SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-6407-99T5
IN RE TAX CREDIT APPLICATION
OF PENNROSE PROPERTIES, INC.
______________________________________________________
Submitted October 23, 2001 - Decided January 15, 2002
Before Judges Wefing, Lesemann and Parrillo.
On appeal from New Jersey Housing and Mortgage
Finance Agency, BUR-L-01529-98 and BUR-L-631-99.
Hill Wallack, attorneys for appellant Eastampton
Center, L.L.C. (Thomas F. Carroll, III, on the
brief).
Wolf, Block, Schorr and Solis-Cohen, attorneys
for respondent Pennrose Properties, Inc.
(Gregory A. Lomax, of counsel and on the brief).
John J. Farmer, Jr., Attorney General, attorney
for respondent New Jersey Housing and Mortgage
Finance Agency filed a statement in lieu of
brief (Michael J. Spina, Deputy Attorney General,
on the statement).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
LESEMANN, J.A.D.
Eastampton Center, L.L.C. (ECLLC), a developer in the Township
of Eastampton ("Eastampton" or "the Township"), appeals from a
decision of the New Jersey Housing and Mortgage Finance Agency
(HMFA) which awarded Pennrose Properties, Inc. (Pennrose), another
developer in Eastampton, over $1,000,000 in low income housing tax
credits to facilitate construction of a 100 unit rental townhouse
complex for low income families. Construction of the project by
Pennrose would satisfy Eastampton's Mount LaurelSee footnote 11 obligation
respecting construction of affordable housing.
ECLLC is, in a sense, a competitor of Pennrose. It is
pursuing its own development within Eastampton, a 577 unit
"inclusionary development" which involves some low income housing
that would also satisfy the Township's Mount Laurel obligation.
ECLLC does not claim that it should have received the tax credits
awarded to Pennrose. Indeed, ECLLC did not apply for those tax
credits, but rather maintains that it is, in essence, simply
protecting the public interest by protesting a decision which it
claims violates the HMFA's own regulations.See footnote 22 Those regulations
prohibit a developer's receiving a tax credit benefit if it has
also received a "density bonus subsidy." ECLLC maintains that
Pennrose did receive such a density bonus subsidy and is thus
ineligible for the second subsidy benefit _ tax credits. Pennrose
maintains that it received no such density bonus subsidy and also
argues that ECLLC has no standing to maintain this appeal. While
we find that the standing issue is certainly debatable, we prefer,
given the public interest in a matter such as this, to resolve the
issue on its substantive merits. On that basis, we are satisfied
that ECLLC has not met the heavy burden placed on one seeking to
overturn the decision of an administrative agency such as HMFA and,
accordingly, we affirm.
Although the detailed interplay of the land use transactions,
conveyances, court determinations and Mount Laurel requirements in
this case are complex, the significant facts of the matter,
stripped to their essentials, are relatively uncomplicated. In
1985, Toll Brothers, Inc., which owned a 310 acre tract of land in
Eastampton, was engaged in Mount Laurel litigation with the
Township. That litigation was resolved by a consent order entered
on June 18, 1985, which granted Toll Brothers the right to
construct 900 housing units on those 310 acres, with 180 of the
units to be "affordable housing," designed to meet the Township's
Mount Laurel obligation.
In 1986, Toll Brothers conveyed its 310 acres to an entity
known as Land Bank Associates (Land Bank). At the same time, Land
Bank acquired two contiguous lots known as Lots 2 and 4 in Block
300 on the Township's tax map. Those two lots comprised
approximately seventy acres and had not been included in the
original 310 acres owned by Toll Brothers at the time of the 1985
judgment, nor had they been covered by or mentioned in that
judgment.
In May 1988, pursuant to an application by Land Bank, the Law
Division judge who was supervising the Eastampton Mount Laurel
litigation, entered a new consent order which added the seventy
acres represented by Lots 2 and 4 in Block 300, to the 310 acres
covered by the 1985 order. That order also reduced the Township's
Mount Laurel "fair share obligation," reduced the aforesaid 900
units of proposed construction to 350 units, and extended the
period of protection and repose to which the Township was entitled
under the 1985 settlement of the Mount Laurel litigation.See footnote 33
In 1994, Land Bank filed a bankruptcy petition and on January
13, 1998, its property was acquired, through the United States
Bankruptcy Court, by Rancocas Investments, L.L.C. (Rancocas). On
January 27, 1999, Eastampton, Rancocas and Pennrose entered into a
Developer's Agreement respecting the property originally owned by
Toll Brothers (310 acres) plus the additional seventy acres (Lots
2 and 4 in Block 300) which Land Bank acquired elsewhere at the
time it bought from Toll Brothers.See footnote 44 The Agreement provided that
the overall tract owned by Rancocas would be re-subdivided to carve
off a 25.85 acre portion, consisting of parts of Lots 2 and 12,
upon which Pennrose would construct 100 units of affordable
housing. The parties acknowledged that Pennrose intended to apply
for low income housing tax credits to facilitate that construction.
