NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-2235-98T5
CORRINE GALLO, JOSEPH GALLO
and GABRIELLE PERRET-JOHNSON,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
MAYOR and TOWNSHIP COUNCIL OF
LAWRENCE TOWNSHIP, LAWRENCE
TOWNSHIP and LAWRENCE TOWNSHIP
PLANNING BOARD,
Defendants-Respondents.
Argued January 5, 2000 - Decided February 10, 2000
Before Judges King, P.G. Levy and Carchman.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
Division, Mercer County.
Robert L. Grundlock, Jr. argued the cause for
appellants (Rubin, Ehrlich & Buckley, attorneys; Mr.
Grundlock, on the brief).
Janice B. Stonaker argued the cause for respondents
(Stonaker and Stonaker, attorneys for Mayor and
Township Council of Lawrence Township; Teich, Groh,
Frost & Zindler, attorneys for Lawrence Township
Planning Board; Ms. Stonaker and Arthur R. Sypek, Jr.
on the joint brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
CARCHMAN, J.A.D.
The 1995 amendments to the protest provisions of the
Municipal Land Use Law, N.J.S.A. 40:55D-62.1 and -63, provide for
notice of zoning classification and boundary changes to those
property owners located within two hundred feet of the boundaries
of the district subject to the changes. The same amendments,
however, exempt from its notice provisions classification or
boundary changes recommended in a periodic general reexamination
of the master plan by the planning board pursuant to Section 76
of P.L. 1975, c. 291 (C.40:55D-89)." This appeal requires us to
determine whether proposed zoning changes creating a higher
density residential zone located adjacent to a landowner's
property and recommended pursuant to the statutorily mandated
six-year review of a municipal master plan, N.J.S.A. 40:55D-89,
obligates a municipality to provide personal notice to those
landowners who are located within two hundred feet of the
boundaries of such change. Judge Feinberg, in the Law Division,
concluded that the exemption provision of the statute applied,
and no personal notice was required. She also rejected
additional arguments regarding notice of other zoning changes
located throughout the municipality as well as an allegation of
spot zoning. We agree and affirm.
I.
In 1992, defendant Lawrence Township Planning Board (the
Planning Board) began a reexamination of its 1987 master plan as
is required at least every six years by
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-89.
Pursuant to the reexamination, the Planning Board gave public
notice and proceeded to conduct twenty-four work meetings
spanning a period from October 1992 and continuing through May
1995. Following the conclusion of its working sessions, in June
1995, the Planning Board on notice to the public held public
hearings on the adoption of the master plan, and on June 14,
1995, the revised master plan was adopted. The new master plan
proposed five zones of residential housing (R-1 through R-5), and
identified the particular type of housing and the areas to which
each zone applied. With respect to R-2, the zone relevant here,
the master plan stated in pertinent part:
The uses proposed for the Residential 2 land
use classification are single family detached
housing, agriculture, and open space.
Density for this category is proposed within
a range of one-and-a-half to two-and-a-half
(1.5 to 2.5) units per acre. The land areas
proposed for this classification include the
Village of Lawrenceville and almost all of
the area west of the Village to Federal City
Road and south of the Village to I-95. . . .
Any future residential subdivisions should be
compatible with the character of adjacent
development, particularly as to the actual
area and width of pre-existing lots.
Prior to the approval of the new master plan, an R-1.5 zone
existed, which had a minimum lot size of approximately 30,000
square feet. The newly approved master plan eliminated the R-1.5
classification.
Subsequent to the adoption of the new master plan, the
Planning Board created a subcommittee to propose an ordinance
necessary to implement the new master plan. During the remainder
of 1995, 1996 and 1997, various ordinance provisions were drafted
and hearings were held periodically seeking public comment and
reaction. Finally, in the summer of 1997, a comprehensive draft
of a land development ordinance was forwarded to defendant
Lawrence Township Mayor and Township Council (Township Council).
The Township Council held six public hearings on the proposed
ordinance, at which time additional revisions were made to the
draft of the ordinance.
In July 1997, a developer filed an "Application for
Subdivision Plan Review" of his property (the Development
Parcel). The developer indicated in his application that this
land was zoned as R-2A, although this new R-2A sub-zone had not
yet been adopted. These facts were memorialized in a memo
written by the Planning Board's land consultants after reviewing
the developer's proposal:
Undersized Lot Variances. The proposed
development appears to be designed using the
proposed R-2A zoning district regulations
rather than the existing R-1.5 regulations.
For the plan to proceed now, the applicant
would need to obtain undersized lot variances
for all of the lots except lots 14 and 17
(with existing houses) and the detention
basin lot.
