Earrusso v. Township of East Hanover
Earrusso v. Township of East Hanover
Opinion of the Court
Prosecutors, by writ of certiorari, challenge the legality of an ordinance adopted in 1931 by the township committee of the township of East Hanover. The ordinance prohibits the dumping, depositing or placing in the township of East Hanover of any garbage collected outside of that township and provides a penalty for violation.
Prosecutors own a tract of isolated farm and swamp land whereon they conduct a piggery. To those premises the prosecutors have for many years—antedating the passage of the ordinance—carted refuse, ashes and garbage. In 1934 they contracted with the town of Morristown for the collection of garbage in that town and since then they have brought that garbage to their farm property in East Hanover township, primarily as food for their pigs but using the excess as fertilizer. Charges of violation have been made against an employe of the prosecutors and now, for the first time as we are told, against the prosecutors themselves, and the present writ is doubtless to test the ordinance as against those prosecutions. Under the circumstances we find no laches.
Prosecutors first contend that the township had no statutory authority to pass the municipal enactment. We know of no such authority and none is brought to our attention.
Respondent cites the Home Rule act, chapter 152 (Pamph. L. 1917, art. XXIII, § 1; Cum. Supp. Comp. Stat. 1911-1924, § *136-2301, p. 2243), which by its terms gives the governing body of a municipality power to provide for the cleaning of streets of the municipality and for the collection, removal and disposal of ashes, garbage and other refuse; but that is clearly aimed at something different. Respondent further cites section 7 of the same article (Cum. Supp. Comp. Stat. 1911-1924, § *136-2307, p. 2244), which, in giving a municipality power to procure by purchase, condemnation or lease, unimproved lowland for the disposal of indestructible ■waste, directs that no such acquisition may be had outside the corporate limits without the consent of the governing body and of the board of health of the municipality in which the land is situated; and that, too, is quite another matter.
No authority having been shown for the exercise by the township committee of legislative powers over the subject-matter, we conclude that the ordinance is void.
It is unnecessary to consider the remaining points.
The ordinance will be set aside, with costs.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.