NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court." Although it is posted on the
internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-1075-18T2
4 WATCHUNG AVENUE, LLC,
Plaintiff-Respondent/
Cross-Appellant,
v.
THE ZONING BOARD OF
ADJUSTMENT OF THE BOROUGH
OF CHATHAM and THE BOROUGH
OF CHATHAM,
Defendants-Appellants/
Cross-Respondents.
____________________________________
Argued December 16, 2019 – Decided January 31, 2020
Before Judges Messano and Ostrer.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
Division, Morris County, Docket No. L-1350-17.
James L. Lott, Jr. and Patrick J. Dwyer argued the cause
for appellants/cross-respondents (Riker, Danzig,
Scherer, Hyland & Perretti, LLP, attorneys for Borough
of Chatham; Nusbaum Stein Goldstein Bronstein &
Kron, attorneys for Zoning Board of Adjustment of the
Borough of Chatham; James L. Lott, Jr. and Patrick J.
Dwyer, of counsel and on the joint briefs; Diane N.
Hickey, on the joint briefs).
Robert L. Podvey argued the cause for respondent/
cross-appellant (Connell Foley, LLP, attorneys; Robert
L. Podvey, of counsel and on the brief; John W. Dalo,
on the briefs).
PER CURIAM
Plaintiff 4 Watchung Avenue, LLC, owns property in the Borough of
Chatham upon which it stores vehicles for two affiliated car dealerships located
in a neighboring municipality. Plaintiff began leasing the property in 1992 and
eventually purchased it in 2002 from Otto Schmidt, Jr. At the time, the property
contained a single-family dwelling and a gas station. Schmidt stored
automobiles on the property, and in connection with the sale to plaintiff, he
certified that the property had been used for "the purpose of storage of vehicles"
since 1968.
In 2013, Chatham amended the land use element of its master plan
pursuant to a report authored by Dr. Susan G. Blickstein, a professional planner.
The plan envisioned changes in the borough's M-1 and M-3 zoning districts to
create a proposed "Gateway to Chatham," an overlay zoning plan intended, in
part, to repurpose former sites of "historic manufacturing processes."
Amendments adopted to the general provisions of Chatham's zoning ordinance
A-1075-18T2
2
prohibited all uses not permitted as a principal, accessory, or conditional use in
any particular zone.
Plaintiff's property is located in the M-1 zone, and outdoor vehicle storage
is not a permitted use. Beginning in June 2013, Chatham's borough engineer
and zoning officer, Vincent DeNave, began inquiries into whether plaintiff had
obtained approvals to permit parking of vehicles on the property. These
culminated in a September 2014 notice of violation and order to abate the
parking and storing of cars on the property. Plaintiff filed an application with
the Zoning Board of Adjustment (the Board) appealing the violation, or,
alternatively, seeking a use variance and site plan approval to permit its
continued parking of cars on the property.
Apparently due to the press of other applications, a hearing was not
scheduled until August 24, 2016. On the day of the hearing, the Board's counsel
sent plaintiff's counsel a copy of an unsigned 1971 Board resolution approving
a variance application Schmidt had filed. 1 The approval was conditioned on the
1
The 1971 application characterized the parking of automobiles as a permitted
use under then-current zoning regulations, subject only to erection of a fence.
The 1971 Board resolution which was subsequently produced, however, states
that the application sought a use variance, since the proposed use was "a 'similar
use'" to those permitted in the zone. As we explain, nonetheless, plaintiff re -
A-1075-18T2
3
erection of a fence around the property, and it limited the number of vehicles
Schmidt could park to 125. As a result, no substantive presentation on the
application took place, as plaintiff considered its options, including amending
the application to request a certificate of nonconformity. See N.J.S.A. 40:55D-
68 (providing "any . . . person interested in any land upon which a
nonconforming use or structure exists may apply in writing for the issuance of
a certificate certifying that the use or structure existed before the adoption of the
ordinance which rendered the use or structure nonconforming").
At the next scheduled meeting, plaintiff's counsel told the Board that his
client intended to challenge the violation, as opposed to seeking a variance, by
demonstrating it was entitled to a certificate of nonconformity. 2 DeNave
testified about his efforts to ascertain whether plaintiff's and other properties in
the M-1 and M-3 zones had received appropriate municipal approvals in the past.
He identified a 1971 violation issued to Schmidt because the parking of vehicles
was not a permitted use at the time and surmised that this citation prompted
asserted before the Board that in 1971, the parking of automobiles was permitted
in the zone subject only to fencing.
