NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-1592-98T2
NORTHEAST TOWERS, INC.,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
ZONING BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT OF
THE BOROUGH OF WEST PATERSON,
Defendant-Appellant.
___________________________________
Argued December 13, 1999 - Decided January
24, 2000
Before Judges Petrella, Conley and
Braithwaite.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
Law Division, Passaic County.
Richard Brigliadoro argued the cause for
appellant (Weiner Lesniak, attorneys; Mr.
Brigliadoro, on the brief).
Remo A. Caputo argued the cause for
respondent.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
PETRELLA, P.J.A.D.
After the Law Division overturned the denial of a variance
to Northeast Towers, Inc. (Northeast), the Zoning Board of
Adjustment of the Borough of West Paterson (the Board) appealed.
The Board had denied Northeast's variance application to
construct a 95-foot lattice communications tower next to an
existing home on property in a residential zone. A 97-foot
monopole had existed illegally on the property for a number of
years and was proposed to be replaced.
On its appeal the Board argues that the decision of the Law
Division Judge was erroneous because the Board's decision was
neither arbitrary, capricious nor unreasonable. The trial judge
reversed the Board's denial of Northeast's variance application
to replace an illegal communications tower in a residential zone
with a higher tower to be placed closer to the residence. The
Board further argues that its denial of a variance for the
proposed tower did not violate the Telecommunications Act of
1996.See footnote 11
Northeast owned a three-quarter-acre property at 2 Oak Ridge
Road on Garret Mountain in West Paterson in a Residential A Zone.
The property contained a three-bedroom ranch house with a two-car
garage. About twenty-five years ago a 97-foot high steel
monopole communications tower had been erected in the middle of
the backyard about forty or fifty feet from the residence. Under
the zoning ordinance this was a non-permitted use and thus was
illegal. The house was rented to tenants who had no relationship
to the operation of the tower.
Northeast's President, George Stites, acquired the property
in January 1993. Before that he managed it for four years for
the previous owners. Stites's management of the property
involved obtaining contracts to lease rights to place a
broadcasting antenna on the tower by various individuals or
entities who could transmit and receive signals at the site.
Stites had about forty "tower accounts" for radio common carriers
that put an antenna on the tower to transmit for the carriers'
communications systems. The leases were long-term and involved
several thousand dollars per year. According to the record,
Stites had tower accounts in various locations. He had four
companies with antennae on his West Paterson tower: Page Net of
New York, Page Net of New Jersey, Tel-Air Communications (Tel
Air), and Message Center Beepers. Transmitters for each of the
different companies were located inside a shed on the property.
These companies were all in the business of offering paging
communications for profit and rented an antenna connection to
provide transmitting capabilities for "tens of thousands" of
their accounts. Fees for the right to transmit from the tower
were unregulated.
Stites and his wife were sole owners of Tel-Air, which owned
nineteen other transmitting sites. In addition to the tower
accounts, Tel-Air serviced 20,000 "paging accounts" for
individuals with billings of approximately $10 to $15 per month.
In response to an inquiry by Stites to add additional
antennae to the tower, West Paterson's code enforcement officer
informed him on April 6, 1993, that the installation of radio
antennae for the purpose of renting them to business entities in
this district violated the borough's zoning ordinance.
Accordingly, the code enforcement officer directed Stites to stop
installing antennae and remove all antennae installed since he
purchased the property. On June 9, 1993, the code enforcement
officer denied a permit to an electrical contractor who sought to
install a sub-panel in the shed to increase the electrical
service for the tower's antennae. The reason for the denial was
that the tower violated Section 22.5.1 of the borough's
ordinance, operating a business in a residential zone. The code
enforcement officer, as a result of these inquiries, investigated
whether the tower was an approved use in the zone and sought the
municipal attorney's opinion. After concluding that the use was
impermissible, the mayor and council were notified. Other
properties with operating antennae for business were notified to
stop doing business immediately.
Northeast applied for a use variance in November 1993,
indicating that the first antenna was added in 1989 and the "last
activity" on the site was October 30, 1994. The variance
application sought (1) permission to allow replacement of the
current tower with a 95-foot tower on a base elevation 10 feet
higher than the existing tower's; (2) allowance of expansion of a
nonconforming use; (3) setback and side yard variances; and (4)
relief from height restrictions in a residential zone. There had
been no prior application for a use variance or for construction
of the shed and the electrical services.
Plaintiff argued that the communications tower was an
inherently beneficial use. The residential use of the property
was to be continued, and maintenance of the tower would not
require the presence of employees or deliveries by commercial
vehicles. The site would be serviced once a year under normal
circumstances. Although the precise role and extent of the
Federal Communications Commission's (FCC) regulation of the
tower's function are not clear from the record, Stites indicated
that a common carrier had exclusive territory granted by the FCC
on the particular frequency allotted to the carrier. He also
indicated that paging companies establish a pattern of site
locations to cover with their transmissions so that coverage
would be complete and no pages would be lost. He stated that
moving his location might require two or three other locations to
cover the same pattern and that FCC permission would be needed to
move an antenna, a "station license." He indicated the new tower
would have the potential to support cellular communications, but
he did not presently have the opportunity to use the tower for
that purpose.
