Kinmonth v. Township Committee
Kinmonth v. Township Committee
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The issue to be determined in this case is raised by relator’s demurrer to a return made by the township committee to an alternative writ of mandamus. The writ recites that on December 10th, 1900, six surveyors of the highways of the county of Monmouth laid out a certain public road in the township of Wall (particularly described in the writ), as appears by their return recorded in the county clerk’s office; that the road ivas by them directed, to be opened on January 10th, 1901; that the legal voters of the township have duly voted, granted and raised the money necessary to open, clear out, make and work said road; that the damages assessed by the surveyors of the highways in laying out the same have been duly paid; and that, nevertheless, the township committee have refused, and still refuse, to open, clear out, malee and work the said public road. The writ commands the township committee to either open, clear out, make and work the said public road or show cause to the contrary.
The return contains the single averment that the legal voters of the township have not voted, granted and raised the money necessary to open the road, and that, on the contrary, the said voters, at an election held in the month of March, 1902, refused to grant and raise the money necessary for the purpose, and voted that no money be raised for new roads.
Relator demurs, and the respondents join in demurrer.
The question presented, therefore, is whether the duty rests upon the township committee to open the road, notwithstanding the legal voters have failed to provide funds wherewith to pay the cost.
Until its amendment by the supplement of 1891 (Pamph. L., p. 137; Gen. Stat., p. 2835), the act devolved upon the overseers of the highways the duty of opening, clearing out, working and repairing the public roads, their duties being prescribed by sections 37, &c. Gen. Stat., p. 2813. The moneys necessary for the purpose were to be granted bjr vote of the inhabitants of the township (section 39), with the option to any person assessed for road taxes to work out his tax by labor upon the highways (section 42). By sections 51 to 55 the inhabitants of the township were permitted to determine by vote whether they would work and maintain their highways by hire or by labor; and if they made, the
By section 49 it was made the duty of the overseer within whose division any highway was laid out to cause the same to be opened and all encroachments to be removed. ‘
By the supplement of 1891 (Pamph. L., p. 137; Gen. Stat., p. 2835), it was enacted that the township committee of each township should have the full supervision, management and control of the making and repairing of all roads in the township, and that thereafter all taxes assessed for making and repairing roads should be paid in money. This act, without expressly abolishing the office of overseer of the highways, took away the duties of the office and imposed 'them upon the township committee. Allen v. Hiles, 38 Vroom 135, 137.
The election of overseers of the highways was formerly provided for by section 12 of the Township act of 1846. Gen. Stat., p. 3583. But in the revision of the Township law in 1899 (Pamph. L., p. 373, § 4), they were omitted from the list of township officers, and the Township act of 1846 was at the same time repealed. Pamph. L. 1899, p. 412, § 96.
We observe that by “An act to increase the powers of township committees,” approved March 11th, 1880 (Pamph. L., p. 199), township committees were, among other things, authorized to exercise, either in connection with the overseers of highways or independently, the same powers and authority then vested by law in overseers of the highways, to cause any
It is worthy of note that while the revised Township act of 1899, in enumerating the officers to be chosen by the inhabitants at their township elections (Pamph. L. 1899, p. 373, § 4), omitted overseers of the highways, which had been formerly elected under Gen. Stat., p. 3583, § 12, it likewise omitted survetyors of the highways, who, as already mentioned, are the officers in whom is reposed the function of laying out highways. But by a supplement to the Road law that was approved on the same day with the revision of the Township law (Pamph. L. 1899, p. 428), provision was made for the election of surveyors-of the highways, while no similar provision was made for the election of overseers. Upon the whole, therefore, the legislative intent is clear to leave the machinery for laying out highways .unimpaired, and to leave with the township committee the duty of opening the same, where it was placed by the Rond law supplement of 1891.
The Eoad law of 1846 (Rev. Stat., p. 515) contained provisions respecting the laying out, opening, working and repairing of roads and the duties of the overseers of the highways in the premises that were not materially different, so far as the present point is concerned, from the provisions of the Road law of 1874. In State, ex rel. Whitenack, v. Township of Bernards, 10 Vroom 60, where a road had been laid out under the act of 1846, and afterwards the inhabitants, at their town meeting, had refused to order moneys to be raised for the purpose of opening it, and no funds were at their disposal which could properly be appropriated to this purpose, it was held that mandamus would not lie to require the township committee to divert moneys voted for the repair of old roads to the laying out of the new road, and that the overseer could open it by warning out the inhabitants.
In Warner v. Reading (1884), 17 Vroom 519, application was made to this court for a mandamus to command an overseer to open and work a highway newly laid out. It appeared that he had not sufficient money in hand for the purpose, and resort was sought to be had to section 56 of the Road law of 1874, so as to compel him to warn out the inhabitants. Justice Magie said: “If this section (56) remains in force, a mandamus to compel the overseer to exert the power thus given him ought to issue.” The application was denied only because of the repealer of the sectioir by Pamph. L. 1883, p. 165. But since this decision the repealer has itself been repealed. Pamph. L. 1885, p. 90; see Gen. Stat., p. 3820, tit. "Roads.” This repealer had the effect of reviving section 56, as was held by the Court of Errors and Appeals in Wallace v. Bradshaw, 25 Vroom 175; reversing, S. C., 24 Id. 315.
In our view, it is the duty of the township committee, having no funds in hand for hiring necessary labor, &c., to perform the work of opening the road by calling out the inhabitants of the township for the purpose, first apportioning the labor required among the inhabitants “in the same proportion
The relator is entitled to judgment on the demurrer.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- HUGH S. KINMONTH, RELATOR v. THE TOWNSHIP COMMITTEE OF THE TOWNSHIP OF WALL, IN THE COUNTY OF MONMOUTH
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published