2
At one point, plaintiff's counsel characterized the application as a "moving
target" because of the additional information regarding Schmidt's 1971
application.
A-1075-18T2
4
Schmidt's application to the Board for a variance. DeNave checked the records
for a neighboring property and found a 1970 Board resolution denying a variance
to park seventy vehicles on the property.
The precursor to the Municipal Land Use Law (MLUL), N.J.S.A. 40:55D-
1 to -163, was the Municipal Planning Act (MPA), 40:55-1.1 to -1.42, which
was in effect at the time of Schmidt's application. Under its terms, the Board's
favorable action on a variance application was only a recommendation to the
municipal governing body for approval. See N.J.S.A. 40:55-39(d) (1975). If
the governing body failed to act, its inaction was deemed a denial of the
variance. See N.J.S.A. 40:55-39.1 (1975) (providing that the governing body's
failure to take action on the board's recommendation granting a variance within
sixty days "shall be deemed to have been" a disapproval of the variance "as
though a resolution to that effect had been adopted"). The parties' review of
municipal records, partially in response to plaintiff's record request under the
Open Public Records Act (OPRA), N.J.S.A. 47:1A-1 to -13, produced no
documentary proof that Chatham's borough council ever approved Schmidt's
variance application. DeNave surmised that, despite the unsigned 1971 Board
resolution, Schmidt's use variance was never approved.
A-1075-18T2
5
Plaintiff's expert engineer and planner also testified, offering historic
aerial photographs of the site and interpretation of the ordinance at the time of
Schmidt's application. The planner opined that in 1971, outdoor vehicle storage
was a permitted conditional use, subject to the Board's approval. He opined that
vehicle storage was prohibited for the first time by a 1979 amendment. The
expert acknowledged, however, that plaintiff's current use of the property far
exceeded the 125 vehicles permitted by the 1971 resolution.
Dr. Blickstein, who also served as the Board's staff planner, was present
and significantly participated in the proceedings. She implicitly
accepted DeNave's opinion that the pre-1979 ordinance did not permit vehicle
storage as a conditional use in the zone, and that Schmidt's 1971 application was
for a use variance. At one point in the proceedings, Dr. Blickstein referred to
plaintiff's expert's interpretation as "absurd."
At the next Board hearing, plaintiff produced four 1971 articles from a
local community newspaper. They indicated the Board had approved Schmidt's
application and subsequently two other variance applications — filed on behalf
of Louis Rillo and Carmen C. Carlone — for vehicle storage on properties across
the street from Schmidt. Later articles reported the council's approval of the
Rillo and Carlone applications — for the parking of thirty and sixty cars
A-1075-18T2
6
respectively — as similar to an application approved the month before, but no
article explicitly mentioned action by the council on Schmidt's application. The
balance of the Board meeting included the testimony of plaintiff's planner
regarding the proposed site plan, which anticipated parking 282 cars on the
property. Two more hearings followed, at which plaintiff's principal and
environmental expert testified.
At the Board's March 22, 2017 meeting, its chairman set forth the
procedure to be followed in voting on plaintiff's application. With the consent
of plaintiff's counsel, the chairman proposed that the Board first vote on
plaintiff's appeal of the violation; if plaintiff's appeal was denied, then the Board
would consider plaintiff's application for a new use variance. The Board
unanimously denied plaintiff's appeal from the zoning officer's violation. It
concluded that Schmidt was required to obtain a use variance in 1971 because
the storage of automobiles was not a conditional use permitted in the zone under
the prior ordinance, and that the property had not been granted a use variance in
1971. The Board then voted to deny plaintiff a use variance. It passed a
memorializing resolution on April 26, 2017.
Plaintiff filed a complaint in lieu of prerogative writs alleging the Board's
actions were "arbitrary, capricious and unreasonable[.]" Plaintiff also asked the
A-1075-18T2
7
court to correct the Board's erroneous interpretation of the zoning ordinance,
presumably the one in effect in 1971. Plaintiff asserted the Board's action
resulted in a "taking," and it sought compensatory damages. Lastly, plaintiff
alleged Chatham was estopped from taking any enforcement action for alleged
violations of the zoning regulations given its failure to do so for more than forty
years.
