In re New York Bay Railroad

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Hendrickson, J.

This is an application by the Hew York Bay Railroad Company for a summary determination of the character of certain lands of the applicant within the city of Jersey City for the purposes of taxation, pursuant to the authority of section 28 of the revised act for the taxation of railroad and canal property. Pamph. L. 1888, p. 269; Gen. Slat., p. 3324. The assessments in question were levied in the year 1905. The plots of land so assessed are grouped together, forming block 1507, as designated upon the tax assessment map of Jersey City. They are portions of the terminal of the petitioner, the Hew York Bay Railroad Com*117pany, located at tidewater on New York bay, in that part of Jersey City known as Greenville.- The road was organized in 1890, and runs from a point in the Pennsylvania railroad at or near Waverly to the terminal named. The construction of the road and terminal was begun in 1889, but the road was not completed so as to permit its operation until October, 1904, and the terminal is not yet completed. The proof shows that the land upon which it is being constructed was mostly land under water, which is being gradually reclaimed by filling in, and upon which is being constructed a large terminal freight yard for the Pennsylvania railroad system. The road is now being operated by the latter company as a freight road, and is designed, in connection with the terminal, for the carriage of its freight and freight cars to and from points in New York harbor and on Long Island sound. These lands were assessed by the city authorities on May 20th, 1905, and were also assessed during the same year by the state board of assessors, as property used for railroad purposes, and the question before us is, Were the lands so assessed, at the date of the assessments, lands used for railroad purposes within the meaning of the act named? If they were, then the state assessment must stand and the city’s assessment must be set aside, and if not, then the result must be vice versa. We have already determined a similar application of the same company at this term, as to lands within the right of way of the petitioner. The opinion may be found ante p. 111. The plots now under consideration are designated upon the map Exhibit P 4, offered on behalf of the petitioner, as Nos. 2a, 2b and 2 and 2 (one hundred and twenty-five acres), as they also appear upon the city assessment map.

As to plots Nos. 2a and 2b, which lie between the shore line and the exterior line for solid filling, the former on the south side and the latter on the north side of a strip of the same terminal marked on Exhibit P 4 as main stem and sixty-eiglit acres, we think it is satisfactorily shown that at the date named they were lands either in actual use for railroad purposes or held for fairly anticipated railroad purposes, and were therefore under the decision of this court in New Jersey *118Junction Railroad Co. v. Jersey City, 34 Vroom 120, taxable only by the state board of assessors as railroad property. This ease was followed in Central Railroad Company v. Bayonne, 42 Id. 476.

Plot No. 2b is shown to have been filled in and graded, with tracks constructed thereon, as shown in red on Exhibit F 4, and freight cars have been running thereon since October, 1904, and while plot No. 2a was not entirely filled in at that time, the filling in was completed in 1906, and while the engineer could not testify positively as to the use that would be made of plot No. 2a by tire company, he did testify that the tracks shown in blue on the plan exhibit the layout of the property in question, and that the whole work was being done according to the plan, of which Exhibit P 4 was a copy, as placed in his hands as a guide to the construction in 1902, and since upon this plan we note that the tracks already laid and those projected show a connected system of tracks forming a yard covering, to a greater or less extent, both of the plots Nos. 2b and 2a, as well as the main stem, we think this fact, taken in connection with the other evidence, is sufficient to justify the conclusion we have reached as to plots Nos. 2a and 2b, as already stated.

As to plot No. 2, which lies west of the exterior line for solid filling and on the northerly side of the main stem, the larger part of which is still under water, containing about one hundred and eighteen acres, we think the evidence fails to show that this plot is subject to taxation by the state board under the rule just cited, and that as to it the assessment by the local authorities must stand. It is urged for the company that at least twenty-five acres of this plot is devoted, as alleged, to a channel dredged out in the same, and to some tracks laid out upon the filled in part, but the engineer frankly stated that he never saw any plan for the improvement of this plot, and we think, under the ruling of this couid, as expressed by Mr. Justice Dixon in In re Central Railroad of New Jersey, 43 Vroom 86, 91, with regard to items 43 and 45 in that case, that the evidence adduced does not establish with sufficient certainty the use contended for.

*119As to plot Eo. 2 (one hundred and twenty-five acres), as marked upon the map, consisting of laird under water between the exterior line for solid filling and the exterior line for piers, having upon it, already constructed, a lighterage pier, transfer bridges with tracks laid thereon to receive freight ears for transportation, with a system of buoys, breakwaters and lights for the protection of navigation into and out of the same, we think this plot comes within the rule laid down in New Jersey Junction Railroad Co. v. Jersey City, supra, and ivas properly assessed by the state board of assessors. It is conceded by the city that a strip enclosing the lighterage pier from east to west, containing about thirty acres, might properly be so assessed, but the evidence shows that this plot has been dredged by the company, at great expense, creating channels therein of sufficient depth for the navigation of vessels to and from the deep -water of the bajy and further, that the traffic in freight at this terminal since October. 1904, has been very large, involving the handling at times of about one thousand cars a day, so that ive think the whole of this plot is reasonably necessary as an appendage of the terminal, and that it was properly included in the assessment by the state board.

The city’s assessment not having been separately made, as we understand, against the plots named, but against all of them together in the block named, vc are unable to order a cancellation of the assessment, but it should be reduced so a.s to leave plots E'os. 2a and 21 and 2 (one hundred and twenty-five acres) untaxed by local authority. In re Assessment Central Railroad Company of New Jersey, supra.

The state assessment for that year must be reduced by excluding from its valuation plot Eo. 2, estimated as above to contain about one hundred and eighteen acres, and the excess of tax paid to the state by the company over the amount due under such corrected assessment must be returned to the company. The judgment will be entered without costs.