SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-1925-95T1
IN RE: PETITION FOR AUTHORIZATION
TO CONDUCT A REFERENDUM ON THE
DISSOLUTION OF UNION COUNTY
REGIONAL HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT
NO. 1
_________________________________________________________________
Argued December 2, 1996 - Decided February 20, 1997
Before Judges Brochin, Kestin and Eichen
On appeal from the New Jersey Department
of Education, Board of Review
Agnes I. Rymer argued the cause for
appellants Board of Education of the
Borough of Garwood and Borough of Garwood
(DeCotiis, Fitzpatrick & Gluck, attorneys;
Ms. Rymer and J.S. Lee Cohen, on the brief).
Robert A. Goodsell argued the cause for
respondent Borough of Mountainside (Post,
Polak, Goodsell & Macneill, attorneys;
John N. Post and Mr. Goodsell, on the brief).
Nancy Kaplan, Deputy Attorney General, argued
the cause for respondent N.J. Department of
Education, Board of Review (Peter Verniero,
Attorney General of New Jersey, attorney;
Mary C. Jacobson, Assistant Attorney General,
of counsel; Michelle Lyn Miller, Deputy Attorney
General, on the brief).
Vito A. Gagliardi, Jr. argued the cause for
respondents Boards of Education of Berkeley
Heights, Kenilworth, Mountainside and
Springfield (Ravin, Sarasohn, Cook, Baumgarten,
Fisch & Rosen, attorneys; Mr. Gagliardi,
of counsel and on the brief; Michael R. Cole
of Riker, Danzig, Scherer, Hyland & Perretti,
of counsel).
Douglas J. Kovats argued the cause for
respondent Board of Education of Clark
(Kenney & Gross, attorneys; Mr. Kovats, on
the brief).
No other parties participated in this appeal.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
BROCHIN, J.A.D.
Since 1935, the Union County Regional High School District
No. 1 has been responsible for providing a high school education
for students residing in the six municipalities of Berkeley
Heights, Clark, Garwood, Kenilworth, Mountainside and
Springfield. Pursuant to N.J.S.A. 18A:13-51, the boards of
education and governing bodies of five of these municipalities,
Berkeley Heights, Clark, Kenilworth, Mountainside, and
Springfield, applied to the Union County Superintendent of
Schools "to make an investigation as to the advisability of the
dissolution of the regional district." Ibid. In accordance with
N.J.S.A. 18A:13-52, the County Superintendent filed a report
which concluded that dissolution was inadvisable. Apparently
unpersuaded, the boards of education of Berkeley Heights,
Kenilworth, Mountainside, and Springfield, and the governing
bodies of Berkeley Heights, Kenilworth and Mountainside
petitioned the State Commissioner of Education pursuant to
N.J.S.A. 18A:13-54, "for permission to submit to the legal voters
of . . . each constituent district whether the regional district
shall dissolve."
The petition for permission to conduct a dissolution
election was submitted to a Board of Review chaired by the
Commissioner. See N.J.S.A. 18A:13-56. In a brief letter opinion
issued November 8, 1995, the board granted the petition and
elaborated on the basis of its decision in an "amplification"
issued December 13, 1995. The election was held and a majority
of voters in the entire regional district and in four out of the
six constituent local school districts voted in favor of
dissolution.
The Borough of Garwood and the Garwood local board of
education have appealed to this court from the decision of the
Board of Review which refused to block the election. For the
following reasons, we affirm the decision of the Board of Review.
To initiate the process of dissolving a special purpose
regional school district, a majority of the constituent local
boards of education and a majority of the governing bodies of the
municipalities that compose the regional district must first
apply to the County Superintendent of Schools. N.J.S.A. 18A:13-51. It is important to note, however, that they do not apply to
the Superintendent for permission to dissolve the district.
Their application must request the Superintendent "to make an
investigation as to the advisability of the dissolution of the
regional district." Ibid. (emphasis added). The product of the
Superintendent's investigation is a report to be filed with the
regional board of education, each of the constituent local boards
of education, and the municipal governing bodies. N.J.S.A.
18A:13-52.
