SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-5027-00T1
ARCHWAY PROGRAMS, INC.,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
PEMBERTON TOWNSHIP BOARD OF EDUCATION,
Defendant-Respondent.
___________________________________
Argued: November 13, 2001 - Decided: June 28, 2002
Before Judges Petrella,See footnote 1* Kestin and Alley.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
Law Division, Civil Part, Camden County, L-7091-00.
Steven D. Weinstein argued the cause for appellant
(Blank Rome Comisky & McCauley, attorneys;
Mr. Weinstein, on the brief).
Frederick W. Hardt argued the cause for respondent
(Mr. Hardt, with Pamela A. McCoy, on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
KESTIN, J.A.D.
Plaintiff, Archway Programs, Inc. (Archway), seeks recovery
under a contract or, alternatively, on theories of unjust
enrichment or quantum meruit. The amount alleged in the complaint
to be due is $95,795.72 for the rendition of educational services
to defendant, Pemberton Township Board of Education (Board), during
the 1999-2000 contract year. The Board counterclaims, also in
three counts, for judgment against Archway in an amount to be
determined, representing alleged overcharges from Archway to the
Board in prior contract years. In a certification filed in the
trial court, the Board's Assistant Superintendent for Business
Affairs alleged that sums due Archway for its services in past
years "are less than amounts due for overpayments made to Archway.
After giving credit for all sums due for tuition, Archway still
owes the District approximately $20,000."
The Board also raises several affirmative defenses including
that primary jurisdiction over Archway's claim resides with the
Department of Education (Department), that Archway had failed to
exhaust its administrative remedies with the Commissioner of
Education (Commissioner), and that Archway's claim was barred by
application of the "doctrines of actual or equitable fraud."
Archway moved for dismissal of the counterclaim, to strike the
aforementioned affirmative defenses, and for summary judgment on
its claim. The trial court denied the motions. Archway appeals
from that denial and the trial court's denial of its motion for
reconsideration.
We granted Archway's motion for leave to appeal, specifically
directing the parties to address the issue whether the entire Law
Division matter should be transferred to the Department. Archway
argues on appeal that the trial court lacks jurisdiction over the
counterclaim and, alternatively, even if jurisdiction exists, the
counterclaim should be dismissed; and that neither the complaint
nor the counterclaim should be transferred to the Department. The
Board continues to assert its right to set-off or recoupment and to
advance the concepts of primary jurisdiction and exhaustion of
remedies in arguing that the entire matter should be entrusted to
the Commissioner for decision and to the Department for resolution
before the trial court addresses the purely legal issues that may
remain.
We begin by noting our institutional respect for the
Department's subject matter interest and for the Commissioner's
first-instance jurisdiction "to hear and determine . . . all
controversies and disputes arising under the school laws[.]"
N.J.S.A. 18A:6-9. The Commissioner's authority is plenary. See
Abbott v. Burke (I),
100 N.J. 269, 301 (1985). Manifestly,
however, the sweep of the Department's interest and the
Commissioner's jurisdiction does not extend to all matters
involving boards of education. For example, contract claims
against boards do not arise under the school laws but rather from
statutory or common law. See Picogna v. Board of Educ. of Cherry
Hill,
249 N.J. Super. 332, 335 (App. Div. 1991). Claims of the
latter type are, therefore, typically and appropriately adjudicated
in the courts. See ibid.; South Orange-Maplewood Educ. Ass'n v.
Board of Educ. of South Orange & Maplewood,
146 N.J. Super. 457,
463 (App. Div. 1977).
This is not to say that courts must apply their jurisdictional
authority to resolve all contract claims before cognate issues
pending on the administrative level are resolved. The concept of
primary jurisdiction suggests otherwise. Where one aspect of a
single, integrated dispute is pending before an administrative
agency and another aspect of the same dispute is pending before a
court, logic commends that the entire matter be dealt with, at
least initially, by the entity with plenary authority over the
subject matter field involved.
The doctrine of primary jurisdiction, like
that requiring exhaustion of administrative
remedies, promotes proper relationships
between courts and regulatory agencies. * * *
Under the doctrine of primary
jurisdiction, when enforcement of a claim
requires resolution of an issue within the
special competence of an administrative
agency, a court may defer to a decision of
that agency.
