NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
OPINION CORRECTED 03/14/02
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-6865-99T3
JOHN SARTOGA and OLGA
SARTOGA and CITY OF CLIFTON,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
BOROUGH OF WEST PATERSON and
GARRET POINTE ASSOCIATES,
Defendants-Respondents.
___________________________________
Argued October 30, 2001 - Decided January 18, 2002
Before Judges Skillman, Wallace, Jr. and
Carchman.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
Law Division, Passaic County, Docket No. L-
3491-99.
John Sartoga, appellant, argued the cause pro
se.
Elisa Leib argued the cause for appellant
City of Clifton (Gerald G. Friend, Municipal
Attorney, attorney; Scott J. Bennion, First
Assistant Municipal Attorney, on the brief).
N. Noelle Letcher argued the cause for
respondent Borough of West Paterson (Gerber &
Samson, attorneys; Steven Gerber and Ms.
Letcher, on the brief).
David R. Oberlander argued the cause for
respondent Garret Pointe Associates
(Flaster/Greenberg, attorneys; Carl S.
Bisgaier and Mr. Oberlander, on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
SKILLMAN, P.J.A.D.
The City of Clifton and two of its residents appeal from a
summary judgment which dismissed their complaints challenging the
validity of a Borough of West Paterson zoning ordinance that
rezoned land immediately adjacent to Clifton to allow residential
development at a density of twenty units per acre. We conclude
that the factual materials submitted by plaintiffs presented
contested material issues of fact, and therefore the trial court
erred in granting summary judgment.
The rezoning challenged by plaintiffs was part of a Mount
LaurelSee footnote 11 compliance plan that West Paterson submitted to the
Council on Affordable Housing (COAH). This plan included
proposed construction of low and moderate housing on three sites,
one of which was a six and a half acre tract in an abandoned rock
quarry owned by defendant Garret Pointe Associates (Garret
Pointe). The compliance plan and implementing ordinance provide
for the construction of 130 residential units on this site, 20 of
which would be affordable to lower income households. On October
6, 1999, COAH granted substantive certification approving West
Paterson's compliance plan.
John and Olga Sartoga, who live on Paxton Street in Clifton,
a narrow, dead-end street that would have to be extended and
improved to allow access to the proposed residential development
on the Garret Pointe site, and the City of Clifton, filed
separate actions in lieu of prerogative writs against West
Paterson challenging the validity of the amended zoning
ordinance. The trial court consolidated the Sartoga and Clifton
complaints and granted Garret Pointe's motion to intervene as a
defendant.
After discovery, plaintiffs and defendants filed cross-
motions for summary judgment. In support of their motion,
plaintiffs relied upon a lengthy report by a planner, Stan Lacz,
who characterized the site as environmentally sensitive due to
steep grades with related storm water runoff problems and an
abandoned quarry with a stone face that ranges from forty to
seventy feet in height. Lacz also noted that the only access to
the site is by a footpath from the end of Paxton Street, which is
a twenty-three foot wide roadway that currently provides access
to three single family residences. In addition, Lacz indicated
that there is no safe pedestrian access to the Garret Pointe
site. According to Lacz, "[t]he ordinance does not secure safety
because an excessive number of residential units are being placed
on a dead-end street and the development . . . is being placed
adjacent to quarry walls, which is an attractive climbing hazard
to children and adults even if the walls are retrofitted to
prevent falling stones." Lacz also stated that "[t]he ordinance
does not establish an appropriate population . . . concentration
[because it] . . . will produce population density substantially
different from that of the adjacent neighborhood as well as a
degradation of the environment by placing such density on a steep
slope situation." Lacz's report concluded that the rezoning of
the Garret Pointe site for high density residential development
is "contrary to the principles of good planning" as set forth in
the Municipal Land Use Law (MLUL), N.J.S.A. 40:55D-1 to -136.