The Agreement specifically noted that "Block 300, Lot 2 was not
previously a part of the affordable housing zoning relief entered
by the Court as part of the Toll litigation" (the 1985 consent
order) [and], "As such, the parties acknowledge that Block 300, Lot
2 was not provided with a 'bonus density' as a result of Toll's
builder's remedy suit and is entitled to receive 9% tax credits
from HMFA." To accomplish the foregoing, the Agreement provided
that Rancocas would convey the 25.85 acre parcel to the Township
and the Township would then reconvey the parcel to Pennrose.See footnote 55
The Developer's Agreement also provided that Pennrose would
not construct any housing units on the remainder of its property _
constituting approximately 342 acres _ although it could use that
remaining property for "non-residential, wetlands mitigation,
conservation, recreational, or other uses" set out on a list of
permitted uses, most of which involved some form of commercial
enterprise.See footnote 66
The low income housing tax credit (the tax credit) is a
federal program which provides a credit against federal income
taxes. It is available to owners of rental properties who agree to
lease the property to low income tenants. Although it is a federal
program, it is administered by the states, with each state being
provided a defined annual dollar amount of tax credits which it may
allocate for housing projects within its borders. In New Jersey,
pursuant to N.J.A.C. 5:80-33.1, the HMFA is the agency which
administers the program.
As noted, the amount of tax credit which a state has available
is limited. The program is popular and desirable for developers of
low income housing and there is competition for the limited number
of awards available. For the year 1999, the HMFA was able to grant
only approximately one out of every four applications received.
For the year 2000, New Jersey was allocated $10,143,763 in tax
credits. The HMFA received 29 applications requesting total
credits of $15,536,137, and was able to grant fifteen of the
twenty-nine requests. The agency described the year 2000 as "sort
of a low" year, but said it anticipated that 2001 would be more
competitive, and that in 2001, it would probably be able to grant
only one out of every four or five applications received.
Presumably, at least in part because of the limited resources
available, regulations adopted by the HMFA provide that tax credits
are not available to a developer who has already received another
form of incentive for subsidized housing _ a density bonus subsidy.
N.J.A.C. 5:80-33.2 defines density bonus subsidy as "an economic
benefit for low and moderate-income housing resulting from a zoning
change that increases permitted density." And N.J.A.C. 5:80-
33.13(a) embodies the prohibition against double subsidies, reading
as follows:
If a municipality has created a density
bonus subsidy to assist the low or moderate
income units in a project, the project may not
compete for tax credits (ceiling tax credits).
This subsection shall not be evaded by failing
to apply all or any portion of the subsidy to
the low or moderate-income units, by diverting
all or any portion of the subsidy to other
uses or by using any other device by which all
or any portion of the subsidy is not used to
benefit low or moderate-income housing.
In 1999, Pennrose applied for tax credits respecting the
proposed construction of 100 units of low income housing on its
twenty-five acre tract. It was deemed eligible for such tax
credits, but in the category in which it competed,See footnote 77 it tied for the
highest ranking but then lost when a "tie breaker" formula favored
another applicant. In 2000, it reapplied, and this time it was
successful. ECLLC contests that grant of tax credits, asserting
that Pennrose had already received a density bonus, and thus it was
ineligible for tax credits. As noted above, we pass the question
of ECLLC's standing to even raise the issue, and on its substantive
merits, we reject the attack.
First, we note the familiar principles governing an attack on
a decision made by an administrative agency. There is a strong
presumption that an agency decision is valid. One challenging that
decision has a heavy burden of proving the contrary and
demonstrating that the decision was arbitrary, unreasonable or
capricious. See, In the Matter of the Reorganization of the Med.
Inter-Insurance Exchange of New Jersey,
328 N.J. Super. 344, 354
(App. Div.), certif. denied,
165 N.J. 530 (2000), hereinafter
"MIIX"; Department of Ins. v. Universal Brokerage Corp.,
303 N.J.
Super. 405, 409-10 (App. Div. 1997). In reviewing such an action,
this court has a limited role. Matter of Musick,
143 N.J. 206, 216
(1996); George Harms Const. Co. v. Turnpike Authority,
137 N.J. 8,
27 (1994); Gloucester Cty. Welfare Bd. v. New Jersey Civil Serv.