No statute or regulation requires the report
to be
filed with the Commissioner of Education or with any other
administrative body. The report is not a preliminary decision
like that of an administrative law judge under the Administrative
Procedure Act. Cf. N.J.S.A. 52:14B-10 (requiring administrative
law judge to file a "recommended report and decision" with
findings of fact and conclusions of law, which may be adopted as
the final decision in a case). The County Superintendent's
report is solely his recommendation to the regional and local
boards of education and the municipal governing bodies of the
district
containing
such financial, educational and other
information as he may deem necessary to
enable said governing bodies and local boards
of education and regional board of education
to form an intelligent judgment as to the
advisability of the proposed . . .
dissolution and the effect thereof upon the
educational and financial condition of . . .
each of the constituent districts in the
event of a dissolution . . . .
[N.J.S.A. 18A:13-52]
O nce a majority of the local boards of education and a majority of the municipal governing bodies have requested the County Superintendent to "make an investigation as to the advisability of the dissolution of the regional district," any board or governing body can "petition the commissioner for permission . . . to submit to the legal voters of each constituent district whether the regional district shall dissolve." N.J.S.A. 18A:13-54. Whether the County Superintendent has recommended for or against dissolution makes no legal difference. In either event, the Commissioner must submit the petition to the Board of Review, an ad hoc committee
whose members are the Commissioner of Education as chairman, a
member of the State Board of Education, the State Treasurer or
his designee, and the Director of the Division of Local
Government Services. N.J.S.A. 18A:13-56. The Board of Review
then either grants or refuses the petition for an election at
which the voters of the regional district will decide on whether
or not it will be dissolved. Ibid.
The basis for the decision of the Board of Review is closely
circumscribed. The statute directs that the Board of Review
"shall . . . Consent to the granting of the application" or
"shall . . . Oppose the same because if the same be granted" and
the district is dissolved,
1. An excessive debt burden will be imposed
. . . upon any of the constituent districts
. . . ;
2. An efficient school system cannot be
maintained . . . in any of the constituent
districts . . . without excessive costs;
3. Insufficient pupils will be left . . . in
any of the constituent districts . . . to
maintain a properly graded school system; or
4. [Because of] Any other reason which it
may deem to be sufficient; . . . .
[Ibid.]
Significantly, any of the first three circumstances
specified by the statute as a justifiable reason to refuse
permission for an election would result in a condition
inconsistent with the "thorough and efficient system of free
public schools . . . " which the State is obligated to maintain
and support. N.J. Const. art. VIII, § 4, ¶ 1; cf. N.J.A.C. 6:3-7.4 ("The board of review . . . shall include in its final
determinations required by N.J.S.A. 18A:13-56 [for withdrawal
from a regional district] . . . any specific conditions under
which its consent is granted in order to insure that a thorough
and efficient system of public schools will be maintained in the
withdrawing district(s) or municipality(ies) and the remaining
regional district."); In re Upper Freehold Reg'l School Dist.,
86 N.J. 265 (1981)(to implement the constitutional mandate, the
Commissioner has the power to order the issuance of school bonds
despite the voters' defeat of their issuance in a school bond
election). Of course, "a thorough and efficient system of free
public schools" also implies a system that complies with other
constitutional imperatives. Cf. N.J. Const. art. I, ¶ 5; Board
of Educ. of Englewood Cliffs v. Board of Educ. of Englewood,
257 N.J. Super. 413 (App. Div. 1992), aff'd,
132 N.J. 327, cert.
denied,
510 U.S. 991,
114 S. Ct. 547,
126 L. Ed.2d 449 (1993)
(importance of racial balance may preclude severance of sending-receiving relationship and could possibly require
regionalization).
We conclude that the fourth ground upon which N.J.S.A.
18A:13-56 authorizes the Board of Review to prevent submitting
the issue of dissolution of a regional district to the voters -
"Any other reason which it may deem to be sufficient" -- requires
a reason of the same character as the first three specified
reasons. Denbo v. Township of Moorestown,
23 N.J. 476, 481-82
(1957) (general words following specific words are understood to
be limited to things of same class or same general character);
Hovbilt, Inc. v. Township of Howell,
263 N.J. Super. 567, 571-72
(App. Div. 1993), aff'd,
138 N.J. 598 (1994) (ejusdem generis
rule of statutory construction limits meaning of general
statutory words to include only objects similar to those
enumerated by preceding specific words). In other words, a
"sufficient" reason is one that implicates the State's
constitutional obligation for the maintenance of a "thorough and
efficient system of free public schools." Any less weighty
reason would be an inadequate ground for compelling constituent
local school districts and municipalities to preserve a regional
school district against the will of a majority of the voters in a
majority of its local districts.