The record indicates that there were at least three
communication towers within a tenth of a mile from the Oak Ridge
tower. Stites had not inquired as to whether he could place Tel
Air's antennae and transmitters on those towers.
Northeast's structural engineering expert reviewed design
plans, including the structural integrity of the proposed tower.
Because soil borings had not yet been taken, he was not clear as
to the design of the concrete pad for anchoring and how the tower
was to be anchored to the ground. The new tower was designed to
hold fifty-two antennae which could weigh from 900 to 4,000
pounds. A real estate appraiser testified on Northeast's case
before the Board and described the area surrounding the tower as
"a fully developed residential neighborhood" with twenty-five or
thirty-five-year-old, well-maintained homes on one-third to one
acre sites. The area was said to be a stable community with a
good reputation for preserving property values and containing
some of the largest zoning in the municipality. The appraiser
testified that based on his studies there "seems to be no effect
on the value of surrounding properties when a tower is properly
erected on a given lot." In his view there would be no negative
impact on the value of the subject property, surrounding
properties or the neighborhood, but this included the premise
that the buyer of the subject property would have the option of
removing the tower or using it. The appraiser conceded that
except for Fair Lawn, other towers reviewed were much more
distant from the nearest homes.
Northeast also had a planner testify as an expert in
planning and land use impact with respect to communications
facilities. He described Garret Mountain as the first major
topographical change between the Palisades and Parsippany. The
height was a significant factor with respect to "line of sight
technology" and signals had to be seen by facilities sending or
receiving that signal. He described the facilities as acting
like an umbrella to cover a certain radius. He considered the
situation "unique" because "a lot of these facilities are already
there"; the "existing monopole is situated on the property"; and
"these antennas and radio equipment which are necessitated to be
here are an integral component of the overall communications
system for the pagers and the other wireless facilities" that the
owner leases to. He also considered the tower a "quasi-public
nature" use because it was FCC regulated, although it is not
regulated by New Jersey as a public utility. He acknowledged
that the FCC did not regulate the number of users or antennae
permitted on the tower or the fees generated. According to him,
there were other antennae on the roofs of homes in the area and
one nearby structure had two free-standing, three-legged towers.
However, he was unaware of whether those facilities were for
commercial or private use. He expressed the opinion that
"stimulation of commerce benefits the public welfare and good of
all the residents of New Jersey," although he acknowledged that
the zoning statutes contain no such criteria. Also, he suggested
that the use of pagers by medical professionals was an inherently
beneficial use and a special reason to permit the facility.
Negative impacts were said to be limited to esthetic or visual.
The facility would not impact traffic, noise considerations and
air quality.
This witness also indicated that removal of these facilities
would probably mean that certain pagers would not work
effectively in the area. He acknowledged that the new tower
would be for Northeast's financial gain and assumed that other
suitable sites for the network existed in the area.
There was also testimony from an expert regarding radio wave
transmission environmental safety. A geotechnical engineer
testified as to the ability of soil and rock to support the
tower. A member of the public stated that he halted his own
plans for construction on his property when he learned of the
tower project because he did not intend to live right under a
telecommunications tower.
In denying Northeast's application by a unanimous 7-0 vote,
the Board made various findings in its resolution: The site was
located in a Residential A Zone, and bordered by residences to
the north and south and by a road to the rear; the proposed tower
would be directly behind an existing garage, whereas the current
tower was in the middle of the rear yard; the tower's elevation
would be eight feet higher than the existing monopole tower which
was an illegal use under the town's zoning ordinances and did not
constitute a preexisting nonconforming use. Northeast was a for
profit corporation engaged in a commercial business enterprise
and unregulated by the government as to its rates, charges, uses
or return on investment. The resolution noted that Northeast
acquired title to the property in 1993 knowing that it was zoned
for residential use; neither it nor its predecessor-in-title ever
obtained any variances to use the property for commercial
purposes, place transmitters or receivers or erect a monopole
antenna, and had not acquired the right to maintain and mix
commercial and residential use for the property and buildings.
The property was noted to be the subject of a violation notice
and Northeast was aware when it acquired the property that it
lacked necessary approvals and was in violation of zoning
ordinances. Moreover, Northeast was "not a single user service,"
but was "in competition with many other like providers of this
commercial service" within the immediate vicinity. Northeast
admitted that appropriately zoned sites were available within the
borough for such uses and Northeast owned additional sites to
operate the service; the majority of users were commercial, and
none were governmental or public safety entities.
The Board concluded that Northeast had not demonstrated
"exclusive public safety or public need" for the tower, nor that
failure to approve the site would hinder public safety or
governmental use for that type of facility in the area. It
concluded that Northeast's tower was not an inherently beneficial
use, but merely a commercial benefit for a commercial user. It
also concluded that Northeast failed to demonstrate that locating
the tower in a residential zone would not impair the intent of
the zoning scheme and adversely affect the surrounding
neighborhood, real estate values and public safety and health.