The Law Division judge heard oral argument, after which he permitted
plaintiff additional time to file another OPRA request or otherwise attempt to
locate additional information regarding Schmidt's 1971 application and its
aftermath. The OPRA request yielded the minutes of the Board's August 1971
meeting, at which it passed a memorializing resolution approving Schmidt's use
variance. At the same 1971 meeting, the Board discussed the Rillo and Carlone
applications without taking a vote. The minutes of the Board's October 1971
meeting contained approval of the Rillo and Carlone variances, and the
December 1971 minutes of the borough council demonstrated approval of Rillo's
and Carlone's variances. However, despite a search of all borough council
records, there was nothing to indicate the council had ever approved or
disapproved Schmidt's variance.
A-1075-18T2
8
The parties entered into a consent order, which the judge executed and
filed. By its terms, the order remanded the matter to the Board for the limited
purpose of considering:
(i) The minutes of the Chatham Borough Zoning
Board's meeting held on the August 4, 1971[,]
regarding the application by Otto Schmidt;
(ii) The minutes of the Board's meeting held on August
4, 1971[,] and its reference to two similar applications
by different owners in the M-1 zone (Carlone and Rillo)
to allow the same use, namely, outdoor storage of
automobiles;
(iii) That the Notice of Violation and Order to Abate
issued to [plaintiff] on September 19, 2014[,] was the
only Notice of Violation issued by the Borough of
Chatham to [plaintiff] regarding its use of the property;
and
(iv) Such other matters as the Board or counsel for the
parties may raise but only to the extent the Board finds
them relevant.
Following two sessions, the Board again voted to deny plaintiff's appeal
from the violation and its application for a variance. In its memorializing
resolution, the Board considered the additional information specified in the
remand order. It rejected plaintiff's argument that the Board's recommendation
and the borough council's approval in 1971 of the Rillo and Carlone applications
for use variances implied the council approved Schmidt's application. The
A-1075-18T2
9
Board noted that Schmidt sought to store more vehicles on his property than
Rillo and Carlone intended to store on their two properties combined. The
resolution also addressed plaintiff's request for a use variance under N.J.S.A.
40:55D-70(d)(1) and explained the Board's conclusion that plaintiff had not
proven the positive or negative criteria under the statute.
The parties again appeared before the Law Division judge for further
argument. Plaintiff particularly emphasized the Board's failure to address
Chatham's forty-year lack of enforcement activities as implicit proof that
Schmidt obtained the variance in 1971, as well as justifying "equitable estoppel"
of further prosecution of the violation. Plaintiff also asserted that Dr.
Blickstein's involvement as both author of Chatham's master plan revision report
and the Board's staff planner presented a conflict of interest that tainted the
proceedings.
The judge's August 30, 2018 order granted plaintiff partial summary
judgment.3 In a lengthy written decision, the judge concluded that Dr.
3
The order also remanded the matter to the Board for "reconsideration of a d(2)
variance." See N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70(d)(2). The statute permits the grant of a
variance "to permit . . . an expansion of a nonconforming use[.]" In his opinion
following defendants' motion for reconsideration, the judge clarified that the
remand was for the Board's consideration of plaintiff's request for a d(1) use
variance.
A-1075-18T2
10
Blickstein's interpretation of the pre-79 ordinance and her involvement with
plaintiff's matter was not tainted by a conflict of interest. Recounting the
documentary evidence regarding Schmidt's 1971 variance application, the judge
reasoned, "[T]he question before the Court becomes: who gets the inference in
the absence of an official record?" He concluded "the substantial evidence in
the record supports a finding that the 1971 Schmidt application was approved
by the [b]orough [c]ouncil, and that [p]laintiff's predecessor-in-interest was
granted a use variance." The judge concluded "the Board acted in an arbitrary
and capricious manner as it insufficiently explained its reasoning and failed to
give due consideration to the strong circumstantial evidence[.]" He granted
partial judgment to plaintiff, and as a result, declined to reach the estoppel issue.
At oral argument, we asked the parties to explain the scope of the intended
remand contained in this August order, and a September 4, 2018 order that
ostensibly made ministerial corrections to the August order. We questioned
whether the appeal was truly final as to all issues. The parties advised that the
orders did not intend, nor did the parties anticipate, any further action before the
Board, and that the orders reflected the intended scope of the court's earlier
remand to the Board that actually preceded and was completed before entry of
the August order. The parties advised that depending on the outcome of this
appeal, Chatham reserved its right to enforce the 125-car limit in the 1971
Schmidt variance.