The arguments which the Garwood appellants have urged in
support of their appeal from the decision of the Board of Review
must be evaluated in this statutory context. They contend that
the decision should be reversed because it is "wrong,
inequitable, arbitrary and capricious." They also contend that
the Board's denial of their request for an evidentiary hearing
violates their right to due process of law; that the procedures
employed by the Board are contrary to controlling statutes; that
its decision lacks adequate findings of fact; and that the Board
erred in "summarily dismissing" its cross-petition. For the
following reasons, we disagree and therefore affirm.
Appellants' first argument has essentially two components.
The first is that the Board's decision is "wrong, inequitable,
arbitrary and capricious," because dissolution of the regional
district will reduce the quality and increase the cost of the
high school education provided to students who live in the
constituent municipalities. The second is that dissolution will
deprive them of their "equity" in the assets of the regional
district. We reject these contentions for several reasons.
First of all, to the extent that appellants' assertions reflect
merely their disagreement with the Board of Review on matters of
educational and financial policy, we are obligated to defer to
the judgments of the administrators whom the Legislature has
authorized to make the judgments. Board of Educ. v. Kraft,
139 N.J. 597, 603-04 (1995); Dennery v. Board of Educ.,
131 N.J. 626,
643 (1993) (courts will generally defer to regulatory and
administrative judgments of those in field of public education).
Secondly, even if appellants' forebodings about the consequences
of dissolution are realized, they do not satisfy any of the three
specific reasons enumerated in N.J.S.A. 18A:13-56 as grounds for
foreclosing an election on the issue of dissolution and they do
not satisfy the fourth statutory criterion because they do not
foreshadow conditions inconsistent with the State's obligation to
assure the maintenance of "a thorough and efficient system of
free public schools" in all of the local school districts which
now compose the regional district. Furthermore, appellants'
argument about their loss of equity is premised on a claim to an
ownership interest in assets of the regional district; that claim
is without legal basis.
We also disagree with appellants' argument that their rights
to due process of law were violated when their request for an
evidentiary hearing was rejected. They assert:
An evidentiary hearing is required here
because there are disputed adjudicatory
facts; i.e., facts about the Regional
District and about the six constituents,
their schools and their educational needs;
facts about the financial and educational
impacts of dissolution; and facts regarding
the basis for Garwood taxpayers' support for
the Regional District over the years. The
disputed facts include, for example: the cost
of running four high schools after
dissolution; the motivation of the
petitioning districts (i.e., is unlawful
socio-economic discrimination among them?);
and the degree of diminution in quality that
will result from narrowed programs in four
small high schools.
However, the flaw in appellants' argument is that they have not shown that there are any genuine disputes material to the issue which the Board of Review was required to decide. They have shown that the cost to Garwood residents of providing a high school education is likely to rise following dissolution because the cost per pupil for the entire regional district has been approximately $16,000 a year and the tax levy per high school student enrolled from each community has ranged from a high of $20,578 for Mountainside to a low of $8,669 for Garwood. But whether or not a policy argument could be made for requiring school districts with a larger tax base per pupil to subsidize school districts with a smaller tax base per pupil, that policy is not reflected in the statutes providing the procedures and conditions for dissolution of regional school districts.
Appellants have not shown that there is a genuine dispute about
whether dissolution would result in any of the three conditions
which N.J.S.A. 18A:13-56 specifically enumerates as grounds for
denying permission for a dissolution election or in any other
condition inconsistent with the maintenance of a "thorough and
efficient" school system in each of the constituent districts of
the former regional district. Under these circumstances, the
public hearing which was conducted was all of the "process" that
was "due."
Appellants allege that various procedural defects marred the
functioning of the Board of Review and require invalidating its
decision permitting the regional district to conduct a
dissolution election. The first of these defects is the alleged
failure of the Commissioner of Education to function as a member
and chairman of the Board of Review as required by statute. The
appellants infer his failure to act because he was absent from
the public hearing conducted by the Board of Review, an assistant
commissioner attended in his place, and the Commissioner's notice
fixing the date of the dissolution election and the County
Superintendent's memorandum scheduling the election both list the
assistant commissioner as a member of the Board of Review.
