State ex rel. Eager v. City of Hackensack
State ex rel. Eager v. City of Hackensack
Opinion of the Court
As an outcome of a successful appeal instituted January 18th, 1933, from an assessment for benefits Alice Eager, on July 15th, 1935, obtained an order from the Bergen County Circuit Court directing the city of Hackensack to pay her the taxed costs of the proceeding. The costs were taxed and entered as a judgment. The judgment creditor sued out an alternative writ of mandamus to compel payment. The city filed its return, and to the return the relator demurred. The pleadings are simplified by a stipulation which preserves the question of the legal validity of the judgment. The city resists upon the grounds, first, that the statute under which the appeal went to the Circuit Court was repealed at the time of the taking of the judgment and, second, that the Circuit Court if it had jurisdiction to entertain the appeal was nevertheless not authorized to award costs.
In 1933 the legislature passed further pertinent legislation in chapter 347 of the laws of that year. N. J. Stat. Annual 1933, § *136-2042. That statute contained four sections, the last of which provided that the act should become inoperative after July 1st, 1934. The first section amended section 42, supra, by reproducing the language of that section as it had theretofore been and by adding almost a page of additional matter. The purport of the new matter is not important, but it is well to observe that the limitations of life was not inserted within section 42, but was imposed generally upon the effectiveness of the entire 1933 statute.
Respondent relies upon the self-contained repealer in the 1933 statute to sustain its first point. It is our opinion, however, that the legislature in 1933 had quite an opposite thought. The physical arrangement of the 1933 statute and the quite obvious purpose of the legislature to maintain that which would otherwise be lost, namely, the right of appeal from assessments for benefits, bring us to the conclusion that the statute in its entirety was meant to have only temporary effect and that upon its lapse the prior law revived in full force. This harmonizes with Wallace v. Bradshaw, 54 N. J. L. 175; 23 Atl. Rep. 759.
In 1935, by chapter 169 of the laws of that year (IV. J. Stat. Annual 1935, § *136-2042), the legislature again amended section 42 by restating essentially the 1925 language
As to costs, we think that at least some of the items were within the provisions of section 4 of chapter 237, Pamph. L. 1926; Supp. Comp. Stat. 1925-1930, p. 726, § 74-65. In our opinion the Circuit Court had jurisdiction to render judgment for costs. Whether any of the items in the taxed bill were improperly allowed does not go to the jurisdiction and is not to be considered here.
It appears that the judgment should be paid. The peremptory writ is allowed, with costs. As the record before us is somewhat informal, it may, if necessary, be molded to permit an appeal.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.