A-1075-18T2
11
The Board moved for reconsideration. 4 It argued that under the MPA, the
borough council's failure to approve Schmidt's use variance was tantamount to
its denial. Therefore, the judge should have deferred to the Board's decision that
plaintiff produced insufficient evidence that Schmidt actually obtained a
variance.5
Calling the Board's actions on remand a "cursory review," the judge
concluded "the Board failed to consider the newly discovered evidence
4
The record does not include the motion for reconsideration or any supporting
documents, nor does it include plaintiff's opposition. There is no transcript
provided, so we assume there was no oral argument on the motion. Our review
is limited to the judge's written decision denying in part and granting in part
defendants' motion.
5
Although the judge said the Board failed initially to raise this argument, he
considered it anyway. Citing two cases decided under the MPA, the judge
concluded: "Substantial evidence supported [my] determination, and case law
from the era tends to indicate that a failure to take action (as opposed to a tie
vote resulting in a 'statutory denial') was arbitrary, capricious, and
unreasonable." If the judge implied a governing body's failure to take action
under the MPA, and Chatham's failure to act on the Schmidt application, was
per se arbitrary, capricious, and unreasonable, we respectfully disagree. See
Lizak v. Faria, 96 N.J. 482, 498 (1984) (holding only that under the MPA, "no
presumption of reasonableness attached to statutory denial resulting from
inaction" (citing Snyder-Westerlind Corp. v. Mayor & Council of Atlantic
Highlands, 134 N.J. Super. 459, 461 (App. Div. 1975))).
A-1075-18T2
12
regarding the 1971 Schmidt [a]pplication[.]"6 The judge entered an order
denying the Board's reconsideration motion on its merits.
Before us, the Board and Chatham argue the judge erred by substituting
his assessment of the evidence for the Board's judgment of that evidence.
Plaintiff counters the argument, claiming the judge properly determined the
Board's conclusion that Schmidt had not obtained a use variance in 1971 was
not supported by substantial, credible evidence and, therefore, its decision was
arbitrary, capricious, and unreasonable.
Plaintiff also filed a cross-appeal. It asserts that Dr. Blickstein "was a
conflicted party" and her participation and advice during the initial hearings
before the Board was prejudicial to plaintiff's interests. It also asserts that
Chatham's "inaction and actions" subject its prosecution of any zoning violation
to the doctrine of "municipal estoppel."
6
Lastly, with the parties' assent, the judge determined that he had erred in
remanding the matter for the Board's consideration of a d(2) variance. In this
regard, the judge cited our decision in Puleio v. N. Brunswick Twp. Bd. of
Adjustment, where we said that "once a variance is granted[,]" the use does not
become "'permitted' . . . under the ordinance. However, a use permitted by
variance is also not a nonconforming use." 375 N.J. Super. 613, 619 (App. Div.
2005).
A-1075-18T2
13
Having considered these arguments in light of the record and applicable
legal standards, we reverse in part, affirm in part, and remand in part for further
proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I.
We first consider whether the Board's determination that Schmidt had not
obtained a use variance in 1971 was arbitrary, capricious, and unreasonable.
Resolution of the issue invokes well-known standards of judicial review and
restraint.
We review the trial court's decision considering the same standards that
the trial court must apply. Fallone Props., LLC v. Bethlehem Planning Bd., 369
N.J. Super. 552, 562 (App. Div. 2004) (citing Fred McDowell, Inc. v. Bd. of
Adjustment of Wall, 334 N.J. Super. 201, 212 (App. Div. 2000)). "We have
long recognized that zoning boards, 'because of their peculiar knowledge of
local conditions[,] must be allowed wide latitude in the exercise of delegated
discretion.'" Price v. Himeji, LLC, 214 N.J. 263, 284 (2013) (alteration in
original) (quoting Kramer v. Bd. of Adjustment, Sea Girt, 45 N.J. 268, 296
(1965)).
A local board's decision "enjoy[s] a presumption of validity, and a court
may not substitute its judgment for that of the board unless there has been a clear
A-1075-18T2
14
abuse of discretion." Ibid. (citing Cell S. of N.J., Inc. v. Zoning Bd. of
Adjustment of W. Windsor Twp., 172 N.J. 75, 81 (2002)). "Because a [board's]
actions are presumed valid, the party 'attacking such action [has] the burden of
proving otherwise.'" Northgate Condo. Ass'n v. Borough of Hillsdale Planning
Bd., 214 N.J. 120, 145 (2013) (alterations in original) (quoting Cell S. of N.J.,
172 N.J. at 81). That party must demonstrate the board's decision was "arbitrary,
capricious, or unreasonable." Ibid. In other words,
[t]he challenger must show that the Board engaged in
"willful and unreasoning action, without consideration
and in disregard of circumstances. Where there is room
for two opinions, action is [valid] when exercised
honestly and upon due consideration, even though it
may be believed that an erroneous conclusion has been
reached."