In our view, the facts to which appellants point do not
support their contention that the Commissioner did not function
as chairman and a member of the Board of Review. First of all,
the statute provides that the Board is to "make its findings and
determination, by the recorded vote of at least three of the four
members of the board . . . ," N.J.S.A. 18A:13-56, implying that, in accordance with the usual rule, three of the four members of the Board constitute a quorum. Matawan Regional Teachers Ass'n v. Matawan-Aberdeen Regional School Dist. Bd. of Educ., 223 N.J. Super. 504, 507 (App. Div. 1988) ("[a]t common law, a majority of a public body constitutes a quorum"). Consequently, the Commissioner's absence from the public hearing was of no legal significance. All of the statements presented at the public hearing were submitted in writing and were available to the Commissioner. See Arlington Assocs. v. Township Council of Parsippany-Troy Hills Township, 118 N.J. Super. 418 (App. Div. 1972) (finding that member of board need not be present at meeting to vote on matter presented as long as testimony transcribed and other evidence available for review). Apparently the assistant commissioner assisted the Commissioner in performing his duties on the Board of Review and was available to communicate to the Commissioner information submitted to the Board. That would be neither unusual nor improper. Cf. In re Kallen, 92 N.J. 14, 22-23 (1983) (noting that role of administrative law judge in administrative hearing is to conduct hearings, make factual findings, and recommend decisions to agency heads); see also In re Shelton College, 109 N.J. Super. 488 (App. Div. 1970) (upholding decision of Board of Higher Education to permit absent Board members to vote on issue as long as all evidence considered). The presumption of regularity to which the Commissioner and the Board are entitled supports the
conclusion that the Commissioner considered all of the evidence
material to the Board's decision. Dennery, supra, 131 N.J. at
643; Township of Bernards v. State Dept. of Community Affairs,
233 N.J. Super. 1, 27 (App. Div.), certif. denied,
118 N.J. 194
(1989). The Board of Review's November 8, 1995 initial decision,
its December 13, 1995 amplification of its decision, and a
subsequent decision denying appellants' motion for a stay pending
appeal are all signed by the Commissioner. The listing of the
assistant commissioner as a member of the Board of Review on the
distribution lists of two documents is insufficient to establish
any material irregularity in the functioning of the Board.
Appellants' remaining allegations of procedural defects all
allege, in effect, that the Board of Review failed to comply with
the Open Public Meetings Act, N.J.S.A. 10:4-6 et seq. The
pertinent section of the Act reads as follows:
Any action taken by a public body at a
meeting which does not conform with the
provisions of this act shall be voidable in a
proceeding in lieu of prerogative writ in the
Superior Court, which proceeding may be
brought by any person within 45 days after
the action sought to be voided has been made
public; provided, however, that a public body
may take corrective or remedial action by
acting de novo at a public meeting held in
conformity with this act and other applicable
law regarding any action which may otherwise
be voidable pursuant to this section . . . .
[N.J.S.A. 10:4-15a.]
In the present case, the action which appellants seek to void was taken no later than November 8, 1995, when the Board of Review issued its initial decision. Appellants did not challenge the
Board's action on the basis of its alleged nonconformity with the
requirements of the Open Public Meetings Act until they filed
their brief with this court on June 7, 1996. The delay is of
particular significance in this case because the date of the
dissolution election was announced March 8, 1996, and the
election took place on May 14, 1996. If appellants had acted
promptly to challenge the Board's action for nonconformity with
the Open Public Meetings Act, there would have been no question
of invalidating the election and conducting a new one; the Board
would have had the opportunity to correct or remedy any defects
well in advance of the election. Under these circumstances,
appellants are not entitled to relief on the basis of the alleged
violations of the Act. See Jersey City v. State Dept. of
Environmental Protection,
227 N.J. Super. 5, 22 (App. Div.),
certif. denied,
111 N.J. 640 (1988); Township Committee v.
Edgewater Park Housing Authority,
187 N.J. Super. 588, 603 (Law
Div. 1982).
Appellants' remaining allegations are that the decision of
the Board of Review lacked adequate findings of fact and
conclusions of law, that it "wrongly brushed aside" the County
Superintendent's report, and that the Board of Review summarily
dismissed their cross-petition. These allegations are without
merit. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E). We have explained the limited basis
upon which the Board of Review may prevent a dissolution
election; these arguments of appellants assume that the Board of
Review has a broader discretion than the statute has accorded it.
Appellants' cross-petition did not warrant any more detailed
answer than was given to it by the Board.
The decision appealed from is therefore affirmed.