At the November 25, 1997 planning meeting of the Township
Council, the Council discussed the issue of the classifications
for the area encompassing the Development Parcel and whether it
should be zoned for 22,500 or 30,000 feet. The Township Council
then concurred in a proposal to create three R-2 sub-zones all
with differing densities (R-2A = 30,000; R-2B = 22,500; R-2C =
15,000).See footnote 11 Thereafter, at the request of the developer, the
Planning Board ultimately recommended to the Township Council
that the Development Parcel be included in the R-2A zone which
had a density of 22,500 square feet.
In December 1997, the revised ordinance, renamed the Land
Use Ordinance (LUO), and generated by the statutory periodic
revision of the master plan, was introduced on first reading and
a public hearing was scheduled for adoption on second reading for
December 16, 1997. Among other issues discussed at that meeting
was the reclassification of the development parcel to an R-2A
zone.
At the December 16, 1997 hearing, plaintiffs Corinne Gallo,
Joseph Gallo and Gabrielle Perret-Johnson first challenged the
Township Council's right to adopt the LUO claiming that they had
not been personally served with notice of the proposed change in
zoning of the area adjacent to their property. It is undisputed
that defendants provided the required general public notice of
this hearing pursuant to
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-15, but did not provide
personal notice to the residents located within 200 feet of the
newly created zone.
After concluding that plaintiffs were not entitled to such
personal notice, the Township Council adopted the LUO by a vote
of three to two and also adopted two resolutions setting forth
reasons for zoning deviations from the master plan in other
unrelated districts.
Plaintiffs then filed an action in lieu of prerogative writ,
challenging the adoption of the LUO on the grounds that
defendants failed to comply with the notice requirements of
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-62.1 and -63, and that the adoption of the LUO
constituted impermissible spot zoning.See footnote 22 Following Judge
Feinberg's grant of summary judgment in favor of defendants,
plaintiffs filed this appeal.
II.
Plaintiffs first assert that the trial court erred in
holding that they were not entitled to statutory notice of the
proposed zoning change of the Development Parcel pursuant to
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-63.See footnote 33 (We focus our attention on
N.J.S.A. 4:55D
63 rather than the parallel statute,
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-62.1, which
requires similar notice when there is a proposed amendment to a
zoning ordinance resulting in a classification or boundary
change. The latter statute contains the same exemption for
changes recommended in the periodic general reexamination of the
master plan by the planning board, and there need not be a
separate analysis of plaintiffs' rights under that statute. Our
conclusions as to plaintiffs' right to notice under
N.J.S.A.
40:55D-63 apply with equal force to plaintiffs' right to notice
under
N.J.S.A. 4:55D-62.1.) Plaintiffs contend that because they
are entitled to protest a change in zoning they are entitled to
notice under
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-63.
The language of
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-63, providing for the
public's right to notice and protest, was amended in 1995 to
exempt "classification or boundary changes recommended in a
periodic general reexamination of the master plan." The statute
additionally addresses the particular requirements of the parties
entitled to protest and the requirements for overriding a
protest. The impact of a notice requirement and the filing of a
protest are significant because once a protest is lodged, the
ordinance in question must be approved by a supermajority _ that
is, by a vote of four-to-one rather than by a simple majority.
Plaintiffs claim that the trial judge's view of the statute
eviscerates their right to protest. Judge Feinberg concluded:
Despite the lack of case law, this court is
satisfied that the exclusion provision of the
statute is clearly an effort by the
Legislature to preclude notice when a
Planning Board takes any action pursuant to
its reexamination obligations. The court
finds that the Legislature recognized that
the reexamination process involved many
public meetings and hearings, and therefore,
the process awards concerned individuals
their due process rights without need for
personal notice. The reexamination process
outlined by
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-89 provides for
substantial public input, public debate and
feedback that by its very nature precludes
the need for personal notice.
No cases have interpreted or addressed the 1995 amendments to the
notice requirements of
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-63 that took effect on
September 12, 1995.
Our first inquiry must focus on the language utilized by the
Legislature in the amendments. "In the absence of any explicit
indication of special meaning, words of a statute are to be given
their ordinary and well understood meaning."
Levin v. Township of
Parsippany-Troy Hills,
82 N.J. 174, 182 (1980). Commentators
have interpreted the change to mean just what it says: "Zoning
changes, if made on the basis of a re-examination report for the
Planning Board, may be enacted without complying with the notice
requirements of P.L. 1995, c. 249." William M. Cox,
Zoning and
Land Use Administration 617-18 (1999);
see also Peter A.
Buchsbaum,
Public Notice of Zoning Amendments - Is it Working?,
NJBSA-Land Use Law Section Newsletter (March 1998). ("There is
one significant exception to the notice requirement. Where a
change in zoning classification or the boundaries of a zoning
district results from a recommendation in a periodic general
reexamination of the master plan by the planning board, no notice
need be given.").