[Id. at 145–46 (second alteration in original) (quoting
Worthington v. Fauver, 88 N.J. 183, 204–05 (1982)).]
We think it clear that the trial judge strayed from these basic tenets.
Contrary to plaintiff's argument, the issue is not whether there was
substantial evidence to support the judge's conclusion that Schmidt obtained a
use variance for the property in 1971. The trial on a prerogative writ claim that
a board took arbitrary, capricious, and unreasonable action is not a trial de novo
before the Law Division. Antonelli v. Planning Bd. of Waldwick, 79 N.J. Super.
433, 440–41 (App. Div. 1963). Contrary to the judge's characterization of the
A-1075-18T2
15
issue he confronted, "the question before the Court [was not]: who gets the
inference in the absence of an official record?"
Rather, the only issue before the trial court was whether on the record
before it, "the [B]oard could reasonably . . . reach[] its decision" that plaintiff
failed to prove Schmidt obtained a use variance in 1971. Jock v. Zoning Bd. of
Adjustment of Wall, 184 N.J. 562, 597 (2005) (citing Kramer, 45 N.J. at 296;
Kessler v. Bowker, 174 N.J. Super. 478, 486 (App. Div. 1979)). The Board
reasonably concluded that the absence of any record of borough council action
on Schmidt's variance was circumstantial proof that Schmidt never obtained a
use variance under the statutory framework of the MPA, which required the
council to act on the Board's recommendation. Nor did the Board necessarily
need to conclude that the council's approval of the Rillo and Carlone variances
implied it also approved Schmidt's variance, or that if the council failed to act
in 1971, its inaction was arbitrary, capricious, and unreasonable.
Plaintiff contends defendants raised the "statutory denial" argument for
the first time when they sought reconsideration, and, therefore, we should ignore
the legal implication of inaction by the borough council. However, the record
before the Board included the absence of any council records regarding
Schmidt's variance, and the presence of council records affirming the Rillo and
A-1075-18T2
16
Carlone variances. The legal impact of that absence was before the Board, at
least to the extent it was aware that in 1971, its approval of Schmidt's variance
request was only a recommendation for borough council action and not the grant
of a variance.
Defendants also point to other reasonable inferences to be drawn from the
evidence or lack thereof. For example, in his 2002 certification provided
contemporaneously with the sale of the property to plaintiff, Schmidt never said
he had obtained a use variance to permit the parking and storage of cars on the
premises. Notably, Schmidt only certified that he had been doing so fo r a
number of years. Given plaintiff's position regarding the interpretation of the
pre-1971 ordinance, Schmidt's limited certification may have served to justify
only plaintiff's claim — asserted during these proceedings — that the property
was not the subject of a variance, but rather was a pre-existing, nonconforming
use that predated the 1979 zoning amendments, which all agreed prohibited the
outdoor parking and storage of cars going forward.
"[H]earings conducted before a zoning board of adjustment to decide an
application for a land use approval are quasi-judicial proceedings." Central 25,
LLC v. Zoning Bd. of Union City, 460 N.J. Super. 446, 464 (App. Div. 2019)
(citing Dolan v. DeCapua, 16 N.J. 599, 612 (1954)). Local boards must make
A-1075-18T2
17
factual determinations and decide issues of credibility in proceedings that
include general procedural safeguards "not unlike (but not as extensive as) those
controlling judicial proceedings." Baghdikian v. Bd. of Adjustment of Ramsey,
247 N.J. Super. 45, 49 (App. Div. 1991). Recognition of the special function of
local land use boards leads inexorably to limits upon judicial review of their
decision making, at the trial level and on appeal. Here, we agree with defendants
that the trial court exceeded the proper role of limited review and substituted its
judgment for that of the Board.
We therefore reverse the orders under review to the extent they held the
Board's decision that plaintiff's property was not granted a use variance in 1971
was arbitrary, capricious, and unreasonable. We reinstate the Board's resolution
which concluded Schmidt did not obtain a use variance for the property in 1971.
II.
