N.J.S.A. 13:9-23

Accumulations in forests as extraordinary fire hazard and public nuisance

13:9-23. Accumulations in forests as extraordinary fire hazard and public nuisance The owner or lessee of any forest, any contractor or employee with authority of the owner of, or any person doing public work in or upon, such forest, who shall permit or suffer the accumulation by human activity of any litter from trees, to lie or be upon such forest within 100 feet of any road trail or fire break, to such an extent or in such manner as to facilitate either the origin or spread of forest fires, shall be deemed thereby to have created an extraordinary fire hazard, which endangers life and property and to have made and maintained a public nuisance. Amended by L.1939, c. 246, p. 660, s. 1; L.1981, c. 369, s. 28, eff. Dec. 30, 1981.

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This is the verbatim text of N.J.S.A. 13:9-23, retrieved from the New Jersey Legislature's public statute corpus. Statutes are amended periodically — for the most current version, check the external source link above. Kyzer is not a law firm and this page is not legal advice.

N.J.S.A. 13:9-23 — Accumulations in forests as extraordinary fire hazard and public nuisance | Kyzer