The resolution also indicated that Northeast had failed to
demonstrate to the Board's satisfaction that construction of the
project conforms "with federal and state standards for
electromagnetic radiation." The Board found that locating the
proposed tower in a Residential A district was "particularly
inappropriate" and that Northeast had not demonstrated special
reasons for granting the application; the grant of the
application would "be substantially detrimental to the public
good" and "substantially impair the intent and purpose of the
Zoning plan." Finally, Northeast's proofs "demonstrate[d] the
unsuitability of the site, the unsuitability of the design, the
noncompliance with the Zoning Ordinance and conflicts with the
master plan."
I.
The Board argues that the trial judge erroneously
substituted his judgment for that of the Zoning Board, failed to
accord the Board's decision the presumption of validity to which
it was entitled and to recognize that the Board's decision was
not arbitrary, capricious or unreasonable. The Board also points
out that the judge erred because the borough's ordinance for the
Residential A Zone does not permit the tower's use as a
commercial venture and Northeast failed to sustain its burden to
prove that special reasons existed to support the variance or
that it could be granted without substantial detriment to the
public good or substantially impairing the intent and purpose of
the borough zoning plan.
It is clear that the borough's ordinance, which covers
"buildings or premises" and "other structures," does not permit
the proposed or existing tower in the Residential A Zone. Nor
does the tower fit the definition of an accessory use under the
ordinance or a state statute.
See Wyzkowski v. Rizas,
132 N.J. 509, 518-519 (1993). This is particularly so where there is a
residential home on the property which complies with the zoning,
but for the commercial use by the tower. The tower supports a
separate and primary use and would be supported by an equipment
structure.
Under
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70(d), the Board can grant a variance
for special reasons to permit, among other things, a use or
principal structure in a district in which such uses or
structures are restricted, an expansion of a nonconforming use,
or a height of a principal structure that "exceeds by 10 feet or
10" the maximum height permitted in the district for a principal
structure."
Northeast's zoning application in part requested a variance
to expand an existing nonconforming use. However, there were no
arguments presented that the existing tower was a permitted
nonconforming use. Hence, the issue is whether Northeast was
entitled to a variance to locate or continue its tower in a
district where such uses and structures were not permitted.
There is a presumption that a municipality's zoning
regulations are reasonable.
Moriarty v. Pozner,
21 N.J. 199, 210
(1956). Hence, variances should "be granted only sparingly and
with great caution since they tend to impair sound zoning."
Kohl
v. Mayor and Council of the Bor. of Fair Lawn,
50 N.J. 268, 275
(1967).
Furthermore, a variance will not be granted if it
advances only the purposes of the property owner.
Menlo Park
Plaza v. Planning Bd. of the Twp. of Woodbridge,
316 N.J. Super. 451, 461 (App. Div. 1998),
certif. denied,
160 N.J. 88 (1999).
Under
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70(d),See footnote 22 an applicant for a variance
must satisfy both the "positive" criteria, or "special reasons"
for the grant of the variance, and the "negative" criteria,
establishing that the variance "can be granted without
substantial detriment to the public good" and that it "will not
substantially impair the intent and the purpose of the zone plan
and zoning ordinance."
Sica v. Board of Adj. of Twp. of Wall,
127 N.J. 152, 156 (1992) (quoting the applicable version of
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70(d)). "Generally, to satisfy the positive
criteria, an applicant must prove that 'the use promotes the
general welfare because the proposed site is particularly
suitable for the proposed use.'"
Smart SMR v. Fair Lawn Bd. of
Adj.,
152 N.J. 309, 323 (1998) (quoting
Medici v. BPR Co., 107
N.J. 1, 4 (1987)). The negative criteria require proof that the
"variance sought is not inconsistent with the intent and purpose
of the master plan and zoning ordinance."
Ibid.
An "inherently beneficial" use, such as a school or
hospital, by its nature can provide special reasons to grant the
variance, thus presumptively satisfying the positive criteria.
Smart SMR,
supra (152
N.J. at 323);
Kohl,
supra (50
N.J. at 279).
The negative criteria nonetheless must be satisfied.
Ibid.;
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70(d).
For proposed uses not inherently beneficial "there must be a
finding that the general welfare is served because the use is
peculiarly fitted to the particular location for which the
variance is sought."
Kohl,
supra (50
N.J. at 279). An enhanced
quality of proof is required in such cases, as well as clear and
specific findings by the board of adjustment that a use variance
"is not inconsistent with the intent and purpose of the master
plan and zoning ordinance."
Medici,
supra (107
N.J. at 4). The
proponent of an inherently beneficial use need not meet this
enhanced quality of proof for negative criteria.
Smart SMR,
supra (152
N.J. at 323).
Northeast asserted in its 1993 application that its tower
was an inherently beneficial use. Some decisions issued prior to
plaintiff's application and the hearings supported such a
contention.
See,
e.g.,
New Brunswick Cellular Tel. Co. v.
