STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
CLARKSBURG INN,
Defendant-Appellant.
_______________________________________________________________
Argued January 26, 2005 - Decided March 11, 2005
Before Judges Newman, Axelrad and Holston, Jr.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Monmouth County, Docket
No. 03-094.
Richard J. Simon argued the cause for appellant.
Simon L. Kaufman argued the cause for respondent (Lomurro, Davison, Eastman & Munoz,
attorneys; Mr. Kaufman, on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
HOLSTON, JR.
Defendant, Clarksburg Inn (Inn), appeals the January 30, 2004 order of the Superior
Court, Law Division, Monmouth County entered after a trial de novo on the
record of the September 29, 2003 trial before the Millstone Township Municipal Court,
finding defendant guilty of two violations of Millstone Township Anti-Noise Ordinance No. 3-15
(Ordinance) on February 1, 2003 and June 20, 2003, respectively. Defendant does not
challenge the factual conclusions reached by the Law Division. Instead, defendant seeks a
reversal of the two guilty verdicts based on two grounds. The first claim
is that the Ordinance is unconstitutional on its face because it is impermissibly
vague and overbroad. Second, it is unconstitutional as applied, because the Ordinance was
applied in a subjective manner without taking into account the reasonableness of defendant's
conduct. We affirm.
Defendant makes the following arguments for our consideration on this appeal.
POINT I
THE DEFENDANT'S CONVICTIONS BELOW SHOULD BE VACATED BECAUSE THE MILLSTONE ANTI-NOISE ORDINANCE IS
IMPERMISSIBLY VAGUE, AND VIOLATES THE DUE PROCESS CLAUSE OF THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT.
A. An ordinance is unconstitutional and violates due process if persons of common intelligence
must necessarily guess at its meaning and differ as to its application.
B. Millstone Ordinance No. 3-15 is unconstitutionally vague and unenforceable.
C. A constitutionally sound noise ordinance contains objective criteria for definitions and enforcement, such
as sound decibel levels.
D. The Law Division's decision should be reversed because sufficient credible evidence present in
the record does not exist to uphold its conclusion that the ordinance is
constitutional.
POINT II
THE MUNICIPAL COURT ERRED BY APPLYING THE ORDINANCE IN A SUBJECTIVE MANNER, AND
NOT TAKING INTO ACCOUNT THE REASONABLENESS OF THE DEFENDANT'S CONDUCT.
On February 1, 2003, the Clarksburg Inn was issued Summons 2003-000701 on a
complaint of excessive noise. On May 27, 2003, the case was listed for
trial before Judge Gelson at the Millstone Township Municipal Court. Following a conference
between the municipal prosecutor, defense counsel and witnesses, the Township agreed to defer
prosecution for ninety days, and if there were no further complaints of noise
violations, the summons would be dismissed. There was an agreement that the noise
level from music would be lowered and monitored, that there would be no
live bands or music on the deck, and that no noise would be
audible from a distance of 100 feet away.
Defendant violated the terms of the agreement on June 20, 2003 and July
12, 2003. Summons 2003-000618 was issued for the June 20, 2003 violation and
Summons 2003-000620 was issued for the July 12, 2003 violation.
On September 9, 2003, the matter was listed for trial before Judge Gelson.
The judge proceeded on the summonses for the February 1 and June 20,
2003 violations. The court did not proceed with the July 12, 2003 violation.
The State's first witness, Roger Weltner, testified that he lived eighty-one feet from
Clarksburg Inn on the same side of the street and that he had
been enduring ongoing disturbances from loud music from the Inn, a bar/package store,
since June 26, 2002. Weltner stated that on February 1, 2003, he was
at home in his bedroom with the windows closed. He was disturbed by
"very loud" music, which he could clearly hear from a live band playing
at the Inn. He could not sleep. Weltner found it necessary to call
the State Police three times that evening: first at 9:47 p.m., again at
11:02 p.m. and a third time at 11:45 p.m. The noise remained continually
loud and disturbing throughout the evening. Finally, after a third call, the loud
noise emanating from the Inn subsided.