Comm'n,
93 N.J. 384, 390 (1983); Department of Ins. v. Universal
Brokerage Corp., supra, 303 N.J. Super. at 409. Where the record
discloses a reasonable basis for the findings and conclusions of
the agency, a reviewing court will normally uphold the agency's
action. Boyle v. Riti,
175 N.J. Super. 158, 166 (App. Div. 1980).
It is also clear that in reviewing such a determination, the court
must give "due regard . . . to the agency's expertise where such
expertise is a pertinent factor." In re Certificate of Need
Granted to the Harborage,
300 N.J. Super. 363, 378 (App. Div. 1997)
(quoting Mayflower Sec. Co. v. Bureau of Securities,
64 N.J. 85,
92-93 (1973). See also MIIX, supra, 328 N.J. Super. at 354.
ECLLC's attack includes a charge that the HMFA did not have
before it an adequate record to justify a conclusion that Pennrose
was eligible for tax credits and that it had not already received
a density bonus subsidy. Although ECLLC casts that argument in
terms of an issue of fact, in reality there is no factual dispute.
The facts are clear. Pennrose maintains that those facts
demonstrate that it has not received a density bonus subsidy.
ECLLC maintains that the facts add up to a contrary conclusion.
The agency agreed with Pennrose, and not only do we find that
determination well founded and reasonable, but we find it far more
compelling than ECLLC's contrary submission.
Pennrose's presentation rests essentially on the undisputed
fact that its program will entail construction of 100 housing units
on a total of 380 acres of land. Far from representing a "density
bonus," Pennrose points out that the actual density is far below
that normally permitted by the zoning ordinance. In fact, the
average density (the total acreage divided by the number of housing
units) indicates a density of one unit for each 3.8 acres.
Pennrose maintains that analysis is accurate, appropriate, and
realistic, because, although all 100 of its units will be
constructed on one twenty-five acre parcel, there will be no
housing construction on any part of the remainder of the tract.
That limitation is expressed clearly, and without equivocation, in
the Developer's Agreement and is undisputed. In addition, Pennrose
notes that Lot 2 in Block 300, which forms part of the twenty-five
acre tract on which the 100 units will be constructed, was not
owned by Toll Brothers or Land Bank at the time of the earlier
Mount Laurel litigation and the 1985 judgment described above.
In support of its tax credit application, Pennrose submitted
to the HMFA two letters from the Special Master appointed by the
Superior Court judge supervising the Eastampton Mount Laurel
litigation, setting out the Master's conclusion that Pennrose had
not previously received a density bonus and thus was eligible for
tax credit financing. In his first letter, dated March 15, 1999,
the Special Master (John J. Lynch) traced the history which is
sketched above, pointed out that if Pennrose is able to develop its
100 units of low income housing with tax credits on its 25.85 acre
site, "it will forego any further residential development on the
site, which even under the reduced yield of the 1988 ruling by
Judge Gibson would have permitted a total of about 366 units. The
overall site yield is even lower when compared with the original
Toll Brothers builder's remedy of 900 units on a somewhat smaller
overall tract (297 acres)." Mr. Lynch then concluded as follows:
As you will no doubt become aware, the
density of the tax credit site itself is about
four units per acre, and on the face of it one
might conclude that a density bonus is
involved because of the underlying gross
density of one unit per acre reflected in the
1988 ruling of the Court. I do not view this
as a density bonus because it is my
understanding that the Township is looking at
the total residential yield for the entirety
of the holdings of the current owner, Rancocas
Investments, which took title to all of the
approximately 366 acres in January 1998. It
is my understanding that no additional
residential development will take place on the
balance of the Rancocas holdings providing
assurance to NJHMFA that tax credit financing
will not be used to assist either an
inclusionary housing development with a
conventional mix of market and affordable
units, nor would it be used in a situation
where a density bonus is involved.