Borough of South Plainfield Bd. of Adj.,
305 N.J. Super. 151,
166-167 (App. Div. 1997)See footnote 33 (proposed 90-foot steel monopole for
cellular antennae was inherently beneficial in a manufacturing
and industrial zone)
;
Nynex Mobile Commun. Co. v. Hazlet Tp.
Zoning Bd. of Adj.,
276 N.J. Super. 598, 609 (App. Div. 1994)
(cellular transmission antenna to be annexed to 130-foot water
tower in a residential zone constituted inherently beneficial
use);
New Brunswick Cellular Tel. Co. v. Township of Edison
Zoning Bd. of Adj.,
300 N.J. Super. 456, 469-471 (Law Div. 1997)
(proposed 80-foot monopole for cellular antennae in a light
industrial zone was inherently beneficial);
Kingwood Twp. Vol.
Fire Co. v. Board of Adj.,
272 N.J. Super. 498, 503-506, 509 (Law
Div. 1993) (197-foot cellular telecommunications tower as
expansion of nonconforming use in "largely undeveloped and
uninhabited area" in a residential zone was inherently beneficial
use).
However, in 1998 and subsequent to the Board's denial of
Northeast's application, but before the trial judge's decision,
Smart SMR v. Fair Lawn Bd. of Adj.,
supra (152
N.J. at 328-329)
explicitly rejected the notion that construction of a
communications tower constituted an inherently beneficial use.
The Court did hold that an FCC license could satisfy the first
requirement of the positive criteria and establish that the
facility serves the general public welfare.
Id. at 336.
Thereafter, the Court in
AWACS, Inc. v. Clementon Zoning Bd. of
Adj.,
160 N.J. 21 (1999), emphasized that an applicant for a
variance to construct a communications tower nonetheless must
satisfy the remaining requirements for obtaining a variance,
demonstrating that (1) the chosen site is particularly suited for
the proposed use, (2) the application may be granted without
violating the negative criteria relating to the intent and
purpose of the master plan, and (3) a weighing of the positive
and negative criteria shows that granting the variance will not
result in a substantial detriment to the public good. The Court
also emphasized that, while not required, it is a "better
practice" for applicants to present expert testimony concerning
the tower's potential impact on the master plan or zoning
ordinance.
Id. at 25. Similarly, establishing proof of adverse
effects on adjacent property values and the zoning plan
"generally" will require expert testimony, rather than mere
allegations.
Smart SMR,
supra (152
N.J. at 336).
In
Smart SMR the Court found that the applicant had met the
positive criteria and established that the site in Fair Lawn's
industrial zone was particularly suited for the 140-foot tower
because the site was zoned for industrial use, was centrally
located in the applicant's system, and it already accommodated a
90-foot monopole.
Id. at 332. The site was bounded on three
sides by commercial and industrial uses and single-family homes
abutted the remaining side of the property.
Id. at 316-317.
Construction of the new tower would eliminate the need for two
towers because the owner of the 90-foot tower was willing to co
locate its antennae on the new tower.
Id. at 320. The system
was "an improvement on cellular telephone systems" because it
provided clearer signals and enhanced protection against
eavesdropping.
Id. at 316. Furthermore, the site was said to be
"essential" for the system to operate fully and had been selected
only after the applicant first considered and rejected other
locations.
Id. at 318.
In a series of cases decided after
Smart SMR,
the non
inherently beneficial standard has been applied on review despite
the fact that, as here, the zoning boards initially had decided
the cases assuming the inherently beneficial standard. In each
case the board had denied the variance.
AWACS, Inc.,
supra (160
N.J. at 23);
New Brunswick Cellular Tel. Co.,
supra (160
N.J. at
5);See footnote 44
New York SMSA Ltd. Partnership v. Board of Adj. of
Middletown Tp.,
324 N.J. Super. 166, 168 (App. Div. 1999);
New
York SMSA Ltd. Partnership v. Board of Adj. of Bernards Tp.,
324 N.J. Super. 149, 154 (App. Div. 1999).
In
AWACS, Inc.,
supra (160
N.J. at 23), Comcast applied for
a variance to construct a 100-foot monopole in a commercially
zoned area of Clementon near a residential zone. Tenants of a
nearby apartment complex and area business owners objected for
primarily esthetic reasons.
Id. at 24. The Court found that
Comcast had satisfied the positive criteria because its FCC
license demonstrated the use would serve the public welfare; it
had presented uncontroverted testimony establishing the need for
additional cellular telephone service in the area; and the
location of the site in a commercial zone, adjoining a major
highway and well-situated to deliver the service, established the
site as particularly suited for a telecommunications facility.
Id. at 25. Nonetheless, the Court remanded the matter to the
Board because Comcast had presented no expert testimony on the
effect on the master plan or zoning ordinance of granting the
variance.
Ibid.
In
New Brunswick Cellular Tel. Co.,
supra (160
N.J. at 10
12), Comcast sought a variance to construct a 90-foot monopole in
the least restrictive zone in South Plainfield, where residential
uses were expressly prohibited. Several nonconforming residences
were located in the zone, however, and those homeowners objected
to construction of the tower. Comcast claimed it could not serve
its customers from existing area facilities, a contention that
the objectors disputed.