In addition to the Lacz report, plaintiffs relied upon a
report by another planner, Charles S. DiMarco, which focused on
the vehicular access problems that would be created if a high
density residential development were constructed on the site. He
pointed out that Paxton Street, which provides the sole access to
the site, empties into Mountain Park Road, a two lane county
roadway. According to DiMarco, "[t]he existing topography,
including steep side slopes, a narrow right-of-way and
significant horizontal and vertical curves and grades along both
Paxton Street and Mountain Park Road severely limit sight
distance at the intersection of Paxton Street and Mountain Park
Road." DiMarco concluded that "[i]mprovements to help alleviate
the existing inadequate sight distance would involve a major
reconstruction of the intersection including an increase in the
horizontal curve radius and a decrease in the steep downward
grade along eastbound Mountain Park Road," which would require
the acquisition of private property at the intersection. DiMarco
indicated that without such a major reconstruction, "[i]t is
unlikely that any significant increase in traffic entering
Mountain Park Road from Paxton Street could be safely handled."
DiMarco also concluded that "Paxton Street is not conducive to
widening due to the significant side slope grades along each
curb," and that "an extension of Paxton Street into the existing
quarry would have to contend with major rock excavations,
potentially unsuitable soil conditions and adverse grades that
would make the viability of any street extension highly
questionable."
In opposition to plaintiffs' motion and in support of their
own motions for summary judgment, defendants submitted several
expert reports that disputed the conclusions of plaintiffs'
experts concerning the suitability of the Garret Pointe site for
high density residential development.
In granting defendants' motion for summary judgment, the
trial court noted that West Paterson's zoning ordinance is
entitled to a presumption of correctness, and it concluded that
plaintiffs' expert reports had failed to overcome that
presumption. The court relied on the fact that the rezoning of
the Garret Pointe site was "an integral element in [the]
satisfaction of West Paterson's [constitutional] obligation to
provide opportunities for affordable housing," and that
plaintiffs had not intervened before COAH to oppose approval of
West Paterson's compliance plan. The court also stated that
plaintiffs' challenges to the rezoning of the Garret Pointe site
were based "primarily [on] site plan issues, which can be
addressed by the Planning Board," but "cannot form the basis for
attacking a zoning ordinance."
On appeal, plaintiffs argue that their expert reports raised
contested material issues of fact as to whether the rezoning of
the Garret Pointe site for high density residential development
conforms with the policies of the MLUL. Plaintiffs also argue
that the trial court improperly considered as evidence its own
observations derived from a site inspection, and that the trial
court should have granted the Sartogas' motion for recusal. In
their answering briefs, defendants argue that COAH's grant of
substantive certification to West Paterson's Mount Laurel
compliance plan included a factual finding that the Garret Pointe
site is suitable for high density residential development, and
that this finding is binding on the courts.
We conclude that COAH's grant of substantive certification
to West Paterson's Mount Laurel compliance plan does not preclude
plaintiffs' challenge to the validity of the ordinance rezoning
the Garret Pointe site. We also conclude that plaintiffs raised
contested issues of material fact as to the validity of the
rezoning of the site for high density residential development.
Accordingly, we reverse the summary judgment in favor of
defendants and remand the case for trial. In view of this
disposition, we have no need to consider plaintiffs' argument
that the trial court made improper use of its own observations in
inspecting the site. However, the court should be guided at
trial by the principles set forth in Morris County Land
Improvement Co. v. Township of Parsippany-Troy Hills,
40 N.J. 539, 548-49 (1963) concerning any site inspection by a trier of
fact. Plaintiffs' argument that the trial judge should have
recused himself is clearly without merit, R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E), and
does not need to be revisited upon remand.
I
Initially, we consider defendants' argument that COAH's
grant of substantive certification to West Paterson precludes the
courts from considering plaintiffs' claim that the rezoning of
the Garret Pointe site conflicts with the policies of the MLUL
and is therefore arbitrary and capricious. Defendants argue that
because COAH is required to consider whether a site designated
for the construction of low and moderate income housing is
"available, suitable, developable and approvable,"
N.J.A.C. 5:93-
5.3(b), COAH's grant of substantive certification constituted an
administrative finding that the Garret Pointe site is suitable
for high density residential housing and that this finding is
binding in a judicial challenge to the validity of the zoning
ordinance adopted to implement the plan.
We find no authority in the Fair Housing Act (the Act),
N.J.S.A. 52:27D-301 to -329, or the decisions interpreting the
Act to support this argument. The Act clearly indicates that the
sole effect of a grant of substantive certification to a
municipality is to create a presumption of validity in an
exclusionary zoning action challenging the validity of a zoning
ordinance adopted to implement a certified plan.