[Campione v. Adamar of New Jersey, Inc.,
155 N.J. 245, 263 (1998) (citations omitted).]
See also, e.g., Muise v. GPU, Inc.,
332 N.J. Super. 140, 160 (App.
Div. 2000) (holding that a court should exercise its discretion to
defer to the primary jurisdiction of an agency where failure to do
so "would be inconsistent with the 'statutory scheme'" conferring
regulatory authority on the agency). Thus, it may be appropriate,
in order to avoid piecemeal adjudication or duplicative, anomalous
or contradictory results, for a court to defer in its
jurisdictional exercise, even if only temporarily, while the
administrative agency with the primary interest sorts out the
issues and the claims. See, e.g., Boldt v. Correspondence Mgmt.
Inc.,
320 N.J. Super. 74, 83-85 (App. Div. 1999); Village of
Ridgefield Park v. New York, Susquehanna & W. Ry. Corp.,
318 N.J.
Super. 385, 405-07 (App. Div. 1999), modified and remanded on other
grounds,
163 N.J. 446 (2000). Concomitantly, if resolution of the
action at law is the key element to resolving the entire dispute,
the administrative agency may defer its consideration until the
lawsuit is resolved. See New Jersey Div., Horsemen's Benevolent
Protective Ass'n v. New Jersey Racing Comm'n,
251 N.J. Super. 589,
603-04 (App. Div. 1991); cf. Lemelledo v. Beneficial Mgmt. Corp.,
150 N.J. 255, 273-75 (1997); Hinfey v. Matawan Reg'l Bd. of Educ.,
77 N.J. 514, 531-32 (1978).
The basic proposition that no administrative officer or
agency, absent a specific grant of legislative authority, is
empowered to decide questions of law, such as those arising in
contract actions, applies to the Commissioner of Education even in
the context of his plenary authority to decide controversies and
disputes arising under the school laws. The Commissioner's
authority is not exclusive where particular statutes provide
alternate routes for issue resolution, see Roxbury Twp. Bd. of
Educ. v. West Milford Bd. of Educ.,
283 N.J. Super. 505, 519-21
(App. Div.), certif. denied,
143 N.J. 325 (1995), or where the
matter involves a question of law outside the purview of the school
laws. Id. at 520. Nevertheless, in appropriate instances where
legal relief is sought while a closely related administrative
proceeding pends in the Department, a trial court should normally
stay its hand, even while retaining jurisdiction where appropriate,
out of deference for the primary subject matter jurisdiction of the
Commissioner and the Department, unless a reflective evaluation of
the issues and their relationship to each other suggests that
another sequence for resolving the pending questions would be more
realistic.
In order to promote a full understanding of our sense of the
relationship between the issues pending on the two levels in this
matter, an analysis of the background facts is required. In this
regard, we depend to a great extent upon the certifications of
counsel and supporting papers in the otherwise sparse record on
appeal. For the limited purpose of reviewing the trial court's
threshold dispositions, we take as true the factual depictions
contained in the parties' trial court motion papers as presented in
the appendices on appeal.
Under State law, the Board is required to provide a "thorough
and efficient" education to all school-aged children who reside
within the Township of Pemberton. See N.J. Const. art. VIII, § 4,
¶ 1; Abbott v. Burke (II),
119 N.J. 287 (1990). In discharging its
responsibilities, the Board must comply with federal law including
the Education of the Handicapped Act (Individuals with Disabilities
Education Act),
20 U.S.C.A.
§§1400 to 1487, under which the Board
must identify children with special needs and develop
individualized education programs for them. See 20 U.S.C.A. §
1414(d). The Board has elected to send its students with
disabilities to approved educational facilities specializing in the
education of special needs children rather than to develop its own
programs adequate to satisfy statutory standards.
Archway is a privately run, not-for-profit entity which
operates a school for individuals with special needs. Among its
other functions, it is authorized by the Department, pursuant to
N.J.A.C. 6A:14-7.1 to -7.10, to provide educational services to
public school students with disabilities. The tuition received
from sending school districts is a major source of Archway's
income. Pemberton is one of number of public school districts that
have contracted with Archway to satisfy their legal obligations to
students entitled to special needs education.
The services provided by Archway to Pemberton and other school
districts are subject to comprehensive regulatory guidelines
established by the Department. For example, N.J.A.C. 6A:14-7.8
requires a school district's board of education to enter into a
written contract with the provider of special education programs
before the provider may furnish educational services to disabled
students from that district. The regulatory provisions also
mandate the minimum content of the contract. The Department
retains monitoring and oversight authority in respect of Archway
and other providers of similar services, see N.J.A.C. 6A:14-7.10,
and performs periodic audits to ensure that the tuition rates
charged to public schools for these services are within prescribed
limits.