Id. at 12-13. The Court found that
Comcast had satisfied the positive criteria by establishing that
it required the monopole to meet public demand for
telecommunications in the area, and that the site's location in
an industrial zone between I-287 and a railroad was particularly
suitable.
Id. at 14-15.
Comcast also had satisfied the negative criteria because
uncontradicted evidence established that the structure would
generate no noise or traffic or impose additional burdens on
municipal services.
Id. at 15. Comcast had presented testimony
from a land use planner that the tower's location in an
industrial zone would not significantly impact development of the
zone.
Id. at 13. South Plainfield had provided no zoning for
telecommunications facilities, nor had it identified appropriate
sites for their location.
Id. at 15. The Court observed that
"[a]n abiding concern with telecommunications facilities ... is
their height," but it concluded that the esthetic impact of the
90-foot monopole would be minimal in light of its location in an
industrial zone.
Ibid. It remarked, however, that "a comparable
structure in a residential zone could impose a more substantial
adverse impact."
Id. at 15-16.
In
New York SMSA Ltd. Partnership v. Board of Adj. of
Middletown Tp.,
supra (324
N.J. Super. at 172-177), decided after
both
Smart SMR,
AWACS, and
New Brunswick Cellular Tel. Co., we
applied the principles therein to an application to construct a
125-foot tower in an area that abutted the Garden State Parkway
right-of-way, zoned single-family residential with a minimum lot
size of one acre. A township ordinance permitted such towers in
non-residential zones if located 200 feet from a residential zone
and the applicant submitted evidence that construction of the
tower was necessary for the efficient and effective provision of
services and addressed whether existing towers or structures
could be utilized as alternate sites.
Id. at 169. The board was
justified in denying the variance in part because the applicant
had failed to comply with the procedural and information
requirements of the ordinance. We concluded "that the grant of
this variance, in a zone recently singled out by the municipality
as inappropriate for the proposed use, does not satisfy the
second prong of the negative criteria, that the variance will not
'substantially impair the intent and purpose of the zone plan and
zoning ordinance'."
Id. at 174 (quoting
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70(d)).
In
New York SMSA Ltd. Partnership v. Board of Adj. of
Bernards Tp.,
supra (324
N.J. Super. at 153-154), also decided
after
Smart SMR,
AWACS, and
New Brunswick Cellular Tel. Co., we
again upheld denial of a variance to construct a communication
tower. The applicant sought to locate the tower on the grounds
of a school for emotionally disturbed boys in a "public purpose"
zone that permitted public or institutional uses such as
hospitals, recreational or educational facilities, but no
commercial or industrial uses. The nearest residences were 600
feet away, and a townhouse development was 1,300 feet from the
proposed site, but no trees or vegetation would effectively
screen the tower from the townhomes' view.
Id. at 155. We held
that the record supported the board's determination that the
applicant had failed to meet its burden with respect to either
the positive or negative criteria.
Id. at 160-161.
As to the negative criteria, we stated that we need not
address the board's conclusion that the public interest in
perfecting cellular telephone service for the area was "not very
compelling."
Id. at 161-162. We found that the "existence of
the coverage gap [claimed by the applicant] and the desirability
of filling it is clear."
Id. at 156. The board's finding that
the tower would be an intrusive presence in the neighborhood
could not be disputed, and the applicant had failed to present
any evidence concerning the possible danger and potential threat
to the safety of the school's students.
Id. at 164.
Applying
Smart SMR and its progeny, and comparing the
circumstances in recent decisions, indicates that the judge erred
in reversing the Board's decision denying Northeast's
application. First, the judge's analysis erroneously failed to
accord any deference to the Board's determination. The decision
to grant a variance has been entrusted to the sound discretion of
the municipal zoning board hearing the application, guided by the
statutory criteria.
Kaufmann v. Planning Bd. for Warren Tp.,
110 N.J. 551, 558 (1988)
. It is not the role of the reviewing court
to determine if the decision was wise or unwise.
Ibid.
Moreover, "[a]ctions of a board of adjustment are presumed to be
valid and the party attacking such action has the burden of
proving otherwise."
New York SMSA Ltd. Partnership v. Board of
Adj. of Bernards Tp.,
supra (324
N.J. Super. at 163-164). The
Court determined in
Kramer v. Board of Adj., Sea Girt,
45 N.J. 268, 296 (1965), that zoning boards
because of their peculiar knowledge of local
conditions must be allowed wide latitude in
the exercise of delegated discretion. Courts
cannot substitute an independent judgment for
that of the boards in areas of factual
disputes; neither will they exercise anew the
original jurisdiction of such boards or
trespass on their administrative work. So
long as the power exists to do the act
complained of and there is substantial
evidence to support it, the judicial branch
of the government cannot interfere. A local
zoning determination will be set aside only
when it is arbitrary, capricious or
unreasonable. Even when doubt is entertained
as to the wisdom of the action, or as to some
part of it, there can be no judicial
declaration of invalidity in the absence of
clear abuse of discretion by the public
agencies involved.