In its cross-appeal, plaintiff argues that Dr. Blickstein's dual roles as
author of the borough's Master Plan Revision report and Board planner violated
the Local Government Ethics Law (LGEL), N.J.S.A. 40A:9-22.1 to -22.25,
specifically N.J.S.A. 40A:9-22.5(e), which provides that "[n]o local government
officer or employee shall undertake any employment or service, whether
compensated or not, which might reasonably be expected to prejudice his
A-1075-18T2
18
independence of judgment in the exercise of his official duties[.]" According to
plaintiff, Dr. Blickstein's ability to render objective advice to the Board as its
planner was compromised by her commitment to the objectives of the revision
report.
The trial judge concurred with defendants' arguments that Dr. Blickstein's
role as Board planning consultant aligned with Chatham's interests in adopting
the revision report. In addition, since there was no hint that Dr. Blickstein had
any direct or indirect, personal or pecuniary interest in plaintiff's application,
her dual role could not leave the public with a perception of conflicted loyalties.
See Mondsini v. Local Fin. Bd., 458 N.J. Super. 290, 300 (App. Div. 2019)
(discussing this subsection of the LGEL as one recognizing the "importance of
public perception" of impropriety). We agree.
The LGEL "demands that an officeholder discharge duties with undivided
loyalty." Macdougall v. Weichert, 144 N.J. 380, 401 (1996). Nevertheless,
"[t]here cannot be a conflict of interest where there do not exist, realistically,
contradictory desires tugging the official in opposite directions." Wyzykowski
v. Rizas, 132 N.J. 509, 524 (1993) (alteration in original) (quoting LaRue v.
Twp. of E. Brunswick, 68 N.J. Super. 435, 448 (App. Div. 1961)). Such was
the case here. We therefore reject plaintiff's cross-appeal on this issue and
A-1075-18T2
19
affirm the conclusion reached by the trial judge that Dr. Blickstein's
participation in the proceedings in no way tainted the Board's deliberations and
decision.
The judge did not decide the other argument plaintiff reasserts in its cross-
appeal, specifically that Chatham should be estopped from enforcing any zoning
violation based on the open use of the property for outdoor storage of cars
because it never cited plaintiff, or Schmidt, for violations of zoning regulations
during more than forty years, from 1971 to 2013.
We need not extensively recite the governing case law but recognize some
guideposts staked out by that precedent. "The essential principle of the policy
of estoppel . . . is that one may, by voluntary conduct, be precluded from taking
a course of action that would work injustice and wrong to one who with good
reason and in good faith has relied upon such conduct." Bonaventure Int'l, Inc.
v. Borough of Spring Lake, 350 N.J. Super. 420, 436 (App. Div. 2002) (quoting
Summer Cottagers' Ass'n of Cape May v. City of Cape May, 19 N.J. 493, 503–
04 (1955)). As we held in Bonaventure, where we estopped a municipality from
enforcing alleged zoning violations, the doctrine may apply "where the interests
of justice, morality and common fairness clearly dictate that course."
A-1075-18T2
20
Bonaventure, 350 N.J. Super at 436 (quoting Ranchlands Inc. v. Twp. of
Stafford, 305 N.J. Super. 528, 538 (App. Div. 1997), aff’d, 156 N.J. 443 (1998)).
"However, the doctrine is 'rarely invoked against a governmental entity,
particularly when estoppel would interfere with essential government
functions.'" Ranchlands, 305 N.J. Super. at 538 (quoting O’Malley v. Dep’t of
Energy, 109 N.J. 309, 316 (1987)). Essentially, when deciding whether or not to
invoke the doctrine against a municipality, "a court must focus on the nature of
the action [or inaction] taken by the municipality[.]" Maltese v. Twp. of N.
Brunswick, 353 N.J. Super. 226, 234 (App. Div. 2002) (alteration in original)
(quoting Wood v. Borough of Wildwood Crest, 319 N.J. Super. 650, 656 (App.
Div. 1999). "[I]t [is] necessary to strike a proper balance between the interests
of the plaintiff and the right and duty of the municipality to promote th e public
welfare of the community through proper planning and zoning." Gruber v.
Mayor & Twp. Comm. of Raritan, 39 N.J. 1, 15 (1962)).
We decline the opportunity to decide the estoppel issue in the first instance
and therefore remand the matter to the trial court. Review of the above cases
makes clear that critical factual determinations must be made on a case-by-case
basis, and that further discovery might necessarily be needed. See R. 4:69-4
(permitting the court to manage the case, including setting "[t]he scope and time
A-1075-18T2
21
to complete discovery, if any"). We leave to the court's sound discretion
management of the proceedings on remand.
Reversed in part, affirmed in part, and remanded for further proceedings
consistent with this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.
A-1075-18T2
22