N.J.S.A.
52:27D-317a provides in pertinent part:
In any exclusionary zoning case filed
against a municipality which has a
substantive certification . . . there shall
be a presumption of validity attaching to the
housing element and ordinances implementing
the housing element. To rebut the
presumption of validity, the complainant
shall have the burden of proof to demonstrate
by clear and convincing evidence that the
housing element and ordinances implementing
the housing element do not provide a
realistic opportunity for the provision of
the municipality's fair share of low and
moderate income housing . . . .
Consequently, under
N.J.S.A. 52:27D-317a, the grant of
substantive certification does not preclude a challenge to the
validity of a zoning ordinance even on the ground that it fails
to provide a realistic opportunity for the construction of a
municipality's fair share of lower income housing. It follows
a
fortiori that substantive certification does not preclude a
prerogative writ action challenging the validity of a zoning
ordinance on other unrelated grounds.
This conclusion is supported by the Court's decision in
Hills Dev. Co. v. Township of Bernards,
103 N.J. 1, 44-45 (1986),
which rejected a challenge to the validity of the Fair Housing
Act on the ground that it interferes with the Court's exclusive
constitutional authority over actions in lieu of prerogative
writs:
Certiorari has long been available in New
Jersey to afford judicial review of
administrative agency actions in general and
of municipal ordinances in particular. Thus,
all of the plaintiffs in the cases before us
would appear to have a constitutional right,
under Article VI, section V, paragraph 4, to
judicial review of the municipalities'
ordinances.
We do not find that the Act has
interfered impermissibly with this right to
judicial review.
Nothing in the Act
precludes judicial review of an ordinance
once [COAH] has acted on it.
[Citations omitted; emphasis added.]
Alexander's Dept. Stores of N.J., Inc. v. Borough of
Paramus,
125 N.J. 100 (1991) provides even more direct support
for our conclusion that COAH's grant of substantive certification
to West Paterson's compliance plan does not foreclose plaintiffs'
challenge to the validity of the zoning ordinance adopted to
implement that plan. In Alexander's, as in this case, parties
adversely affected by a zoning ordinance adopted to implement a
compliance plan granted substantive certification by COAH brought
an action in lieu of prerogative writ challenging the ordinance.
In rejecting defendant's argument that plaintiffs were barred
from challenging the ordinance because they had failed to present
their objections to COAH, the Court stated:
[W]e find significant that although the [Act]
authorizes COAH to promulgate regulations
regarding compliance with Mt. Laurel, it does
not empower COAH to decide the underlying
ordinances or the prerequisites to the
ordinances' valid enactment. Although COAH
has authority to determine whether a
municipality's fair share plan truly provides
a realistic opportunity for affordable
housing, we agree with the Appellate Division
that "[s]uch a determination does not
ordinarily include a ruling whether a
proposed ordinance and developer's agreement
satisfy substantive and procedural legal
standards generally applicable to such
municipal actions whether or not they are
taken in a Mt. Laurel setting."
. . . .
[T]he [Act] delegates authority over
municipal ordinances to COAH only for
modification of zoning to comply with Mt.
Laurel. COAH has no authority over
ordinances generally or over determining the
prerequisites for their valid enactment.
[Id. at 112-14.]
See also East/West Venture v. Borough of Fort Lee,
286 N.J.
Super. 311, 327-28 (App. Div. 1996).
Moreover, even though COAH made an administrative finding
that the Garret Pointe site was suitable for high density
residential development, including housing affordable to lower
income households, it did not conduct a hearing or make findings
of fact based on an evidentiary record. In fact, as indicated by
In re Petition for Substantive Certification, Township of
Southampton,
338 N.J. Super. 103, 114-16 (App. Div.), certif.
denied,
169 N.J. 610 (2001), COAH sometimes grants substantive
certification to a compliance plan based on a perfunctory review
of factual materials submitted by a municipality without COAH's
own staff even inspecting the sites that the municipality has
designated for Mount Laurel housing. Therefore, COAH's grant of
substantive certification to West Paterson was not based on the
kind of administrative fact-finding that is entitled to judicial
deference. Accordingly, we reject defendants' argument that
plaintiffs' challenge to the validity of the rezoning of its site
is foreclosed by COAH's grant of substantive certification.