Where the board's decision is reasonably supported by the record,
it will be sustained.
Id. at 285;
New York SMSA Ltd. Partnership
v. Board of Adj. of Bernards Tp.,
supra (324
N.J. Super. at 163
164).
Moreover, greater deference is accorded to denial of a
variance than to a grant.
Funeral Home Mgmt., Inc. v. Basralian,
319 N.J. Super. 200, 208 (App. Div. 1999). Where a zoning board
has denied a variance, the proponent has the "heavy burden" of
proving that the evidence before the board "was so overwhelmingly
in favor of the applicant that the board's action can be said to
be arbitrary, capricious or unreasonable."
Medical Realty Assoc.
v. Board of Adj. of Summit,
228 N.J. Super. 226, 233 (App. Div.
1988). This greater deference arises in part from the
recognition that only exceptional cases warrant use variances
because this state's legislative policy strongly favors "land use
planning by ordinance rather than by variance."
See Funeral Home
Mgmt. Inc. v. Basralian,
supra (319
N.J. Super. at 207) (quoting
Elco v. R.C. Maxwell Co.,
292 N.J. Super. 118, 126 (App. Div.
1996)).See footnote 55
This case came before the trial judge as a result of an
action in lieu of prerogative writs, and not from an appeal to a
municipal governing body. However, the trial judge's comments
during argument and his analysis indicate that he conducted a
de
novo review such as would be done by a municipal governing body
under
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-17. At the conclusion of oral argument the
judge inappropriately, considering the standard of review,
requested that the attorney for each party provide "findings of
fact and appropriate conclusions for my consideration," even
though the Board's findings and conclusions already had been
memorialized and were before the court for review.See footnote 66
The judge's written opinion not only contained no analysis
of whether the Board's conclusions were supported by the record
but also did not attempt to relate the facts as found by the
Board or to establish why those facts were unsupported by the
record. Instead, the judge issued his own findings and
conclusions, which he supported by testimony before the Board.
For example, regarding testimony of Northeast's planner, the
judge stated: "At the May 22, 1995 hearing, plaintiff's licensed
planner, Jeffrey Stiles, offered uncontroverted testimony
supporting the conclusion that plaintiff's application meets the
positive criteria required of such applications under
N.J.S.A.
40:55D-70(d) because special reasons exist by virtue of enhanced
regional business and emergency communications capabilities."
The judge then set forth the portions of Stiles's testimony that
supported such a conclusion. The judge continued, finding "that
the record before the Board supports a finding that the requested
use variance may be granted without substantial detriment to the
public good" and listing the reasons for its conclusion.
The judge analyzed each of the issues before the Board in
the same manner, stating a legal conclusion and then citing
supporting testimony from the record. Consequently, he
determined that: "the record amply demonstrates that the subject
property is particularly well-suited for the proposed use,"
citing a list of facts the court accepted as true: "[p]laintiff,
through uncontroverted testimony, has established that the
proposed use serves the general welfare" because the antennae
currently serve "numerous public, private, medical, health care,
emergency and charitable entities which require such services"
and were licensed by the FCC; and "plaintiff has met the
'enhanced quality of proof'" standard required under
Medici,
[
supra,]
which necessitates the reconciliation of the proposed
use to the zoning plan and the zoning ordinance of the
municipality" because West Paterson, like other municipalities,
had not zoned for communications towers. The court specifically
rejected the Board's conclusion that Northeast had failed to
demonstrate conformity with radiation emission standards and made
no reference to any of the Board's other findings or conclusions,
merely reciting his own findings.
Despite the judge's opinion setting forth the correct law
concerning the deferential standard for review of a
municipality's decision denying Northeast's request for a use
variance, the judge's analysis in fact failed to adhere to that
standard. Except for the Board's findings concerning radiation
emissions, the judge's opinion did not discuss the Board's
findings, declaring instead that the "record below reveals that
it is lacking in any credible evidence or supporting testimony
upon which the Board's findings of fact and conclusions of law as
embodied in the resolution of December 18, 1995 can be
supported." The trial judge gave no deference to the Board's
decision, let alone the greater degree of deference ordinarily
accorded a zoning board's denial of a variance.
We are satisfied from our review of the record that the
Board's decision was supported by the record and is consistent
with the conclusions expressed by the courts in most recent case
law. This is so despite the fact that the objectors presented
virtually no expert testimony and that the Board's analysis was
not as fulsome as possible. Assuming Northeast possessed an FCC
license, and thus served the general public welfare, it made no
showing of how the tower would improve communications in the
area. In
Pierce Estates Corp. v. Bridgewater Tp. Zoning Bd. of
Adj.,
303 N.J. Super. 507, 517 (App. Div. 1997), decided prior to
Smart SMR, we held that an applicant relying on the inherently
beneficial nature of a communications tower to improve
telecommunications must prove that its tower actually would have
that effect. The plaintiff there, who was not in the
telecommunications business, had asserted that its tower would
"improve communications," but was unable to show that the tower
would be used to fill identified gaps in coverage, improve mobile
phone communications, or provide real emergency benefits.