In his second letter five days later, Mr. Lynch addressed that
provision of N.J.A.C. 5:80-33.13(a), which prohibits any attempt to
evade the prohibition against double subsidies by duplicitous
action. Mr. Lynch repeated that he had reviewed the proposal, and
he then concluded as follows:
[P]lease be advised that the project has not
received the density bonus subsidy as defined
at N.J.A.C. 5:80-33.2. Furthermore, this rule
has not been evaded by failing to apply all or
any portion of the bonus density to the low or
moderate income units by diverting all or any
portion of the bonus density to other uses or
by utilizing any other device in which all or
any portion of the bonus density is not used
to subsidize the low or moderate income
housing.See footnote 88
Pennrose's presentation, endorsed by the Special Master and
the HMFA, seems more than reasonable _ indeed much more reasonable
than the contrary presentation by ECLLC. In considering the
density of a construction project and the impact on a municipality
of the construction of low income housing with varying degrees of
density, legal title to one tract or another is not determinative.
The significant questions are the effects on the municipality and
the effects on the area in which the construction is to take place.
Here, treating the Pennrose project as encompassing 100 units to be
built on more than 300 acres of land is not only reasonable, but is
realistic and consistent with rational concepts of overall
planning. And, even more to the point in evaluating a challenge to
the agency determination here, it is certainly a rational
determination which could reasonably be made by the municipality
and the HMFA. We see no basis for our intervention, or any
insistence that the agency view the twenty-five acre tract owned by
Pennrose as unrelated to the remaining 300 acres adjacent to it.
As part of its argument on this point, ECLLC claims there is
no indication that the HMFA had all of the facts before it when it
approved Pennrose's application for tax credits. However, as
noted, the issues in this case, and the issues before the agency,
were not factual questions at all. Rather, the question was
whether the agency should accept ECLLC's claim _ which we find
strained and unrealistic _ that Pennrose's project must be viewed
as embodying construction on twenty-five acres, with no relation to
the remaining acreage on which Pennrose agreed not to construct
housing. All of the "facts" were laid out in zoning ordinances,
court judgments and orders, and the Developer's Agreement between
Pennrose, Rancocas and the Township. All were matters of public
record. All are presented on this appeal, and there is no reason
to believe that the agency or its staff were so derelict in their
obligations as to be unaware of those undisputed facts.
The record of the agency's Tax Credit Committee meeting of
June 13, 2000, which approved Pennrose's application, has been
submitted. The meeting was a public meeting, which opened with
announcement of the agency's compliance with the Open Public
Meetings Act, N.J.S.A. 10:4-6, and a reading of the published
notice of the meeting. The meeting then continued with a
description of the application process, which made clear that the
agency's staff had reviewed and analyzed the applications submitted
and had then submitted its recommendations to the agency. The
staff and the agency members then proceeded through a description
of each application, beginning with the "Urban" category, moving
next to "Suburban," and then to the remaining three categories.
With respect to each, the staff summarized the request, its own
recommendation, a brief statement of the reason for any recommended
rejection, and, with respect to recommended approvals, the score
obtained by the applicant in the competitive process. Not
surprisingly, the Urban projects, which were generally larger and
costlier, were more complex and elicited more detailed
explanations. With respect to the Pennrose project, the staff
recommended approval and described the project as having "a score
of 80." The agency members then voted on the recommendation, and
all voted in favor. We find no impropriety and no basis to
conclude that the Agency acted in ignorance or that its members
were derelict in their duties.
ECLLC's final argument turns on what we conceive to be an
unrealistic construction of the bar against tax credit relief for
a developer who has already received a density bonus subsidy.
ECLLC maintains that the disqualification applies not only to one
who has received a density bonus subsidy for additional residential
construction, but also bars tax credits for any developer who has
received any form of zoning (or apparently any other) accommodation
from a municipality. With respect to the Pennrose development,
ECLLC argues that "housing aside," Rancocas and Pennrose were given
"very substantial zoning relief, as well as related relief." It
notes that Rancocas may pursue "wetlands mitigation" or commercial
development on the remainder of its property, even though it is
prohibited from any additional residential construction.
The primary difficulty with that argument lies in ECLLC's
introductory phrase _ "housing aside." When considering the
applicable regulation, it is not realistic to put "housing aside,"
because the entire purpose of the regulation is to deal with
housing, the construction of housing, and the density of housing.
