The opinion of the court was delivered by
Lippincott, J.The prosecutor of this writ, a railroad corporation organized under the general laws of this state, is in the operation of an electric street railway for the carriage of passengers in the city of Cape May, under and by virtue of an ordinance approved June 29th, 1892.
There is no contention on the part of the street railway company that it is vested with any power to operate a street railroad on Beach avenue, in the city of Cape May, without the consent of the proper city authorities.
The right to grant the license or permission to use this street for this purpose is vested in the city council, and without such consent it is conceded that its use would be unlawful. This power is vested in the city council by the charter. Pamph. L. 1875, p. 206, § 19. Reference is also made to Pamph. L. 1886, p. 185; Rev. Sup., pp. 364, 365, § 4; Pamph. L. 1893, p. 144, § 1; Pamph. L. 1894, p. 374.
The prosecutor, in the operation of a street railway, can, in the city of Cape May, exercise no greater or other rights than those conferred by the ordinance of June 29th, 1892, nor could it construct its road or tracks in any other mode than is provided by that ordinance, and if this connection or extension of its sidings or turnouts- originally constructed on this street was not within the terms of that ordinance, or was contrary to its prohibitions, then such connection formed an unlawful obstruction and encumbrance upon said street and •rendered the railway company subject to its removal by some *569proper form of legal procedure. The ordinance granting the consent to construct must be strictly followed in the preservation of the public right to the highway. If sidings or turnouts are provided for in the ordinance, then only such as are so provided for can be constructed, and if none are provided for, then none can legally exist, and any extension of those provided for, or connection between them, would certainly be outside the provisions of the ordinance and an unjustifiable interference with public right.
The ordinance, if it does not contain certainty as to the construction of tracks, curves, sidings, turnouts and other .requirements for the street railway, would be invalid. Kennelly v. Jersey City, 28 Vroom 293. In these respects the ordinance must not be vague, and if it is so it can give no right of construction whatever. Ibid. The protection of the public right requires this degree of certainty.
The tracks must be constructed in the streets on the lines which have been designated' in the ordinance, and no other lines can be followed. West Side Street Railway Co. v. Barnard, 48 Hun 57. The provisions of the ordinance are held' to be mandatory and to be strictly followed. Finch v. Riverside and Arlington Railway Co., 87 Cal. 597, 600. This rule is enforced with the same strictness when applied to turnouts, side tracks or switches, which cannot be constructed unless authorized by ordinance or statute. Concord v. Concord Horse Railroad, 65 N. H. 30. I understand these rules to have been laid down by Mr. Justice Dixon in Kennelly v. Jersey City, supra, and besides, the ordinance, in order to be a valid warrant for the construction of a street railway,' must have certainty in these respects.
How, it must follow that this permission by ordinance to' construct and maintain a street railway according to a-given construction and upon a given location, can confer no authority to construct according to another mode or upon another location, and if another method of construction is undertaken of another location attempted to be occupied, the railway company-can be dealt with precisely as if no right of way or right *570of construction and operation had ever been granted at all. And without speaking at all of the many other remedies which can be applied to correct such a situation, I think it is clear, both by reason as well as by authority, that the tracks, switches, turnouts or sidings or other unauthorized constructions may be removed without judicial intervention. The usual ordinary police intervention can be had, or it can be accomplished by the action of the constituted municipal authorities having the control over the streets. Stamford v. Stamford Railroad Co., 56 Conn. 381. It is apparent that such a rule is salutary and one. perhaps often necessary to be invoked for a full as well as beneficent' measure of protection to the public in these days when it too often happens that the public highways are taken possession of without legal right and in disregard of constituted municipal authority.
We are not unmindful of the existence of cases which require judicial intervention in order to settle disputed claims of right. These cases are easily distinguished from those in which the usurpation or violation of law is at once apparent, for it is only in these latter cases that the summary police intervention is justifiable. New York and Long Branch Railroad Co. v. South Amboy, 28 Vroom 252.
There are many reasons urged for the reversal of the resolution and ordinance under review which have not been considered or determined.
