SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-2458-93T1
RIDGEWOOD EDUCATION ASSOCIATION,
ELAINE HIGGINS and ANN HOVAN,
Petitioners-Appellants,
v.
RIDGEWOOD BOARD OF EDUCATION,
Respondent-Respondent.
_____________________________________________
Submitted: March 22, l995
Decided: October 16, 1995
Before Judges Baime, Kestin and A. A.
Rodríguez.
On appeal from the State Board of Education.
Bucceri & Pincus, attorneys for appellants
(Gregory T. Syrek, of counsel and on the
brief).
Sills Cummis Zuckerman Radin Tischman
Epstein & Gross, attorneys for respondent
(Mark J. Blunda, of counsel and, with Derlys
Marie Gutierrez, on the brief).
Deborah T. Poritz, Attorney General, attorney
for the State Board of Education (David
Earle Powers, Deputy Attorney General, on the
statement in lieu of brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
KESTIN, J.A.D.
Petitioners sought a declaration from the Commissioner of
Education (Commissioner) that a policy adopted by the Ridgewood
Board of Education (Board) limiting employment of supplemental
teachers to two consecutive years was arbitrary, capricious and
unreasonable. The matter was transmitted to the Office of
Administrative Law as a contested case, N.J.S.A. 52:14B-10(c), and
was heard on stipulated facts and written arguments. The
administrative law judge found that the Ridgewood Education
Association (REA) was "the exclusive representative for collective
negotiations for part-time supplemental teachers employed by the
Board" and that petitioners Higgins and Hovan were "tenured part-time supplemental teachers employed by the Board and also are
residents and taxpayers of Ridgewood...." The judge also
determined that the challenged policy applied "to those employees
hired after February 24, 1992, the date the policy was adopted",
and that there was "no current employee or member of the
Association whose employment status [was] currently affected by the
implementation of the policy."See footnote 1
Based on these findings, the administrative law judge held
that, although the issue of the validity of the policy was ripe for
adjudication, the petitioning parties lacked standing to challenge
it. The REA was seen to lack standing because none of its current
members was affected by the policy. The individual petitioners
were held to lack standing as persons directly affected by the
policy because they had acquired tenure as part-time supplemental
teachers and thus would be unaffected. They were also seen to lack
standing as residents and taxpayers for want of even "slight
additional private interest .... in the absence of showing that the
matter impacts the public interest." Among the authorities cited
in support of the latter view, the administrative law judge
referred to a series of school law decisions in which the
Commissioner had held that taxpayers lacking some additional
interest did not have adequate standing to challenge the personnel
decisions of school boards. The administrative law judge viewed
this matter as one involving issues relating to personnel.
Because all petitioners were held to lack standing, the matter
was dismissed without a decision on the merits. The administrative
law judge's findings and determinations were adopted by the
Commissioner as the final decision in the matter. The State Board
of Education affirmed for the reasons expressed in the final
decision. Petitioners appeal. We reverse.
Personnel decisions affecting particular individuals are
heavily impacted with privacy considerations and other personal
interests of significance. They are, therefore, sometimes treated
as unique in the balance with considerations of public interest.
See, e.g., Collins v. Camden County Health Dep't,
200 N.J. Super. 281, 288 (Law Div. 1984). We do not here address the
Commissioner's established policy that taxpayers be required to
show some additional special interest before being permitted to
challenge such personnel decisions. We do not view a challenge to
a statute, ordinance, regulation or policy that affects employment
rights in general to be of the same ilk, however. Where the
challenge is to an exercise of legislative or quasi-legislative
power, the public interest is necessarily involved and a different
standard applies.
The provision of New Jersey's Administrative Procedure Act
permitting "any interested person" to challenge the applicability
of any statute or rule enforced or administered by an agency,
N.J.S.A. 52:14B-8,See footnote 2 is based upon a venerable tradition of liberal
application of standing criteria, Crescent Park Tenants Ass'n v.
Realty Equity Corp. of N.Y.,
58 N.J. 98, 101, 107-11 (1971),
particularly in taxpayer suits and the like, see Bell v. Stafford
Tp.,
110 N.J. 384, 390-91 (1988); Walker v. Stanhope,
23 N.J. 657
(1957), in furtherance of the principles embodied in the
Declaratory Judgment Act, N.J.S.A. 2A:16-50, 53, especially as
regards exercises of legislative or quasi-legislative authority,
New Jersey Turnpike Auth. v. Parsons,
3 N.J. 235, 239-41 (1949).
An important function of standing rules and other justiciability
norms is to protect against the issuance of advisory decisions.
Bell, supra, 110 N.J. at 391; Parsons, supra, 3 N.J. at 240. The
norms are not to be applied in a wooden fashion to preclude
"expeditious relief from uncertainty with respect to rights when
claims are in genuine conflict." Bell, supra, 110 N.J. at 391.
