the ordinance comes up -for final passage. It is urged that this deliverance was obiter. It nevertheless accords with reason, and we now reaffirm it. In most cases, as in that before us, the advertised meeting to consider an application, under the statute, is adjourned from time to time, and the ordinance is prepared with much deliberation. If it were the legislative intent that the filing of the prescribed consents should precede municipal consideration, it would seem that the governing body of the municipality could not) without them, even fix a time and place for a hearing on the application—which would be a most unreasonable interpretation of the act. Counsel for the prosecutors is driven to contend for it, but his argument is not persuasive. It seems quite plain that the municipal consent and the private consent are distinct. Efforts to secure the two essentials may well proceed pari passu. The only restriction is that the granting ordinance must await final passage until the requisite private written consents shall be filed.
The second ground of challenge presents a new question. The land devoted to the cemetery was, in 1865, conveyed, by private owners, to “James RooscvcLt Bayle3r, D.D., bishop
The contention for the prosecutors is that, at the time of the passage of the ordinance, no effective consent to its grant could, under the statute, be given for the cemetery frontage, except by the devisees of Bishop Wigger. This contention, for reasons to be stated, cannot prevail. Whether such devisees were competent as “trustees holding the legal title” to execute the writing need not be decided.
The status of property of the Roman Catholic Church in this country is peculiar. The civil courts, even as to property
It has been proved in the present case by eminent churchmen that the authoritative declaration of the polity in this country of that church is in the acts and decrees of the Third Plenary Council of Baltimore,_ held in 1884. These acts and decrees are in Latin, but we have been favored with sworn translations, from which I gather that the normal system of holding and transmission of diocesan property is through the bishop of the diocese, either as a corporation sole or as an individual. In states like New Jersey, where parochial and ecclesiastical incorporation is permitted, property may be held by bodies so incorporated, but I do not understand that to be compulsory, and where there is no such corporation formed to hold non-parochial property, the bishop must hold it. The bishop is required, within three months after consecration, to make, in duplicate, and deposit in a designated way, a testamentary disposition of the property of the diocese, so as to secure its safe transmission to his successor. The testimony is that the practice is to do this by a devise to three bishops, who convey to the successor of the decedent. This was the method adopted by Bishop Wigger and effectuated by his surviving devisees. The conveyance had not actually been made to Bishop O’Connor when he signed the challenged consent, but he was in possession of the property, in all essentials its owner, with absolute control and dominion over it.
Let us now apply to this situation the words of the statute. The authoritative consent must come from the real owner. The writing may he signed by an attorney in fact, or by an executor or trustee if he holds the legal title or has a power of sale. The connotation of executors and trustees with
We think Bishop O’Connor was the owner of the cemetery property, within the purview of the statute, and that his written and acknowledged consent affords support for the ordinance.
THIRD, FOURTH AND FIFTH—-INSUFFICIENCY OF THE PUBLIC HEARING.
The objections I thus group together present various aspects of the case, and may best be met by a short statement of. the requirements of the act as the court understands them. The tenor of the petition to the governing body of the municipality is not prescribed, but may be implied from the notice of its consideration required to be published, which must state the character of the road intended to be constructed, the motive power to be used thereon and the streets or other public highways or places 'through which the same shall extend, The petition must, indeed, be accompanied with a map or description of the route of the proposed railway, showing also the proposed location of rails or tracks and the location of poles or conduits, but the granting ordinance need not adopt such- locations or any location. The ordinance need do no more than grant permission to construct, maintain and operate, by the described power, a street railway upon the designated streets, highways and places or parts thereof. The details of location may be ñxed and determined in the ordinance or by a resolution, passed at the same time br at-a subsequent time.
The requirement of notice, of course, involves a public
SIXTH-ILLEGALITY IN RESERVING RIGHT TO CHANGE LOCATION OE POLES BY RESOLUTION.
It is conceded for the prosecutors that the council need not have designated such location in the ordinance, but .having done so, the claim is that it was not competent to provide for change, by resolution, on the application of the street railway company. There seems to me no force in this objection, but if there be any, it is only subversive of, the'reservation, not of the ordinance.
The ordinance imposed, as a condition, a tax of two per cent, on gross receipts, with a yearly minimum of $1,000, for ' fifty years; subsequent compensation .to be fixed by arbitration. It is argued that the provision for arbitration avoids the whole ordinance for uncertainty. It was competent, though not compulsory, for the council to exact compensation. The recent case of Fielders v. North Jersey Street Railway Co., 39 Vroom 343, 361, upholds the right to make such contracts. The whole matter, being extra statutory, is left to the council's discretion. We see no legal objection to a contract for arbitration. It is a reasonable method for determining, in the distant future, the value of a right whose valuable elements cannot now be ascertained, and will render certain what is now necessarily uncertain. Should the company, at the end of the term, refuse to submit to arbitration, doubtless the public will find means of redress.
EIGHTH-INCAPACITY GE THE CONSOLIDATED TRACTION COMPANY TO APPLY EOR OR RECEIVE THE PERMISSION OE THE ORDINANCE.
This objection is based on the fact that, in 1898, the traction company had leased, for nine hundred and ninety-nine years, all its property and franchises to the North Jersey Street Railway Company.
I do not see how this concerns the prosecutors. The traction company is still a street railway company. The consents of property owners were given to the traction company, its successors or assigns. The permission granted will simply enure to the benefit of its lessee. The case shows ratification by the lessee, and the lease, in evidence, expressly provides
The United New Jersey Eailroad and Canal Company made a like lease to the Pennsylvania Eailroad Company in 1871, validated by the legislature of this state in 1873 (Pamph. L. p. 1298), yet condemnations of land for improvements and additions to the leased railroad have always been made by the lessor. Many have been contested by the landowners, but no question of lack of power to condemn has ever been raised, and the condemnations have been sustained. Beck v. United, &c., Co., 10 Vroom 45; United, &c., Co. v. Weldon, 18 Id. 59.
In Slingerland v. Newark, 25 Vroom 62, this court sustained a Condemnation by a city of land for a water-pipe line, which a private corporation had contracted to acquiré, subject to the right of the city to purchase.
We see no infirmity in the ordinance under review, and it will be affirmed, with costs.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.