Weltner testified that the second incident occurred when he arrived home from work
at 4:00 p.m. on June 20, 2003. A disc jockey was playing music
on the deck of the Inn. Weltner was disturbed by the sound level
of the noise being generated from defendant's premises, which was "very loud" to
the extent that he could actually discern the words being sung from that
distance. Before he came home, his wife had called the Inn to complain
about the noise. Weltner again called the State Police who responded, and the
loud noise ended.
Roger Strickland, the State's second witness, testified to living 270 feet from defendant's
premises on the opposite side of the street. On February 1, 2003 at
approximately 9:00 p.m., he was inside his home with the windows closed watching
television when he was disturbed by "clearly audible" loud noise and music coming
from the Inn. The noise was so loud that it drowned out the
sound of his television and caused his windows to vibrate. He testified that
the noise was annoying and disturbing and persisted until after midnight.
Strickland further testified that on June 20, 2003 at approximately 4:00 p.m., he
was again disturbed by loud noise and music coming from the Inn. The
noise was clearly audible from 270 feet away but seemed to him like
it was only ten feet away. The music was so loud that he
could hear the lyrics. The noise disturbed Strickland's peace and quiet. Strickland was
so annoyed that he contacted defendant's attorney to complain about the noise.
Dris Kowalic testified to living 500 to 600 feet from the Inn. During
the winter months of 2003, he was disturbed by loud music coming from
the Inn every weekend. His windows were closed, but he could still hear
the music, loud bass, and people singing from that distance. The disturbance stopped
for about two weeks after the May 27, 2003 municipal court proceeding but
then continued to be loud on the weekends. The noise was so loud
and disturbing that Kowalic could only sleep in the back room of his
home.
See footnote 1
State Trooper M. Budrewicz testified that on February 1, 2003, he went to
the Clarksburg Inn three times on noise complaints from Weltner and Strickland. The
first two times, he spoke to a man named Watkins, who was the
"guy in charge" at the Inn. The trooper asked that the noise be
turned down. When the trooper returned the third time, he issued a summons.
The defense presented no witnesses. Neither the State nor defense counsel made a
closing statement. Judge Gelson found the Clarksburg Inn guilty as to both summonses.
The sentence for the first summons was a $500 fine and $30 costs.
The sentence on the second summons was $750 fine and $30 costs. The
payment of fines was stayed pending appeal.
On September 30, 2003, the Clarksburg Inn appealed. After a trial de novo
on the municipal court record in the Law Division on January 30, 2004,
Judge Kreizman found defendant guilty as to both summonses, entered a judgment of
conviction and imposed the same sentence as the municipal court.
3-15.2 Definition of Noise. Without intending to limit the generality of subsection 3-15.1,
the following acts are hereby declared to be examples of loud, disturbing and
unnecessary noise in violation of this section:
a. Radios; Televisions; Phonographs. The playing, use or operation of any radio receiving
set, television, musical instrument, phonograph or other machine or device for the producing
or reproducing of sound in such manner as to disturb the peace, quiet
and comfort of neighboring inhabitants or with louder volume than is necessary for
convenient hearing for persons who are in the room, vehicle or chamber in
which the machine or device is operated and who are voluntary listeners. The
operation of such a set, instrument, phonograph, machine or device so that it
is clearly audible at a distance of one hundred (100') feet from the
building, structure or vehicle in which it is located shall be prima facie
evidence of a violation of this section.
[(emphasis added).]
Defendant contends that the language in Section 3-15.1 of the Ordinance is ambiguous.
Defendant claims that the terms "loud," "unnecessary" and "unusual" are subjective and lack
any objective component. Also unclear are the terms and phrases "likely to annoy,"
"disturb," "injure" or "endanger the comfort, repose, health, peace or safety of others."
Further, defendant argues that the phrase "clearly audible" in the Ordinance is vague.
