SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-401-97T5
ML PLAINSBORO LIMITED
PARTNERSHIP,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
TOWNSHIP OF PLAINSBORO and
the PLAINSBORO TOWNSHIP ZONING
BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT,
Defendants-Respondents.
________________________________
Argued: October 21, 1998 - Decided: December
1, 1998
Before Judges King, Wallace and Fall.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New
Jersey, Law Division, Middlesex County.
David J. Connolly, Jr., argued the cause for
appellant (Pitney, Hardin, Kipp & Szuch,
attorneys; Mr. Connolly and Christopher John
Stracco, on the brief).
Janice B. Stonaker and Michael Balint argued
the cause for respondents (Stonaker &
Stonaker, attorneys for respondent Township of
Plainsboro, Michael P. Balint, attorney for
respondent Zoning Board of Adjustment; Ms.
Stonaker, on the joint brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
KING, P.J.A.D.
In this declaratory judgment action filed on January 26, 1996
plaintiff, ML Plainsboro Limited Partnership, a subsidiary of
Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc., sought an adjudication of its rights to
use or sell its properties in the Township of Plainsboro (Block
5.01), a Hotel Conference Training Center (HCTC) on Lot 3.03 and an
Administrative Office Building (AOB) on Lot 3.07. The plaintiff
also owns unimproved land on the site designated as Lot 3.08 in
Block 5.01. These properties comprise a 275-acre site in the
Princeton Forrestal Center on Route 1.
Plaintiff sought a declaration of rights as follows:
(1) to use the HCTC as a commercial hotel and conference
training center open to the public for transient guests and third-party trainees and conferees (not Merrill Lynch personnel)
attending programs at the HCTC,
(2) to lease all or part of the AOB to commercial tenants not
affiliated with Merrill Lynch,
(3) to sell the HCTC and its associated lot to any person or
entity, independent of the AOB and its associated lot, and
(4) to sell the AOB and its associated lot to any person or
entity.
Plaintiff sought this declaratory adjudication with the term
that it need not receive "further approval of the [Plainsboro]
Planning Board." The Township opposed the relief sought, insisting
that the use of these facilities was approved during the period
from 1981-1983 for a single-user, owner-occupied corporate campus,
i.e., Merrill Lynch only, and that the declaration sought by
plaintiff would "change the character of the site" requiring
further "site plan approval" of a non-specific nature by the
Planning Board.
On May 13, 1996 the Law Division judge remanded the matter to
the Zoning Board for consideration of plaintiff's right to
declaratory relief under N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70(a) and (b)
(adjudicatory powers of zoning board). The Zoning Board declined
relief to plaintiff, finding, in effect, that Planning Board
approval was required for any of the proposed changes in ownership
or occupancy of the properties.See footnote 1 When the matter came back to the
Law Division on January 23, 1997, the judge declined to disturb the
decision of the Zoning Board and refused any declaratory relief.
The judge dismissed plaintiff's now-amended complaint for a
declaratory judgment against the Township and the Zoning Board.
We are satisfied that the plaintiff is entitled to the
declaratory relief sought with respect to its rights to use the
properties or to sell them. The Declaratory Judgment Act, N.J.S.A.
2A:16-50 to -62, is expressly remedial. N.J.S.A. 2A:16-51. The
Act's mandate is to afford relief from uncertainty with respect to
a party's rights, including property rights. N.J.S.A. 2A:16-50.
A court should liberally construe and administer the Act to
accomplish this general purpose. New Jersey Home Builders
Association v. Div. on Civil Rights,
81 N.J. Super. 243, 251 (Ch.
Div. 1963), aff'd,
45 N.J. 301, 309 (1965); see Bell v. Stafford
Tp.,
110 N.J. 384, 390 (1988); So. Burlington Ct. N.A.A.C.A.P. v.
Tp. of Mt. Laurel,
67 N.J. 151, 159 (1975). We conclude that
plaintiff has presented a justiciable issue and has appropriate
standing. The pendency of the parallel, but collateral, tax
litigation does not detract from these conclusions. We do not
consider this action a request for an abstract declaration of
contingencies which may emerge in a future law suit. See Danadio
v. Cunningham,
58 N.J. 309, 325 (1971). This is a request for a
declaration of present rights to use or sell the properties.
Indeed, our declaratory adjudication here may help to clarify the
parties' rights in the pending tax litigation which involves the
evaluation of the properties.
To the extent necessary, we exercise our original
jurisdiction, although we find that this case, with a complete
record, presents a question of law without disputed facts which we
can properly conclude without any remand. R. 2:10-5; Bressman v.