Ibid.
In this case, Northeast presented testimony that one of Tel
Air's thousands of paging accounts was a hospital and "many
doctors, dentists, and veterinarians," used pagers serviced from
the tower. But Northeast presented no testimony whatsoever that
the absence of this particular tower would impede those doctors'
ability to obtain paging services or even that this tower formed
an important link in providing paging coverage for the area.
Furthermore, Stites stated that he had no plans to use the tower
for mobile phone communications and thus the tower provided
beeper services only.
Northeast made no attempt to discover if the tower could be
located on other sites in non-residentially-zoned areas of West
Paterson or neighboring communities. Plaintiff argued throughout
the hearings that the topography of this site made it
particularly suitable for a communications tower, and the trial
judge accepted that argument as proof that Northeast had met the
special reasons criteria. The concept expressed in
Kohl as to
the peculiar suitability of the location requires, however, that
the use "fits well with the surrounding area...."
Funeral Home
Mgmt. Inc. v. Basralian,
supra (319
N.J. Super. at 209).
Northeast's arguments and evidence, and the trial judge's
analysis, incorrectly focussed on the suitability of the location
solely from the point of view of the applicant, not the
municipality. It is not disputed that the location and height of
the ridge afforded Northeast an ideal location for its tower.
That showing alone, however, is insufficient to establish the
particular suitability of the site.
The Board's findings that the site was "particularly
inappropriate" because it was in an entirely residential zone and
Northeast had conceded that its service could be located either
on other sites it owned or on other sites in the Borough that
were within commercial zones already appropriately zoned is
supported by the record. Although Northeast presented a series
of experts, each of those experts presented opinions that were
undermined by their lack of knowledge about the area and the
site, or, in Stiles's case, that the Board could find inherently
incredible. A board "has the choice of accepting or rejecting
the testimony of witnesses. Where reasonably made, such choice
is conclusive on appeal."
Kramer v. Sea Girt Bd. of Adj.,
supra
(45
N.J. at 288) (quoting
Reinauer Realty Corp. v. Nucera,
59 N.J. Super. 189, 201 (App. Div.),
certif. denied,
32 N.J. 347
(1960));
see also Hawrylo v. Harding Tp. Bd. of Adj.,
249 N.J.
Super. 568, 579 (1991);
Allen v. Hopewell Tp. Zoning Bd.,
227 N.J. Super. 574, 581 (App. Div.),
certif. denied,
113 N.J. 655
(1988).
In this case, Stiles's testimony that the use was inherently
beneficial was negated by our Supreme Court's decision in
Smart
SMR. His additional testimony that no distinction existed
between this privately-owned and unregulated communications tower
and a public utility has no basis in law. His concept that the
tower stimulated commerce and thus satisfied the positive
criteria is antithetical to the very idea of zoning.
Northeast's structural engineer had not visited the site;
its geotechnical engineer had done no borings and had not been
informed of the loading conditions for the tower. Northeast's
real estate appraiser conducted no sales studies of the
neighborhood and spoke with only one individual real estate
agent, whose credentials he did not know, and one real estate
appraiser. In the studies he cited based on other towns, the
towers, without exception, were located hundreds of feet from the
nearest residence. The Board could reasonably find that his
testimony concerning the impact of this tower was inherently
incredible. For example, he asserted that neither the price nor
marketability of the home on the subject property would be
affected by the existence of a 95-foot tower on a 10-foot
concrete platform next to the garage, and also that this tower
could simply be removed if the new owners did not like it, but
gave no estimate of the cost of doing so. Removing a 10-foot
concrete platform and 95-foot steel structure would not appear to
be simple or inexpensive. As with any other benefit or
detriment, the cost of removing the tower would have to be
factored into the price of the home. The fact that in what was
described as a highly desirable, well-maintained, residential
area, the home now was owned by a corporation and occupied by
tenants, rather than the property owner, also supported the
Board's conclusion that the character of the neighborhood would
be affected by the commercial use of the property.
The objectors in this case presented no real estate expert.
Although the Court observed in
Smart SMR,
supra (152
N.J. at
336),
that a negative effect on real estate prices generally
would not be presumed and should be proven by experts, it is
reasonable to believe the Court was assuming that, in most cases,
the tower would actually be constructed in an area zoned for
commercial, industrial, or mixed uses, perhaps with residences
nearby. The distinguishing factor here is Northeast's attempt to
justify locating the 95-foot tower in an exclusively residential
zone where it would be adjacent to the actual home and fall short
of meeting setback requirements established for much lower
buildings, let alone for structures almost 100 feet tall. Even
in the absence of expert testimony, the record supported the
Board's conclusion that existence of such a tower would change
the character of the area, adversely affect real estate prices,
and impair the intent of the zoning scheme.
II.
The Board argues that, contrary to the trial judge's
conclusion, its decision did not violate the Telecommunications
Act of 1996, Pub. L. No. 104-104,
110 Stat. 56 (codified
principally at
47 U.S.C.A.
§§151-614 (1996)) (TCA or Act),
because the intent and effect of its decision was to require that
communications towers be located in a more suitable zone within
the Borough, not to ban them altogether.