We disagree.
In State v. Holland,
132 N.J. Super. 17, 21 (App. Div. 1975), the
defendant was found guilty of violating a noise ordinance, which read, in relevant
part:
(a) The making, creation or permitting of any unreasonably loud, disturbing or unnecessary
noise in the Village is hereby prohibited.
(b) The making, creating or permitting of any noise of such character, intensity
or duration as to be detrimental to the life, health or welfare of
any individual or which either steadily or intermittently annoys, disturbs, injures or endangers
the comfort, repose, peace of safety of any individual is hereby prohibited.
[(emphasis added).]
In reviewing the matter de novo, the Law Division found that the provision
was unconstitutionally vague. Id. at 22. This court reversed, determining that noise regulation
is a "subject matter [which] renders specific and precise definitions of prohibited conduct
difficult to formulate." Id. at 23. In determining that the ordinance intended to
prohibit noises that would disturb the peace and constitute common law nuisance, this
court further explained:
From the beginning our cases dealing with nuisances based upon noise have held
that the matter is a relative one, requiring the weighing of the competing
interests and rights of the parties in each case, and that to constitute
a nuisance and a disturbance of the peace a noise must be an
[u]nreasonable one in the circumstances or cause [m]aterial annoyance. The leading case, and
the one most often cited, is Benton v. Kernan,
130 N.J. Eq. 193,
21 A.2d 755 (E. & A. 1941) which laid down the test that
"A noise may constitute an actionable nuisance . . . but it must
be a noise which affects injuriously the health or comfort of ordinary people
in the vicinity to an unreasonable extent", and it ". . . becomes
actionable only when it passes the limits of reasonable adjustment to the conditions
of the locality and of the needs of the maker to the needs
of the listener[.]"
[Id. at 25-26 (emphasis added).]
The language set forth in Holland is strikingly similar to the Ordinance here.
The Ordinance does not explicitly define the terms "loud," "unnecessary," "unusual," "annoy," "disturb,"
"injure," "endanger" or "audible" that defendant contends are vague and ambiguous. Therefore, its
plain meaning should be applied in construing the Ordinance as a whole. The
terms, "unusual" and "audible," are not explicitly set forth in the Ordinance. The
ordinary definition of "[a]udible" is: "capable of being heard[]" while "unusual" is defined
as: "not usual, common, or ordinary." Webster's II New College Dictionary 73, 1211
(2d ed. 1999). "[A] reviewing court should not give undue emphasis to the
presence or absence of a single word. The ordinance should be examined in
the context of the entirety of its language giving due deference to the
title and its overall intent." Downs Ford, Inc. v. Dover Tp.,
230 N.J.
Super. 623, 627 (Ch. Div. 1989)(citing Holland, supra, 132 N.J. Super. at 24).
This court in State v. New York Cent. R. Co.,
37 N.J. Super. 42, 48 (App. Div. 1955), stated: "That there may be marginal cases in
which it is difficult to determine the side of the line on which
a particular fact situation falls, is not a sufficient reason to hold the
language too ambiguous to define a penal offense." No more than a reasonable
degree of certainty can be demanded. In that case, the defendant was found
liable for violating a noise ordinance which read, in part: "Whatever loud and
unnecessary noise which disturbs the public peace . . . between the hours
of Eleven o'clock P.M. and Seven o'clock A.M. is hereby declared a nuisance
and is prohibited." Id. at 45. There, the defendant's idling train engines caused
loud and unnecessary noise during the night. Ibid.
In State v. Smith,
46 N.J. 510, 514, cert. denied,
385 U.S. 838,
87 S. Ct. 85,
17 L. Ed.2d 71 (1966), the Supreme Court
sustained a statute which provided that "Any person who by noisy or disorderly
conduct disturbs or interferes with the quiet or good order of any place
of assembly . . . is a disorderly person." The Court said:
[D]efendant says the statute is void for vagueness because it does not spell
out the degree of noise or the details of a disorder which will
offend. Of course, the statute does not do so in specific terms, and
it may be doubted that the ingenuity of man could meet that demand
if the Constitution made it. But the Constitution does not insist upon the
impossible. It asks only what the subject will reasonably permit, and hence if
there is a public interest in need of protection, due process does not
stand in the way merely because the subject defies minute prescription.