Gash,
131 N.J. 517, 529 (1993); Pieretti v. Bloomfield,
35 N.J. 382, 385 (1961).
We stress that plaintiff can use or sell the properties for
the described conference-center-hotel and office purposes. The
hotel, conference center and office building uses are legal and
permitted in the Planned Multi-Use Development (PMUD) zone, § 101-137.See footnote 2 Indeed, these uses are quite characteristic of the
surrounding area, east of Princeton and the University. The
approval resolutions from 1981 through 1983 did not attempt to
restrict the use to plaintiff ML specifically or require Planning
Board approval for change of ownership. We hesitate to attach our
absolute imprimatur to the term or condition desired by plaintiff:
that it need never return to the Planning Board for future
approvals. We rule that plaintiff does not need Planning Board
approval to sell one or both properties and to separate buyers, or
to have transients in the HCTC, or occupants or tenants in the AOB
who are not Merrill Lynch employees or corporate family. The
Planning Board cannot dictate to perpetuity who can use, buy, own
or rent the properties .... as a single or multiple owner. But any
changes in the nature of the use or the physical structures could
legitimately implicate site plan or other code concerns under local
law, which could require Planning Board or other municipal
approvals.
For example, plaintiff asserts and we accept its
representation, that it has adequate parking in place for the
extant, legal uses. If future events disclose this representation
is inaccurate further parking facilities must be installed with
appropriate approvals, or relief must be sought from the Township,
if necessary. Naturally, our decision does not prevent local
enforcement of site plain ordinances, building codes and other
ordinances which might properly impact on future development of or
changes to the property.
Our desire is solely to clarify plaintiff's rights to use or
sell the properties under the present zoning and approvals, none of
which gives the Planning Board, or any other arm of the local
government, a say in who can own or use the properties for legally-permitted purposes, no matter what the Township's political leaders
hoped they were accomplishing some fifteen years ago in 1981-1983
in terms of future land-use controls. See Bridge Park Co. v.
Borough of Highland Park,
113 N.J. Super. 219, 221 (App. Div. 1971)
(zoning ordinances limit land uses, not land users; zoning
ordinance which restricted ownership to a single entity was void as
regulation if the ownership of buildings or types of permitted
tenancies); Arkham Machine & Tool Co. v. Township of Lyndhurst,
73 N.J. Super. 528, 533 (App. Div. 1962) (number of tenants does not
affect use; test is "use" and not ownership or tenancy); AT&T
Communications v. Bd. of Adj., Tp. of Bedminister,
216 N.J. Super. 340, 345 (Law Div. 1986) (use of a property by another owner does
not affect the use to which the property is put and does not impact
on valid zoning considerations); Township of Washington v. Central
Bergen County Mental Health Center, Inc.
156 N.J. Super. 388, 417
(Law Div. 1978) (statute on power to zone "utilizes the word `use'
solely as a reference to the actual or physical purposes to which
land or buildings are devoted and does not apply to the legal form
by which ownership or possession is derived"). As the court
remarked in AT&T Communications v. Bedminister Adj. Bd., 216 N.J.
Super. at 345, "In effect, the township is largely seeking to
determine who operates the banking center. This is not a valid
zoning consideration."
This opinion shall constitute the order of this court. The
judgment of the Law division is so modified.
Footnote: 1The Zoning Board resolution stated that the ultimate question
which the Zoning Board decided was:
Whether or not the applicant has the
authority, pursuant to prior Planning Board
approvals to sell, lease, or convey, all or
any part of its corporate hotel and conference
training center and/or its administrative
office building without obtaining any further
approval from the Planning Board of the
Township ....
The reasons for the denial of ML's application were set forth in
the Zoning Board resolution as follows:
1. The hypothetical question posed by Merrill
Lynch constitutes a change in character of the
site and thus pursuant to the Township
Ordinance Constitutes development requiring
Planning Board Review.
3. Merrill Lynch has previously applied for a
number of modifications to its plan and the
conversion of the single user aspect of the
site to a multiple user of the site is
inconsistent with the intent of the prior
reviews and approvals by the Planning Board
regarding representations concerning usage of
the facility.
4. While mention of third-party users was
made at the time of some of the Planning Board
approvals, the representations were that the
site would be solely for Merrill's own use:
the Planning Board did not consider the site
plan implications of any other uses for the
property.
5. Due to the integrated nature of the site,
the user is a substantial factor in
determining the actual use of the site: to
separate the uses, as hypothesized herein,
requires municipal review of the development
itself.
6. The change from apartment-style housing to
hotel-style housing and the subsequent
subdivision of the property were done for
reasons of financing and the supporting
documents incorporated by reference in the
resolutions of approval reflect the
representations that Merrill Lynch made and
agreed to be bound by, specifically that the
facilities were still intended to be used by
Merrill Lynch, its employees and guests.
Plaintiff denied it made any such binding representations and none
are found in the record.
Footnote: 2Section 101-137 provides:
The following uses shall be permitted in a
PMUD planned unit development:
A. Office, research and industrial uses
permitted in the I-100 Limited Industrial Zone
under Article VIII of this chapter and any
amendments thereto and the I-200 Industrial
Zone under Article VIIIA of this chapter and
any amendments thereto.
C. Business and commercial uses permitted in the GB Business Zone under Article VII of this chapter and any amendments thereto and the OB-1 Office Business Zone under Article VIIA of this chapter and any amendments thereto. An indoor motion-picture theater and a hotel or motel and related facilities, included but not limited to a conference center auxiliary to the hotel or motel use, shall be permitted as commercial uses. (Emphasis supplied).