SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-4771-93T2
ELEANOR MERCURIO,
TOM and DIANE ALLEN,
PAUL and CATHY NOVITCH,
and RALPH J. SALERNO,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
RICHARD DELVECCHIO, JR.,
and BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT OF
THE TOWNSHIP OF BLOOMFIELD,
Defendants-Respondents.
__________________________________________________
Argued: October 10, 1995 - Decided: November
14, 1995
Before Judges Petrella, SkillmanSee footnote 1 and
Eichen.
On appeal from Superior Court, Law Division,
Essex County.
Robert Ricci, Jr. argued the cause for
appellants (Salerno, Cozzarelli, Mautone,
DeSalvo & Nussbaum, attorneys; Ralph J.
Salerno of counsel; Mr. Ricci, on the brief).
Angelo Cifelli, Jr. argued the cause for
respondent Richard DelVecchio, Jr. (Piro,
Zinna, Cifelli & Paris, attorneys; Mr.
Cifelli, on the brief).
Vincent A. Pirone, attorney for respondent Bloomfield Township Board of Adjustment,
relies on the brief submitted by co-respondent DelVecchio.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
PETRELLA, P.J.A.D.
Plaintiffs Eleanor Mercurio, Tom and Diane Allen, Paul and
Cathy Novitch, and Ralph J. Salerno, appeal from a judgment
entered by the Law Division, upholding the grant of a variance to
defendant Richard DelVecchio, Jr. by the Board of Adjustment of
the Township of Bloomfield (Board) and dismissing their complaint
in lieu of prerogative writ.
DelVecchio applied on November 20, 1992 for the expansion of
his nursing home pursuant to N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70(d)(2).
Plaintiffs were objectors to DelVecchio's application for a
variance to expand a nonconforming use in a residential zone.
Originally, DelVecchio wanted to add a second-story addition to
the rear of the building that had been converted to a nursing
home in 1949 and a twelve-foot by twenty-four-foot addition to
the garage. He also sought site plan approval. Public hearings
were held on December 10, 1992, and February 11, March 11, and
April 8, 1993. On April 8, the Board, by a vote of 6-1, adopted
a resolution granting the variance to permit only the addition of
rooms for two patients, subject to certain restrictions, but
denied the application for an addition to the garage.
On appeal, plaintiffs argue that the Board improperly
allowed a newly appointed member, who had not participated in the
first of three Board meetings, to participate and vote in the
Board's action in granting the variance. They assert that such
improper participation tainted the decision. They also argue
that the Board's refusal to adjourn the third of four hearings
because one of the objectors was ill was reversible error.
Finally, they maintain that the granting of the variance was
arbitrary, capricious, and unreasonable.
We address initially the issues involving participation by
the newly appointed member and the refusal to adjourn the third
hearing date due to the illness of an objector.
A member of a municipal agency[See footnote 3] who was
absent for one or more of the meetings at
which a hearing was held shall be eligible to
vote on the matter upon which the hearing was
conducted, notwithstanding his absence from
one or more of the meetings; provided,
however, that such board member has available
to him the transcript or recording of all of
the hearing from which he was absent, and
certifies in writing to the board that he has
read such transcript or listened to such
recording.
Although the statute does not address any distinction
between current members and newly-appointed members, two Law
Division decisions have considered the matter and arrived at
contrary conclusions. Compare Patel v. Planning Bd.,
258 N.J.
Super. 437 (Law Div. 1992) (new member is not considered a
"member" under section 10.2 and, therefore, is not allowed to
participate) with Lawrence M. Kairn Assocs. v. Maple Shade Tp.,
185 N.J. Super. 336 (Law Div. 1982) (newly appointed member is
allowed to participate under section 10.2).
We do not agree with the reasoning of Patel that section
10.2 of the statute only contemplates or applies to an individual
who was a member of the board when a hearing occurred and, hence,
solely to an existing member who merely was "absent" from a
particular hearing. To the extent that Patel is inconsistent
with our determination we overrule it.
New members (or even re-appointed members) may well be named
to a board of adjustment at the beginning of any year or to fill
a vacancy under the staggered scheme of appointing members
contemplated by the statute. See N.J.S.A. 40:55D-69. Therefore,
following Patel could well hamper the processing of applications,
particularly where the application proceedings carry over from
one year to the next.See footnote 4
Moreover, in our view, the more recent Supreme Court
decision in Pizzo Mantin Group v. Township of Randolph,
137 N.J. 216, 233-234 (1994), lends some support to the conclusion that a
"new member" should be entitled to participate in hearings and
vote on an application, provided the new member complies with the
statute. In Pizzo Mantin, there was a remand for reconsideration
after the Court reversed the board. The Court noted that the
board already had reached a final decision when the new member
joined the board. The Pizzo Mantin Court found Patel "not
entirely applicable" in part because on remand "the board must
make new findings of fact and reach additional and different
conclusions of law in applying the provisions of the subdivision
and zoning ordinance." Id. at 234. Hence, the Court explained,
the review and reassessment that was necessary entailed "a fresh
determination that can be undertaken by all the members of the
board, both those who participated in the earlier hearings as
well as those who have since joined the board." Ibid.