[Id. at 518.]
"[F]ormulating a specific and precise ordinance regulating noise and disturbances of the peace
is a difficult task." State v. Friedman,
304 N.J. Super. 1, 6 (App.
Div. 1997) (citing State v. Holland, supra, 132 N.J. Super. at 23). However,
"an ordinance regulating [loud, disturbing, and unnecessary noises] may utilize general language so
long as it notifies the public of the conduct it proscribes." Ibid. (citing
State v. Powell,
250 N.J. Super. 1, 7 (App. Div. 1991)).
In Powell, the defendant was driving his motor vehicle and was stopped for
playing loud music. This court reviewed the ordinance that stated that it was
unlawful for any person to make any "excessive[], unnecessary or unusually loud noise
which either annoys, injures, disturbs or endangers the comfort, health, repose, peace or
safety of others within the City . . . ." State v. Powell,
supra, 250 N.J. Super. at 4. We held that the ordinance was specific
enough to pass constitutional muster under the void-for-vagueness test and that similar challenges
to anti-noise ordinances had been rejected in the past where the noise constituted
a common law nuisance. Id. at 5.
In Bynum v. Mayor and Tp. Comm. of Winslow Tp.,
181 N.J. Super. 2, 5 (App. Div. 1981), certif. denied,
89 N.J. 440 (1982), Randall Bynum
sought to prevent his prosecution by the township for allegedly violating the township
ordinance restriction of the use of radio transmitters, which adversely affected other township
residents' reception of television, stereo and other electronic devices. The ordinance provided that
it would be unlawful to transmit radio signals that caused or created electrical
visual or audible interference or that annoyed, disturbed, or endangered the comfort, repose,
health, peace, safety or general well-being of others within the limits of the
township. Id. at 4. This court held that the regulation was "clear, specific
and reasonable" since it dealt with the abatement of noise nuisances that interfere
with the use and enjoyment of property of others. Id. at 6. Since
the ordinance sought to ban loud and unusual noises that annoy, disturb, injure,
or endanger the comfort, repose, health, peace, safety of others, we ruled it
was an entirely proper exercise of police power to protect the health, safety
and welfare of local residents by abatement of nuisances and preservation of order.
Ibid. To that end, we found that "municipalities may adopt ordinances regulating or
preventing loud, disturbing and unnecessary noise detrimental to the public health and welfare."
Ibid. (citing State v. Holland, supra, 132 N.J. Super. at 22).
In the case at bar, Millstone Township enacted Ordinance No. 3-15 to prohibit
any loud, unnecessary or unusual noise or any noise that does or is
likely to annoy, disturb, injure or endanger the comfort, repose, health, peace or
safety of others. The language of the Ordinance is substantially similar to the
language of the ordinances in Powell and Bynum. The Ordinance does not ban
all noise. To the contrary, it sets forth specific, objective criteria for a
violation to occur: clearly, audible noise at a distance of 100 feet from
the building in which it is located is prima facie evidence of a
violation of the noise ordinance. The Township enacted the Ordinance for the health
and safety of its residents, and the Ordinance is presumed to be valid
and reasonable.
Defendant argues that the vague language in the Ordinance should be replaced with
objective criteria for enforcement based on sound decibel levels. Relying on Dupres v.
City of Newport,
978 F. Supp. 429 (D.R.I. 1997), and Parachutes, Inc. v.
Lakewood Tp.,
121 N.J. Super. 48 (App. Div. 1972), certif. denied,
62 N.J. 331 (1973), defendant argues that such criteria have been accepted and are based
on an objective standard for enforcement. Additionally, defendant notes that forty-six municipalities in
New Jersey as well as the New Jersey Noise Control Act regulate noise
based on decibel levels.