Aside from the specific language used by the Legislature in
creating the exemption at issue, the Legislative purpose behind
the exemption contradicts plaintiffs' position. "In construing a
statute, the primary task is to 'effectuate the legislative
intent in light of the language used and the objectives sought to
be achieved.'"
In re the Adoption of N.J.A.C. 7:1I,
149 N.J. 119, 127-28 (1997) (quoting
Merin v. Maglaki,
126 N.J. 430, 435
(1992)) (internal quotations omitted). Moreover, "'the inquiry
in the ultimate analysis is to determine the true intention of
the law; and to this end, the particular words are to be made
responsive to the essential purpose of the law.'"
Jimenez v.
Baglieri,
152 N.J. 337, 351 (1998) (quoting
Wollen v. Borough of
Fort Lee,
27 N.J. 408, 418 (1958)). Ultimately, statutes are to
be read with a modicum of common sense to insure that the purpose
of the Legislature is upheld and preserved.
Friends of Dinky
Woods v. Township of West Windsor,
291 N.J. Super. 325, 333 (Law
Div. 1996). Plaintiffs' interpretation of the statute fails to
reflect the Legislature's distinction between an isolated zoning
change and a broad-based review of a municipality's entire zoning
scheme.
Amendments to
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-89 were a reaction to
Levin,
supra, 82
N.J. at 181-82, and recognized the difference between
an amendment to a zoning ordinance, as in
Levin, or an adoption
of a reexamined revised master plan resulting in enabling
ordinances to implement such revisions. The difference between
the two is best typified by the facts of this case. The former
involves compliance with statutory procedures that will generally
be time restricted and may well involve public involvement
resulting from the specific notice required by the statutes. On
the other hand, the master plan review envisioned by
N.J.S.A.
40:55D-89 involves, as is demonstrated here, extensive public
review and analysis by consultants and experts, hearings, general
public notice, and in most cases, extensive publicity and
notoriety. The statute itself provides detailed specifications
of the nature of the reexamination and the report which must
follow such reexamination.
The reexamination report shall state:
a. The major problems and objectives
relating to land development in the
municipality at the time of the
adoption of the last reexamination
report.
b. The extent to which such problems and
objectives have been reduced or have
increased subsequent to such date.
c. The extent to which there have been
significant changes in the
assumptions, policies, and
objectives forming the basis for
the master plan or development
regulations as last revised, with
particular regard to the density
and distribution of population and
land uses, housing conditions,
circulation, conservation of
natural resources, energy
conservation, collection,
disposition, and recycling of
designated recyclable materials,
and changes in State, county and
municipal policies and objectives.
d. The specific changes recommended
for the master plan or development
regulations, if any, including
underlying objectives, policies and
standards, or whether a new plan or
regulations should be prepared.
e. The recommendations of the planning
board concerning the incorporation
of redevelopment plans adopted
pursuant to the "Local
Redevelopment and Housing Law,"
P.L. 1992, c. 79 (C.40A:12A-1 et
al.) into the land use plan element
of the municipal master plan, and
recommended changes, if any, in the
local development regulations
necessary to effectuate the
redevelopment plans of the
municipality.
[
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-89.]
Here, the master plan reexamination extended in excess of two
years involving more than a score of working meetings and public
hearings. General notice was provided to the entire
municipality. There was contentious debate on the issues before
both the Planning Board and Township Committee. Ultimately, the
LUO was adopted by a split vote of the Township Committee. As
demonstrated here, the very nature of periodic review of a master
plan precluded it from remaining a secretive process and outside
of public oversight and scrutiny. Against this not atypical
factual backdrop, the Legislature was keenly aware of the
distinction between the two separate processes and did not
perceive it necessary to require that each property owner
affected by a master plan change and zoning change be notified.
There is a more practical consideration. The continuous
review process involves tinkering and adjusting the master plan
and ultimately the proposed LUO. This is a dynamic process which
may involve hundreds of changes, some major and some minor,
during the deliberative and review process. To require
individualized and personal notice to those within two hundred
feet each time such change is contemplated or proposed would be
counterproductive and would essentially stall the review process.
The Legislature recognized that where there was a generalized
revision, for which generalized public notice would be given,
there was no reason to burden a municipality, and ultimately the
taxpayers (the record suggests that the cost of such notice in
Lawrence would approach $30,000), with the additional burden of
imposing specific notice for each proposed zoning change.
Instead, personal notice is reserved for discrete and specific
zoning changes that are not part of a Board's reexamination and
modification of classifications consistent with them. See, e.g.,
Levin, supra.
We see no distinction between the rights afforded under
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-62.1 and N.J.S.A. 40:55D-63. In both instances,
the Legislature perceived the notice requirements and very nature
of a master plan reexamination to be worthy of the exemption. In
such circumstances, the extended nature of the process coupled
with the general notice provided are more than sufficient to
protect the public. We conclude that no personal notice was
required, and plaintiffs' claim in that regard must fail.
