Oritani Field Club v. City of Hackensack
Oritani Field Club v. City of Hackensack
Opinion of the Court
This writ brings up the assessments levied against the lands of the respective prosecutors for the extension of a street in Hackensack called Berry street from State street easterly to Biver street. A number of reasons are assigned but not all of them need to be discussed.
The first point argued is that the assessment is illegal because the commissioners of assessment who had charge of the matter and who made the report, did not have the qualifications required by the statute. We find no reason to support this point. It is assigned to the last reason filed in both cases, but an examination of that reason shows that it merely alleges general error and we think is not available to support the point now made.
The next point is that the report and map returned in response to the writ are not the same report and map that were adopted and confirmed by the municipal body, and that another report and map have been substituted.
The third point is that these reports and maps failed to designate, define or limit the extent of the property of the prosecutor Oritani Field Club, against which the assessment was imposed. Similar points are made in the Barkman case.
This question of the substitution of other papers, particularly of another map, for the map originally annexed to the report of the commissioners and on file in the municipal office, was raised very early in the case and was the subject of considerable controversy. The court made a rule permitting the taking of depositions on this subject, and those depositions have come in and have been considered. It is urged for the city that the return to the writ of certiorari, which sends up a certain map, cannot be contradicted by other evidence and is conclusive on the court, but we are unable to take this view of the matter. It is true that where
The other map, which is claimed to be the map actually
Our examination of the depositions and other evidence satisfies us that Exhibit P-l was the map actually used and which should have been annexed to the report, and not Exhibit R-B, the map last above described. However, even if Exhibit R-B be regarded as the true map, the same difficulty exists with regard to property of the Oritani Field Club in that there is nothing on the map to show how much of their property, which extends all the way from Berry street to Camden street, a distance of 437 feet, is to be subjected to the assessment. We are unable to see how this assessment in either case can be upheld as against property that is not delineated on the map. The map is an essential part of the assessment and, in fact, is the only source of information whereby the property assessed can be identified. The assessment as reported speaks of lot 1 in block 401A as owned by the Oritani Field Club, and lot 11 in block 407 as owned by Mrs. Barkman; but as we have already pointed out, the Barkman lot is not shown on the assessment map P-l at all, and the Oritani Field Club plot is not indicated except by its frontage on Berry street and River street. We think these errors are fatal to the present assessment.
There are one or two other reasons argued, all of which seem to go to the point that the assessment is either excessive or that it is based on consideration which should not properly be taken into account in fixing the amount assessed. As to this phase of the case it is stipulated or conceded that api>eals are pending before the Circuit Court pursuant to the statute, and as the matters embraced in these last points are
However, for the reasons above stated the assessments against the two prosecutors are set aside, with costs.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.