Defendant's arguments are unpersuasive. In Dupres, the district court held that the decibel
provision of a municipal noise ordinance was not constitutionally vague. In satisfying the
due process requirements of the Fourteenth Amendment, the court found that the decibel
provision set forth specific, objective, and measurable limits on sound for various parts
of the city so that individuals would be aware of what conduct was
proscribed. Dupres, supra, 978 F. Supp. at 433. In Parachutes, Inc., this court
held that a municipality was not barred from regulating noise that was coming
from aircraft hovering and cruising at low levels for sport parachuting and that
forbidding sounds over fifty decibels during night hours and sixty decibels during the
day was not discriminatory. Parachutes, Inc., supra, 121 N.J. Super. at 50-51.
Even if decibel levels are a "technological" better means for measuring noise levels,
the Parachutes, Inc. case was rendered three years prior to Holland. Therefore, the
technology for utilizing decibel levels was known for at least three years before
Holland was decided. However, our decision in Holland did not require a decibel
level based ordinance as a prerequisite for a noise ordinance to pass constitutional
muster. Defendant's suggestion that this court disagree with our decisions in Holland, Bynum,
Powell and Friedman because more technological advances in measuring noise levels now exist
than existed at the time of the Holland decision is without merit.
See footnote 2
If
Millstone Township decides to amend the Ordinance to measure noise based on decibel
levels, it is, of course, permitted to do so. It is not this
court's role to require the choice of one method over another when as
here the present language in the Ordinance is neither vague nor ambiguous and
reasonably notifies the public of the conduct it proscribes.
II
[State v. Locurto,
157 N.J. 463, 474 (1999) (citations omitted).]
Defendant contends that the Ordinance's subjective application to the Inn's activities denied the
Inn due process. The Ordinance sets a boundary of 100 feet as prima
facie evidence of a sound constituting "noise." In fact, defendant was warned of
this requirement at the May 27, 2003 hearing when Judge Gelson spoke with
defense counsel:
THE COURT: Okay. Now, and I am sure you have explained, Mr. Mordas
[defense counsel], in terms of the music as well is that, with regard
to the statute, essentially, it is the 100 foot rule in terms of
establishing a prima facie case.
I have no idea as to anything that involves this summons or whatever.
But, I am saying for future reference, just in terms of trying to
keep some type of a perimeter on what would be reasonable.
MR. MORDAS: Clearly audible within 100 feet.
THE COURT: Exactly sir. I am sure you have discussed that with your
client.
MR. MORDAS: Yes, I have, Judge.
[(emphasis added).]
Thus, the transcript reveals that defendant was aware of the statute, its requirements
and Judge Gelson's advice that 100 feet should be used as a "perimeter."
Further, the transcript reveals that defendant was warned of the repercussions of violating
the Ordinance from its own attorney. The admonitions gave clarification to any ambiguity
that defendant might have had. Nowhere in the transcript does it indicate that
defendant did not understand the meaning or purpose of the Ordinance.
Defendant cites State v. Friedman in support of its position. Friedman involved the
application of a noise ordinance to a dog barking complaint. We explained the
notion of reasonableness in the context of noise ordinances as follows:
From the beginning our cases dealing with nuisances based upon noise have held
that the matter is a relative one, requiring the weighing of the competing
interests and rights of the parties in each case, and that to constitute
a nuisance and a disturbance of the peace a noise must be an
unreasonable one in the circumstances or causes material annoyance.
[State v. Friedman, supra, 304 N.J. Super. at 7 (quoting
State v. Holland, supra, 132 N.J. Super. at 25) (emphasis in original).]
Thus, "[such an] ordinance should be interpreted to mean that noise will become
actionable only if it is unreasonable or unnecessary in the circumstances." Ibid. (quoting
Downs Ford, Inc. v. Dover Tp., supra, 230 N.J. Super. at 628).