III.
Plaintiffs argue that the zoning of the developer's property
amounted to spot zoning.
"'Spot zoning' is the use of the zoning power to benefit
particular private interests rather than the collective interests
of the community."
Taxpayers Ass'n of Weymouth Township, Inc. v.
Weymouth Township,
80 N.J. 6, 18 (1976),
cert. denied,
430 U.S. 977,
97 S. Ct. 1672,
52 L. Ed.2d 373 (1977). The burden of
proving that a zoning ordinance is illegal spot zoning lies with
plaintiffs.
Id. at 19. Moreover, "[a]n ordinance enacted to
advance the general welfare by means of a comprehensive plan is
unobjectionable even if the ordinance was initially proposed by
private parties and these parties are in fact its ultimate
beneficiaries."
Id. at 18.
Although zoning ordinances enjoy a presumption of validity,
a court can invalidate an ordinance if the municipality has not
followed the procedural requirements of the statute.
Riggs v.
Township of Long Beach,
109 N.J. 601, 611 (1988). "Courts
generally will not inquire into legislative motive to impugn a
facially valid ordinance, but will consider evidence about the
legislative purpose 'when the reasonableness of the enactment is
not apparent on its face.'"
Id. at 613 (quoting
Clary v. Borough
of Eatontown,
41 N.J. Super. 47, 71 (App. Div. 1956)). Moreover,
if a particular ordinance serves two purposes _ one lawful and
one unlawful _ a court should not inquire into which purpose the
municipality intended the ordinance to serve.
Ibid. The
presence of a lawful purpose will be sufficient.
Ibid.
In granting summary judgment to defendants on the issue of
spot zoning, Judge Feinberg stated:
Plaintiffs have failed to carry their
burden of establishing that a genuine issue
of material fact exists as to their spot
zoning claim. They have simply introduced
evidence that the developer's 1997
application for subdivision of a parcel
within the R-2A District referred to the
higher density proposed by the master plan
adopted in 1995. They have blatantly failed
to provide any evidence that the Township had
some interest in awarding this developer a
benefit to the detriment of all other land
owners in and around this zone.
To the contrary, defendants have offered
a more than sufficient amount of evidence
supporting the Township's legitimate purpose
in enacting the LUO. As discussed above, the
LUO was part of defendants' six year
reexamination plan. Defendants have produced
the statements and certifications of Town
Council and Planning Board members who have
expressed that the LUO was part of a
comprehensive plan to benefit the community
by providing residents with a uniform zoning
scheme, and that the ordinance was not simply
enacted to benefit certain individuals in the
Township.
We agree with Judge Feinberg's analysis of this issue and
conclude that plaintiffs failed to establish any basis for
concluding that defendants were involved in spot zoning;
moreover, we find no merit to plaintiffs' argument that further
discovery would generate a factual issue to withstand defendants'
motion for summary judgment. The record was complete and
sufficient to allow the trial judge to adjudicate the matter.
Finally, we have carefully reviewed the record and find no
basis for plaintiffs' argument that the Township Council failed
to provide personal notice to non-party property owners who were
affected by provisions of the LUO that deviated from the master
plan.
R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
Affirmed.
Footnote: 1 1There is a discrepancy between the minutes of the Township
Council's November 25, 1997 meeting and the Land Use Ordinance as
to the proposed density of the R-2A zone. The minutes indicate
that the council agreed on a 30,000 square foot density for the
R-2A zone, while the LUO that was adopted designated a 22,500
square foot density for this zone. However, there is no question
that the developer sought the 22,500 square foot density that was
ultimately adopted for the R-2A zone in the LUO.
Footnote: 2 2 In their complaint, plaintiffs also alleged that
defendants' acts violated
42 U.S.C.A.
§1983 and constituted a
conspiracy under
42 U.S.C.A.
§1985. These counts were
apparently not pursued by plaintiffs on summary judgment, and
although Judge Feinberg did grant summary judgment on these
grounds, plaintiffs explicitly do not appeal from dismissal of
these two counts.
Footnote: 3 3N.J.S.A. 40:55D-63, titled "Notice and protest" states in
pertinent part:
Notice of the hearing on an amendment to the
zoning ordinance proposing a change to the
classification or boundaries of a zoning
district, exclusive of classification or
boundary changes recommended in a periodic
general reexamination of the master plan by
the planning board pursuant to section 76 of
P.L. 1975. c. 291 (C. 40:55D-89), shall be
given prior to adoption in accordance with
the provisions of section 2 of P.L. 1995, c.
249 (C. 40:55D-62.1).
[Emphasis added.]