In the instant case, the new member joined the Board before
the proceedings were concluded and was able to review the tape of
the first hearing and participate fully in the three subsequent
hearings. The new member also took part in the deliberations,
the adoption of findings, and the decision. An existing member
who missed the first or second meeting, as the chairman did here,
would have no more a "feel" for the application than the new
member who missed only the first meeting. Accordingly, we affirm
the Law Division judge's action allowing Sefcik's participation.
In light of our determination that Sefcik properly
participated in the vote, we need not consider plaintiff's
further contention that his participation tainted the
proceedings.
letter delivered to the Board asking to have the hearing
scheduled for that evening adjourned because he was ill.
The record does not reflect the nature or extent of
Salerno's illness; however, Salerno had a previous opportunity to
participate as an objector. As an attorney, he knew or should
have known that he also could have communicated his objections to
the Board in his letter indicating that he was unable to attend.
Furthermore, Salerno had the option to have another attorney,
perhaps from his own office, appear on his behalf when he found
himself unable to attend the third hearing. Just because a
person is an objector does not confer an absolute right to have
an applicant's matter adjourned due to claimed inability to
attend one of several scheduled hearings. Generally, it is the
applicant and the Board that control the scheduling of the
application. However, we do not approve the Board Chairman's
statement that adjournments, as a matter of policy, are never
given to objectors. See Woodland Civic Ass'n v. Brick Homes,
Inc.,
144 N.J. Super. 78 (Law Div. 1976)(Board was "arbitrary in
not responding" to objector's continuance request made three days
before first scheduled hearing because statutory ten-day notice
was insufficient to marshall opposition to variance under
specific and complicated circumstances of that case). The facts
in the case before us are far different from those in Woodland.
The objectors here not only had sufficient time to prepare
opposition, but they were heard and their arguments were
considered. Mercurio's attorneySee footnote 5 presented opposition to the
variance application, and that opposition presumably was similar
in many respects to that of Salerno.See footnote 6 Even if the Board's
failure to adjourn here was erroneous, and we do not so hold, in
light of the fair and thorough hearing conducted, this would not
provide a basis for over-turning the variance granted.
We note parenthetically that a 120-day time limitation
begins to run on the filing of a completed application. See
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-76(c). The effect of the Board's failure to act
within that time period, absent the consent to an extension by
the applicants, could result in the application automatically
being approved. In the case before this court, DelVecchio's
application was filed on November 20, 1992, and by the date of
the March 11, 1995 request for an adjournment, the 120-day period
had almost run. Thus, without first obtaining the applicant's
consent, the Board might have had difficulty meeting the 120-day
statutory requirement had it entertained Salerno's request to
adjourn. No request for the applicant's consent appears in the
record. However, we do not view this denial of an adjournment or
continuance here for one objector to have been arbitrary,
particularly where there were other objectors.
The record does not indicate that the applicant had been
responsible for taking up considerable time so as to prevent
objectors from being heard. Moreover, as discussed hereinafter,
the variance application was meritorious and the record does not
provide a basis to conclude that denial of the late request by an
objector for an adjournment prejudiced that objector.
We reject Salerno's claim that the Board erred in refusing
to adjourn the hearing because of his inability to participate
one evening. Furthermore, no proffer appears in the record of
this appeal of any facts that, if presented to the Board or the
Law Division, would have changed the result.
Footnote: 1Judge Skillman did not take part in oral argument. However, the parties consented to his participation in this decision. Footnote: 2Parenthetically, we note that the chairman missed the second hearing, but he also indicated on the record and certified that he had listened to the tape of that meeting. Footnote: 3"Municipal agency," as used in this statute, refers to the "planning board or board of adjustment, or a governing body of a municipality when acting pursuant to this act...." N.J.S.A. 40:55D-5. Footnote: 4We need not address a similar issue which might arise months after a board's decision where there is a court challenge to a decision that eventually results in an order of remand to the board for new or additional findings and conclusions. Footnote: 5Mercurio's brother is an attorney and represented his sister throughout the hearings. Footnote: 6Salerno had proper notice of the application and the hearings and had an opportunity to cross-examine some of the applicant's witnesses. He asserts, however, that he was denied an opportunity to present an affirmative case. Salerno obviously had a right to object to the variance. However, the record does not indicate any witnesses or information that Salerno wanted to present.