In Friedman, this court held that the trial court's "failure to consider the
reasonableness of the Friedmans' [dog owners'] conduct [in letting the dog out in
its yard for a few moments before going to work in the morning]
in determining whether the ordinance was violated makes the application of the ordinance
in this case unconstitutional as to them." Id. at 8. We determined that
"[b]arking is 'a natural canine act' and the ordinance, as applied in this
case, does not provide a sufficient basis for concluding that the kind of
barking that occurred here is prohibited." Id. at 9 (citing City of Spokane
v. Fischer,
754 P.2d 1241, 1242-43 (Wash. 1988)).
Unlike in Friedman, the Law Division judge considered the reasonableness of defendant's conduct
in managing its business and its right to utilize live music in the
operation of the business. Judge Kreizman stated:
I find that the Inn has an absolute right to have bands, to
have DJs, to have a jukebox, whatever kind of music they have. But
I find that the ordinance is constitutional.
I find that the ordinance does prohibit the infringing upon the lives of
those people who live within the immediate vicinity. They are people within 100
feet, 200 feet, 500, 600 feet. I find where somebody is unable to
listen and watch television in the middle of the winter with his windows
closed, I find that the music is too loud.
In weighing the rights of the Inn to conduct their business and the
right of the citizens to be free from the nuisance of excessive noise,
I find that the equities lie in favor of the citizens.
I find that the judge below and this Court has weighed the reasonableness
of the defendant's conduct. I find it unreasonable under the circumstances, that there
was an abuse of their right to conduct their business by making excessive
noise.
Clearly, the decision to uphold the Ordinance's application to the facts elicited in
the testimony was based on a finding that the Ordinance was neither vague
nor overbroad. That conclusion was derived after considering the testimony of Weltner, Strickland,
and Kowalic, who corroborated the noise emanating from the Inn, Trooper Budrewicz, who
testified that he warned defendant about the noise level, and the transcripts of
proceedings before Judge Gelson in which the parties initially reached a compromise and
defendant was warned about the noise level. Based on the credible and sufficient
evidence in the record, Judge Kreizman's decision finding defendant in violation of Millstone
Ordinance No. 3-15 was based on objective criteria after a balancing of the
right of the Inn to conduct its business and the right of citizens
within 100 to 600 feet from the Inn to listen and watch television
in the middle of winter with their windows closed because the music from
the band was too loud and infringed on the right of those citizens
to be free from excessive noise.
We hold that (1) the Ordinance is neither vague nor overbroad and, therefore,
not violative of the Fourteenth Amendment; (2) the plain meaning of the language
of the Ordinance is in compliance with the law that we previously set
forth in Holland, Bynum, Powell and Friedman; (3) reasonable people are able to
understand the proscriptions that are set forth in the Ordinance; and (4) the
Ordinance, as applied, used a reasonableness standard in its application. The Law Division
judge properly considered the reasonableness of the Inn's conduct when balanced against the
objective right of nearby citizens to be free from the nuisance of excessive
noise as proscribed by the Ordinance. Defendant's conviction was based on substantial credible
evidence in the municipal court record.
Affirmed.
Footnote: 1
In his reply brief, defendant urges this court not to rely on Kowalic's
testimony because he had no recollection of any sounds emanating from defendant's premises
on either February 1, 2003 or June 20, 2003. However, Kowalic's testimony corroborated
the testimony of both Weltner and Strickland.
Footnote: 2
It was pointed out at oral argument that anti-noise ordinances, based on decimal
levels, are impractical and, therefore, difficult to enforce. The issue of whether anti-noise
ordinances based on decimal levels are better or more preferred has been the
topic of discussions in recent years. Included in the discussions has been their
difficulty of practical application for enforcement purposes. See Kristen A. Demers, Note, Recent
Development In Constitutional Law,
27 Stetson L. Rev. 1007 (1997); William B. Harvey,
III, Symposium on the Regulation of Free Expression in the Public Forum, 14
St. Louis U. Pub. L. Rev. 593 (1995).