The infirmity presented by the first reason of the prosecutor is that the resolution, which is only a tender to the ordinance, and the ordinance were enacted without notice to the prosecutor or opportunity to be heard in the matter. The resolution and ordinance were adopted without notice to the prosecutor and without affording an opportunity for a hearing.
The return and evidence show this to be true, and under the circumstances of this ease this omission renders the proceedings of the city council in the matter fatally defective. This error is a fundamental one.
The street railroad company, it is conceded, laid its track and these two turnouts or sidings previous to May 28th, *5711895, under the grant of the ordinance of June 13th,' 1892. This track and the sidings had existed there, and had been in use by the company, without objection on the part of the city council, from the early part of .1893. On May 28th, 1895, as appears by the evidence, the company connected these two sidings. This connection was made, in the usual manner and without device or concealment,' and the company contends that it was done in conformity to the provisions of the ordinance of 1892. ' This ordinance is not before the court, but it is noticeable that the defendants do not, in the evidence, dispute the contention of the company, nor do they by any proof attempt to show that it was not in conformity to the ordinance under which the prosecutor claims. It is true that the ordinance of removal of June 13th, 1895, declares. that it was made without the consent of the city council, but beyond this assertion no proof exists disputing the position of the railway company. The construction was not such as actually excluded the public from the use of the street to any extent' whatever, and at the time of the passage of the resolution and ordinance under review'the company was in the operation of the street railway upon this connection or extension. There is nothing in the ease to show that the construction was not made in good faith.
Under these circumstances and the status acquired by the prosecutor, the adoption of the ordinance of the character of the one in question was an adjudication that this status was an unlawful obstruction and encumbrance upon the avenue upon which this construction or extension had been made, and the force and effect given to such adjudication was that it should at once be forcibly and summarily removed, and this adjudication at once deprived the railway company of the right to further operate its street railway over this extension and extinguished the status by it before that time acquired.
The proceedings of the city council in the adoption of this ordinance were taken without' any ■ notice whatever. to the' prosecutor. ■ Conceding the ordinance to be one within the general powers' of the city council to adopt by a legal pro*572ceeding, yet the proceeding was one resulting in an adjudication of-the legal rights of the prosecutor. The exercise of its franchise as well as its rights of private property were called in question by these proceedings, and the result was an- adjudication that the prosecutor be summarily divested of both. It must be manifest, upon reason as well as by authority, that such a proceeding, leading -to such a determination, so conclusively .and effectively detrimental to the rights of the prosecutor, should" not have been taken without reasonable notice to the prosecutor and an opportunity for it to be heard in relation to the subject-matter. The validity of " such a determination must be made, among other essential requisites, to depend upon notice and opportunity to be heard." The proceeding was one directly aimed at the prosecutor and involved private rights, and the ordinance had an immediate effect, which was both summary and forcible, in the removal of the tracks of the company and the suspension of the operation of its road. Attorney-General v. Chicago and Evanston Railroad Co., 112 Ill. 520.
The municipal authorities cannot legally substitute their arbitrary, judgment for a judicial declaration of forfeiture. Easton v. South Easton and West End Passenger Railway Co., 133 Pa. St. 505; Asheville Street Railway Co. v. Asheville, 109 N. C. 688; Stevant v. Ashtabula, 2 St. Ry. Rev. 186. In such cases there must .be notice, -either actual or constructive (in accordance with the charter), or prior legal proceedings. 1 Dill. Mun. Corp. (4th.ed.), p. 418, §§ 348-350.
Where the ordinance affects a property right it is necessary to give actual notice, or prescribed constructive notice, to owners as a prerequisite to-its adoption; Athletic Association v. New Brunswick, 26 Vroom 279; Kennelly v. Jersey City, 28 Id. 293, 295.
It is clear that the proceedings of the city council in the; enactment of this resolution and ordinance, being without notice to the prosecutor, were without legal warrant.
The proceedings of the city council in the adoption-of the ordinance and the resolution and ordinance must be set aside,' with costs.