The trial judge concluded that "the Board's denial of
plaintiff's application violates the Telecommunications Act of
1996" because the Act forbids state and local governments from
regulating the placement of wireless facilities in such a manner
as to prohibit the provision of personal wireless services. He
did not explain how the Board's decision would have had such an
effect. Northeast argues that the Board violated the Act because
its decision was not based on substantial evidence in the record.
The TCA does limit the "regulation of the placement,
construction, and modification of personal wireless service
facilities by any State or local government or instrumentality":
It provides that State or local government "(I) shall not
unreasonably discriminate among providers of functionally
equivalent services; and (II) shall not prohibit or have the
effect of prohibiting the provision of personal wireless
services."
47 U.S.C.A.
§332(c)(7)(B)(i). In addition, the
municipality must act on requests for authorization to construct
or modify such facilities "within a reasonable time,"
47 U.S.C.A.
§332(c)(7)(B)(ii), and may not regulate such facilities on the
basis of the environmental effects of the emitted radio
transmissions, as long as the transmissions comply with federal
regulations,
47 U.S.C.A.
§332(c)(7)(B)(iv). Denials of such
requests must be in writing and "supported by substantial
evidence contained in a written record."
47 U.S.C.A.
§332(c)(7)(B)(iii). Finally, the Act provides that any person
adversely affected by the decision of a state or local government
regarding personal wireless services may commence an action in
any court, state or federal.
47 U.S.C.A.
§332(c)(7)(B)(v);
Smart SMR,
supra (152
N.J. at 326).
The Board's decision here did not violate the TCA. First,
Northeast did not file its complaint under the TCA. Second, as
observed in
Smart SMR,
supra (152
N.J. at 326), the Act parallels
restrictions already imposed by New Jersey's Municipal Land Use
Law,
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-1 to -136, and the New Jersey Radiation
Protection Act,
N.J.S.A. 26:2D-1 to -23.4, requiring that the
municipal land use agency act within a reasonable time, that it
memorialize its decision in writing, that its decision be
supported by sufficient credible evidence, and that localities
may not regulate radiation emissions as long as the emissions
comply with state regulations.
Finally, no evidence in the record indicated that failure to
permit the construction or continued use of plaintiff's
communications tower would have the effect of prohibiting
coverage outright.
In addition, the TCA imposes no obligation that a board
accept all expert testimony presented.
New York SMSA Ltd. Part.
v. Board of Adj. of Middletown Tp.,
supra (324
N.J. Super. at
175-177). The TCA is inapplicable here where there is no
evidence that the Board's decision effectively prohibited access
to the wireless use serviced by Northeast's tower. The Board's
decision acted as "neither a moratorium nor a blanket
prohibition," but was "just one decision in a municipality that
permits wireless facilities in other locations."
Id. at 176.
The judgment of the Law Division is reversed and the
determination of the Zoning Board of Adjustment of the Borough of
West Paterson is reinstated.
Footnote: 1 1
47 U.S.C.A.
§§151 et seq.
Footnote: 2 2 The statute was amended in 1997 to clarify that even
proponents of an inherently beneficial use must show that the
requested relief could be granted without substantial detriment
or impairment of the zoning plan. L. 1997, c. 145, § 1.
Footnote: 3 3 This case was appealed as of right and remanded by the
Supreme Court for reconsideration in light of Smart SMR, supra.
After remand we affirmed, New Brunswick Cellular Tel. Co. v.
Borough of S. Plainfield Bd. of Adj.,
314 N.J. Super. 102, 104
(App. Div. 1998), holding that denial of the variance was not
arbitrary and capricious. Plaintiffs again appealed and the
Supreme Court reversed. New Brunswick Cellular Tel. Co. d/b/a
Comcast Cellular One v. Borough of S. Plainfield Bd. of Adj.,
160 N.J. 1 (1999). This case is discussed infra.
Footnote: 4 4 In New Brunswick Cellular Tel. Co., supra (160 N.J. at 19
20), Justice O'Hern would have remanded the matter to the board
because both the board and the Law Division judge had decided the
case under the inherently beneficial standard. That is not the
case here.
Footnote: 5 5 This restricted role of the trial court in such matters is
in contrast to that of a municipal governing body hearing a
challenge to the action of a board of adjustment as when, for
example, such appeal is taken in instances authorized by N.J.S.A.
40:55D-17. Evesham Tp. Zoning Bd. of Adj. v. Evesham Tp.
Council,
86 N.J. 295, 300-302 (1981). The municipal governing
body hearing the appeal reviews the record de novo, and then
makes its own findings of fact and conclusions of law. Id. at
301-302. Thereafter, the reviewing court is limited to
determining if the governing body's findings were supported by
the record and whether the decision was arbitrary, capricious, or
unreasonable. Id. at 302.
Footnote: 6 6 It is unclear whether the judge received the requested
proposed findings since they are not in the record.