II
"A presumption of validity attaches to a zoning ordinance
that may be overcome only if an opponent of the ordinance
establishes the ordinance is 'clearly arbitrary, capricious or
unreasonable, or plainly contrary to fundamental principles of
zoning or the [zoning] statute.'"
Manalapan Realty, L.P. v.
Township Comm. of Township of Manalapan,
140 N.J. 366, 380 (1995)
(quoting
Bow & Arrow Manor, Inc. v. Town of West Orange,
63 N.J. 335, 343 (1973)). In determining whether a zoning ordinance is
arbitrary, capricious or unreasonable or contrary to the MLUL, a
court must consider not only whether it advances the purposes of
the MLUL but also whether it is reasonably related to those
purposes and whether it conflicts with other purposes of the
MLUL.
See Pheasant Bridge Corp. v. Township of Warren,
169 N.J. 282, 290-91 (2001);
Home Builders League of S. Jersey, Inc. v.
Township of Berlin,
81 N.J. 127, 137-42 (1979). Therefore, if a
party challenging the validity of a zoning ordinance presents
evidence that could support a finding that the ordinance violates
the principles of sound zoning embodied in the MLUL, an
evidentiary hearing must be held to afford both the party
challenging the ordinance and the municipality an opportunity to
present expert testimony relevant to a determination of its
validity.
See Bow & Arrow Manor, Inc. v. Town of West Orange,
supra, 63
N.J. at 347-49.
Plaintiffs' expert reports contain various allegations that
could support a finding that the rezoning of the Garret Pointe
site for high density residential development conflicts with the
purposes of the MLUL. Those reports express the opinion that
high density residential development of this site would be
incompatible with existing single family housing in the
immediately adjoining areas of West Paterson and Clifton. The
reports also contend that the steep slopes, cliffs and wetlands
on the site make it unsuitable for high density residential
development. In addition, the reports claim that the dangerous
intersection of Mountain Park Road and Paxton Street and sole
access to the site by means of Paxton Street would not afford
safe vehicular or pedestrian access to such a development. If
accepted by the trier of fact, these opinions could support
findings that the rezoning of the Garret Pointe site conflicts
with various purposes of the MLUL, including the "establishment
of appropriate population densities and concentrations that will
contribute to the well-being of persons, neighborhoods,
communities and regions and preservation of the environment[,]"
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-2(e), "ensur[ing] that the development of
individual municipalities does not conflict with the development
and general welfare of neighboring municipalities,"
N.J.S.A.
40:55D-2(d), "the . . . development of all lands in this State,
in a manner which will promote the public health, safety, morals,
and general welfare,"
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-2(a), and "secur[ing]
safety from fire, flood, panic and other natural and man-made
disasters."
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-2(b).
Garret Pointe argues that the validity of a zoning ordinance
must be sustained if it furthers any purpose of the MLUL, even if
it conflicts with other purposes of the law, and that
satisfaction of the constitutional obligation to zone for
affordable housing is one purpose of the MLUL. In support of
this argument, Garret Pointe relies upon a statement in
Riggs v.
Township of Long Beach,
109 N.J. 601, 611 (1988) that "a zoning
ordinance must satisfy certain objective criteria," one of which
is that it "must advance one of the purposes of the [MLUL] as set
forth in
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-2." However, the Court in
Riggs only
indicated that a zoning ordinance that fails to satisfy any of
the purposes of the MLUL will be invalidated.
Id. at 612-13.
The Court did not say that an ordinance that satisfies one
purpose of the MLUL will be automatically upheld even if it
conflicts with other purposes of the MLUL. To the contrary, the
Court has recognized that "[a]lmost inevitably restrictions on
the use of land will have both salutary and detrimental effects."
Home Builders League of S. Jersey, Inc. v. Township of Berlin,
supra, 81
N.J. at 139. Hence, "[a] provision which has some
beneficial effect will not automatically be deemed valid and
consonant with the general welfare."
Ibid. "Rather, the court
is required to decide whether a proper legislative goal is being
achieved in a manner reasonably related to that goal."
Ibid.
Consistent with these principles, the Court has indicated that
municipal compliance with the constitutional obligation to
provide lower income housing "does not require bad planning."