In holding that the REA lacked standing to challenge the
Board's policy, the Commissioner erred in the test applied to
associations representing defined interests. It was incorrect to
view the REA as lacking standing on the ground that no current
employee of the Board and none of REA's present members were
affected by the implementation of the policy. Only "[a]
substantial likelihood of some harm visited upon the plaintiff in
the event of an unfavorable decision is needed for the purposes of
standing." New Jersey State Chamber of Commerce v. New Jersey
Election Law Enforcement Comm'n,
82 N.J. 57, 67 (1980). Where a
plaintiff association "would have an obvious, albeit indirect,
interest in the effect upon others of statutory and administrative
regulations," id. at 68, requirements for standing are met. The
REA's relationship to the Board policy under attack "is not that of
[a] total stranger[] or casual interloper[]." Ibid. That
association's interest in protecting the employment status of
prospective members who, when appointed as part-time supplemental
teachers, would, under the adopted policy, be denied an opportunity
to acquire tenure, is an adequate basis for according it
representational standing in a suit challenging the validity of the
policy.
The Commissioner's view of Higgins's and Hovan's standing was
likewise too stinting. See Haines v. Burlington County Bridge
Comm'n,
1 N.J. Super. 163, 171-72 (App. Div. 1949), aff'd sub. nom.
Driscoll v. Burlington Bridge Co.,
8 N.J. 433, cert. denied,
344 U.S. 838,
73 S. Ct. 34,
97 L. Ed.2d 652 (1952). To the extent
their status as residents and taxpayers of the school district was
not itself an adequate basis for according standing - a proposition
of questionable validity, see Kozesnik v. Montgomery Tp.,
24 N.J. 154, 177-78 (1957) - Higgins and Hovan, by reason of their
professional status and involvement, must be seen as having
satisfied any additional requirement that may exist for a "slight
private interest, added to and harmonizing with the general public
interest," Hudson Bergen County Retail Liquor Stores Ass'n v. Board
of Comm'rs, City of Hoboken,
135 N.J.L. 502, 510 (E. & A. 1947), in
order for their standing to be recognized. Elizabeth Federal Sav.
& Loan Ass'n v. Howell,
24 N.J. 488, 499-500 (1957). We see no
reason why this State's historic liberal approaches to the issue of
standing in general, see Crescent Pk., supra, 58 N.J. at 101,
should not apply to taxpayer suits challenging the quasi-legislative actions of local boards of education. Silverman v.
Board of Ed., Tp. of Millburn,
134 N.J. Super. 253, 257-58 (Law
Div.), aff'd o.b.
131 N.J. Super. 435 (App. Div. 1975).
The official actions of boards of education are identical in
the public interest sense to those of local governing bodies. See
ibid. Although the route of review is different by reason of
N.J.S.A. 18A:6-9 and 52:14B-8, the principles of standing governing
facial challenges to official conduct are the same in either
context.
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings on the merits.
Footnote: 1 In exceptions to the administrative law judge's initial
decision, petitioners asserted that this finding was not supported
by the record, more specifically that there was no evidence whether
any part-time supplemental teachers had been hired after the
effective date of the challenged policy. The Commissioner held
that the Board had made such an assertion which, having gone
unchallenged by petitioners, was deemed to have been established.
We do not address the validity of this determination.
Footnote: 2 In general, declaratory rulings "with respect to the
applicability to any person, property or state of facts of any ...
rule enforced or administered by [a State] agency" are to be sought
from that agency. N.J.S.A. 52:14B-8. "[R]eview[s of] the validity
of any rule promulgated by [a State] agency or officer" are
generally within the jurisdiction of the Appellate Division. R.
2:2-3(a)(2). All reviews of quasi-legislative acts of local
agencies, whether framed as challenges to the facial validity of
such acts or to their validity as applied are properly sought in
the Law Division pursuant to R. 4:69 (actions in lieu of
prerogative writs).
The quasi-legislative acts of local and regional boards of
education are, however, generally subject to the jurisdiction of
the Commissioner "to hear and determine ... all controversies and
disputes arising under the school laws...." N.J.S.A. 18A:6-9.
Abbott v. Burke,
100 N.J. 269, 301 (1985); Hinfey v. Matawan Reg.
Bd. of Ed.,
77 N.J. 514, 525 (1978); Theodore v. Dover Bd. of Ed.,
183 N.J. Super. 407, 412-13 (App. Div. 1982). Thus, procedurally,
challenges to the facial validity of school board policies or to
their validity as applied more closely resemble proceedings brought
under N.J.S.A. 52:14B-8 than any other provision for declaratory
relief in respect of quasi-legislative acts.