When N.J.A.C. 5:80-33.2 defines density bonus subsidy by referring
to "a zoning change that increases permitted density," it is clear
that the reference to "permitted density" is to the permitted
density of housing units. There is no language in the definition,
or in any other provision of the regulations, which suggests that
the bar of N.J.A.C. 5:80-33.13(a) against awarding tax credits to
one who has already received a density bonus subsidy should be read
as barring tax credits to anyone who has received any zoning or
other accommodation from a municipality. Pennrose is correct when
it argues that under such a construction, "every agreement between
a town and a builder which, like here, provides for the passage of
non-density zoning changes to simply facilitate the builder's
planned construction would disqualify the builder from taking
advantage of the NJHMFA's tax credit program." Certainly the
language of the regulation does not compel or even support such an
extreme construction. If that were its intent, one would expect
the prohibitory language to refer not only to "a zoning change that
increases permitted density," but to one which permits new or
different uses not theretofore permitted. But the regulation
contains no such language. Nor do we see any reason why we should
strain that language in order to reach a conclusion which would bar
a municipality from any realistic assistance to a developer who
proposes to construct Mount Laurel housing within that
municipality. The philosophy of Mount Laurel favors such
assistance; it does not oppose it. The regulation here bars tax
credit assistance to a developer who has already received a density
bonus subsidy, and that is all it bars. We see no basis for a
judicially constructed additional bar. Such a construction would
not only run counter to the language of the regulation, but would
also offend the well-established principle which calls on this
court to defer to the expertise of an administrative agency
regarding the interpretation and application of its own regulation.
See, Koch v. Dir., Div. of Taxation,
157 N.J. 1 (1999); Outland v.
Bd. of Trustees of Teachers' Pension & Annuity Fund,
326 N.J.
Super. 395 (App. Div. 1999).
The decision of the HMFA is affirmed.
Footnote: 1 1 See South Burlington Cty. N.A.A.C.P. v. Mt. Laurel
Township,
92 N.J. 158 (1983).
Footnote: 2 2 An "inclusionary development" such as ECLLC's would not
normally qualify for low income housing tax credit.
ECLLC's development project is involved in land use and
Mount Laurel litigation involving the Township and its land use
agencies, which need not be detailed here.
Footnote: 3 3 This May 1988 order is referred to in the Developer's
Agreement and also in a letter from the court's Special Master to
the HMFA. However, apparently no one has been able to locate and
produce a copy of the order and in its brief, Pennrose seems to
vacillate between describing the order and then suggesting that
it may not have existed at all. For purposes of this appeal, we
have assumed that there is such an order and that its provisions
are essentially as described in the Developer's Agreement and in
the parties' briefs.
Footnote: 4 4 Adding the original 310 acres plus the seventy acres
subsequently acquired indicates a total of 380 acres owned by
Rancocas. The Developer's Agreement refers to 367.334 acres
owned by Rancocas. The discrepancy _ the apparently missing
thirteen acres _ is not explained but does not seem significant.
Footnote: 5 5 The only discernable reason for that double conveyance,
rather than a direct deed from Rancocas to Pennrose, would seem
to be a provision in the Agreement which says, "The parties
acknowledge that the conveyance or assignment of real estate by a
municipality to a tax credit financing applicant will enable the
Applicant to receive a high priority for tax credit funding by
the HMFA as a 'municipal contribution.'" See also, to the same
effect, N.J.A.C. 5:80-33.16(a)6.
Footnote: 6 6 The Developer's Agreement also contained a provision
entitled "ALTERNATIVE INCLUSIONARY AFFORDABLE HOUSING DEVELOPMENT
PROPOSAL," which noted that approximately seventy-five to eighty
acres of "uplands," forming part of the Rancocas property was
"suitable, developable and approvable" for affordable housing,
and provided that, in the event the 100 units on the twenty-five
acre parcel was not approved and constructed, then Rancocas could
proceed toward construction of "[a]pproximately 350 market-rate
and inclusionary multi-family housing units" on those seventy-
five to eighty acres. However, the Agreement made clear that
such an alternative was available only if the original intent of
the Agreement _ 100 affordable units on the 25.85 acre parcel _
could not be carried out.
The Agreement also contained a number of ancillary provisions, which we need not enumerate here, relating to the Township's Mount Laurel obligations, stating that the "Township endorses and is fully supportive of Pennrose's intended use of the Property and its willingness to construct tax subsidized income restricted family rental housing" thereon, and expressing the commitment of the Township to cooperate with Pennrose in effecting the central purpose of the Agreement. Footnote: 7 7 The HMFA divides applicants into five categories: Urban; Suburban; Special Needs; Hope VI; and Non-profits. Pennrose's application fell into the Suburban category. Footnote: 8 8 HMFA instructions for submission of a tax credit application respecting any project involved in Mount Laurel litigation requires that the application be accompanied by a certification from the Superior Court judge presiding over that litigation, or a Special Master appointed by the court, certifying that the project has not received a density bonus subsidy. The form provided with the application calls for a simple check off and a conclusory statement by the judge or master, and is far less detailed than the letters submitted here by Mr. Lynch.