The record before us discloses that, in September 1995, the
Department began an audit of Archway's financial records for fiscal
year 1994-1995. The results were presented to Archway in November
1998. In that audit, the Department found that Archway had
overcharged in providing services to approximately eighty public
school districts during the 1994-95 year, including Pemberton. The
report stated that Archway was obligated to reimburse the school
districts a total of approximately $2.5 million on a pro-rata basis
based on the percentage of tuition received from each district. By
letter dated November 9, 1998, the Department informed Archway that
its approval to accept new students was immediately revoked, and
that effective June 30, 1999, the revocation would extend to
Archway's authorization to continue serving students currently
enrolled. Shortly thereafter, the Department staff requested the
Commissioner, on an emergent basis, to appoint a fiscal monitor to
oversee Archway.
Archway appealed to the Commissioner, seeking a review of the
audit results and an interpretation of regulations dealing with the
manner in which certain Archway expenses should be allocated to its
tuition charges to school districts. In an emergent application,
Archway sought a stay of the Department's decision to revoke its
approval to accept new students, and it opposed the appointment of
a fiscal monitor. Employing established contested case procedures,
see N.J.S.A. 52:14B-9, -10; N.J.A.C. 1:1-1.1 to -20.3, the
Commissioner referred the matter to the Office of Administrative
Law (OAL). On December 28, 1998, Administrative Law Judge Metzger
rendered an initial decision on the order to show cause and the
application for emergent relief. He determined that the
Department's June 30, 1999 license revocation should be stayed and
that the application for appointment of a fiscal monitor should be
denied. That determination was forwarded to the Commissioner for
final decision. See N.J.S.A. 52:14B-10c.
In mid-February 1999, Archway and the Department entered into
an interim settlement agreement and an OAL consent order reciting
the parties' "agree[ment] that the application for emergent relief
filed by Archway . . . and the [Department's] cross-petition for
review of conditional approval status and revocation are hereby
dismissed, without prejudice." The terms of the agreement provided
for administrative handling and resolution of all the outstanding
issues between Archway and the Department.
Shortly thereafter, on February 25, 1999, a Department
memorandum was addressed to chief school administrators, school
business administrators, and directors of special education
reporting the agreement and advising, by way of a "status report",
inter alia:
3. Archway has submitted a list of actions
taken to ensure compliance with the
fiscal monitoring report and a team of
monitors visited the school to confirm
those actions.
4. Archway has scheduled a meeting with the
Office of Compliance to appeal findings
identified in the fiscal monitoring
report. A final determination on any
monies to be refunded to districts has
not yet been made.
5. Effective February 22, 1999, Archway
Programs was permitted to accept new
students into its schools.
6. Districts currently sending students to
Archway are advised to pay their tuition
on a timely basis. It is not appropriate
to withhold funds from Archway based on
monies that may or may not be owed the
district.
7. The Department will not pursue closing of
the school in June 1999 as previously
reported.
Despite ongoing negotiations between the parties to the OAL consent
order, the issue of tuition overpayment has apparently been
unresolved and, after a series of administrative proceedings and
orders, remains with the Department for resolution. Further
matters related to a subsequent audit of Archway and other
performance questions also pend while those parties seek a "global
settlement" of all issues between them.
The foregoing notwithstanding, Archway has continued, with
Department approval, to provide its services to a number of
districts, including Pemberton, and to bill for tuition. The 1999-
2000 tuition obligation upon which Archway's claim in this case is
premised arose on September 7, 1999, when Archway and the Board
entered into a written contract under which Archway would provide
educational services to Pemberton students with special needs for
that school year at a tuition rate established under N.J.A.C. 6:20-
4.1 to -4.7. Those regulations, in force at the time but since
superseded by N.J.A.C. 6:23, provided for a tentative or interim
tuition rate to be charged, subject to adjustment based on the
Department's year-end audit to be performed in conformity with
N.J.A.C. 6:20-4.8. Under the contract and pursuant to N.J.A.C.
6:20-4.1(e)3, the Board was obligated to make payments no later
than sixty days after the receipt of the monthly tuition bills for
services provided by Archway.