Southern Burlington County NAACP v. Township of Mount Laurel,
supra, 92
N.J. at 238. Therefore, a zoning ordinance that
furthers the constitutional and statutory goal of providing
housing for lower income families is not insulated from challenge
on the ground that it conflicts with other purposes of the MLUL.
Garret Pointe also argues that plaintiffs' allegations
concerning the incompatibility between high density residential
development of its site and adjoining uses, the presence of
cliffs and other environmental constraints, and lack of adequate
and safe access to the site, constitute "site plan issues" which
"should be raised in a Planning Board site plan review hearing,
rather than in a challenge to the Ordinance." However, a
planning board's authority in reviewing a site plan application
is limited to determining whether the plan conforms with the
municipality's zoning and site plan ordinances.
W.L. Goodfellows
& Co. of Turnersville, Inc. v. Washington Township Planning Bd.,
345 N.J. Super. 109, 116 (App. Div. 2001);
Shim v. Washington
Township Planning Bd.,
298 N.J. Super. 395, 411 (App. Div. 1997).
"[Site plan review] 'was never intended to include the
legislative or quasi-judicial power to prohibit a permitted
use.'"
PRB Enters., Inc. v. South Brunswick Planning Bd.,
105 N.J. 1, 7 (1987) (quoting
Lionel's Ctr., Inc. v. Citta,
156 N.J.
Super. 257, 264 (Law Div. 1978)).
Similarly, in the closely related context of review of a
subdivision application, the Supreme Court has indicated that a
planning board's authority is circumscribed by the municipality's
zoning and other land use ordinances:
The Appellate Division in this case
concluded that under the MLUL a planning
board does not have the broad authority to
consider a subdivision application in light
of the general welfare or of the purposes of
zoning under the MLUL or general principles
of sound planning apart from the standards of
applicable local subdivision and zoning
ordinances. It found that if a proposed
subdivision complies with local ordinances
and the MLUL, then a planning board "'shall
. . . grant preliminary approval.'" [
Pizzo
Mantin Group v. Township of Randolph,
261 N.J. Super. 659, 666 (App. Div. 1993)]
(quoting
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-48) (emphasis
omitted). . . . According to the Appellate
Division,
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-2, which sets forth
the general purposes of the MLUL, "was not a
codification of standards for the purpose of
guiding planning boards in the review of
particular subdivision applications. Rather,
it provides a framework, together with
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-48, from which general
guidelines and particular standards should be
devised by the governing body."
Id. at 667.
. . . .
We concur generally in the Appellate
Division's analysis and interpretation of the
MLUL. The MLUL evinces a legislative design
to require consistency, uniformity, and
predictability in the subdivision-approval
process. The legislative scheme contemplates
that a planning board's review of a
subdivision proposal, including the layout of
the entire design, must be made within the
framework of the standards prescribed by the
subdivision and, if pertinent, the zoning
ordinances.
[
Pizzo Mantin Group v. Township of Randolph,
137 N.J. 216, 228-29 (1994).]
In short, a planning board's authority in reviewing an
application for site plan or subdivision approval is limited to
determining whether a development plan conforms with the zoning
ordinance and the applicable provisions of the site plan or
subdivision ordinance. A planning board has no authority to deny
site plan approval based on its view that a use permitted under
the zoning ordinance, such as, in this case, high density
residential development, is inconsistent with principles of sound
zoning.
We have no doubt that some of the problems plaintiffs'
experts claim would be created by high density development of the
Garret Pointe site, such as the dangers posed by the quarry
cliffs, the site's ecological sensitivity, and the lack of
adequate and safe vehicular and pedestrian access, could be
considered in reviewing an application for site plan approval.
See
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-38(b)(2), 40:55D-41(b). However, considered
in their entirety, the criticisms presented by plaintiffs'
experts concerning the rezoning of the Garret Pointe site are not
simply "site plan issues," but instead could provide a basis for
finding that the rezoning of the site for high density
residential development violates the principles of sound zoning
embodied in the MLUL and is therefore invalid.
Accordingly, we reverse the summary judgment in favor of
defendants and remand the case for trial.
Footnote: 1 1 See Southern Burlington County NAACP v. Township of
Mount Laurel,
92 N.J. 158 (1983).