Archway claims that, notwithstanding the express contractual
undertaking, and contrary to the regulation and the directive in
item six of the Department's February 25, 1999 memorandum, the
Board refuses to pay tuition bills for services provided during the
months of December 1999, and May and June 2000. Archway contends
further that the Board does not dispute the amount of those bills.
For its part, the Board, inter alia, "admits that some sums for
past years are due" but, as we have noted, it asserts that these
amounts "are less than amounts due back for overpayments made to
Archway. After giving credit for all sums due for tuition, Archway
still owes the [Board] approximately $20,000."
Manifestly, plaintiff's claim in this action, based on a
contract, is within the purview of the courts to decide.
Nevertheless because it bears upon a larger controversy still
pending on the administrative level, and because it is less than
clear whether item six in the Department's February 25, 1999
memorandum is a directive or merely guidance to local school boards
in their dealings with Archway regarding the effectuation of
obligations owed by Archway arising from overcharges in prior
years, the trial court should stay its consideration of the matter
pending resolution of the underlying administrative issues. One of
the basic legal questions before the trial court, the validity of
the Board's assertion of a right to set-off in the amount of past
overcharges, cannot be fruitfully addressed, in a way that makes
sense practically, in advance of resolution by the Commissioner and
the Department of the issues pending before them. Certainly, the
Commissioner and the Department possess ample jurisdictional and
practical authority over both of the parties to require each to
discharge its obligations owing to the other. All issues between
the parties should be placed before the Commissioner and the
Department so that the latter authorities are not hampered in their
responsibilities to administer the subject matter area
comprehensively.
This is not to say that the trial court may cede its contract-
claim jurisdiction to the Commissioner or the Department for
decision. Cf. Hackensack v. Winner,
82 N.J. 1, 28-29 (1980).
Neither Archway's contractual rights nor the Board's legal rights
to set-off or other relief based upon its claim of legal or
equitable fraud may be decided on the administrative level.
Nevertheless, out of respect for the subject matter interest of a
coordinate branch of government and to promote consistency of
result, the trial court should stay its hand regarding all
interrelated issues of law between the parties until the
Commissioner and the Department have resolved all those questions
that are within their subject matter purview and amenable to
disposition by administrative order or directive. For example, the
amount of Archway's overcharge has yet to be confirmed by the
Department. Also, Archway's right, if any, to withhold its
services from defendant's students while its current billings
remain unpaid, may be a question to be determined. These issues
are not within the trial court's authority to decide. Even the
"tuition due" question requires the Commissioner's expertise to
determine because it necessarily implicates the applicability of
and conformity with complex regulations governing the subject
matter.
It may well be, once the Commissioner and the Department have
decided all the issues within their purview, there will, as a
practical matter, be no factual issues left for the trial court to
decide. If such be the case, the court might well dismiss the
civil action as moot. Or, the circumstances may suggest that the
trial court should enter judgment embodying whatever terms might
be necessary to give legal, civil-action-claim effect to the
determinations made on the administrative level, in much the same
way the courts are generally available, through the summary actions
framework, to give needed legal effect to administrative
determinations. See R. 4:67-6. On yet another hand, it is
possible that once the Commissioner and the Department have
resolved all the issues properly before them, questions of law
between the parties, not amenable to practical administrative
resolution, will remain to be determined by the trial court. By
way of possible example, notwithstanding the Commissioner's plenary
authority over the parties to resolve all facets of the disputes
between them, the issue of defendant's legal right in the
circumstances to claim set-off may remain as an issue that must be
determined by a court. The summary proceedings framework in R.
4:67-6 contemplates that possibility and authorizes the trial court
to apply its processes to determine lingering legal issues so that,
eventually, a judgment may enter fully disposing of all claims and
counter-claims between the parties.
We have concluded that, in the circumstances presented, the
trial court should have applied principles of primary jurisdiction
and deferred to the Commissioner's and the Department's subject
matter interest in addressing, in the first instance, all issues
raised by both parties. We remand for the entry of an order
temporarily transferring the matter to the Commissioner of
Education, in which the trial court shall retain jurisdiction to
resolve such legal issues as may remain once all the administrative
proceedings bearing upon the current issues between the parties
have been concluded.
Reversed and remanded.
Footnote: 1 * Judge Petrella did not participate in oral argument, but has, with the consent of counsel, been added to the panel deciding the matter.