NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-2876-18
INDEPENDENT VOLUNTEER
FIRE COMPANY and JOSEPH
J. CARUSO, III,
Plaintiffs,
and
JOSEPH CARUSO, JR.,
WILLIAM TOMASELLO,
JOHN H. WARREN, JR., and
JOHN MICHAEL WARREN,
Plaintiffs-Respondents,
v.
TOWN OF HAMMONTON,
Defendant-Appellant.
___________________________
Submitted December 7, 2020 – Decided April 19, 2021
Before Judges Messano, Hoffman and Suter.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
Division, Atlantic County, Docket No. L-0132-16.
Fox Rothschild, LLP, attorneys for appellant (Michael
J. Malinsky, on the briefs).
Jacobs & Barbone, PA, attorneys for respondents
(Louis M. Barbone, on the brief).
PER CURIAM
Plaintiffs Joseph Caruso, Jr., Joseph Caruso III, William Tomasello, John
H. (J.H.) Warren, Jr., and John Michael (J.M.) Warren were members of the
Independent Volunteer Fire Company No. 2 (the Company), one of two fire
companies that provided volunteer firefighting services to the Town of
Hammonton (the Town).1 On September 28, 2015, another member of the
Company and its only female member, Nicole Ruberton, filed a formal
complaint directly with the Town administrator alleging Tomasello and Caruso
III sexually harassed her, and she feared retaliation from the other plaintiffs
"because they are all family." Never before had a member of either fire company
filed a complaint alleging harassment directly with the Town administration.
1
During the litigation and for reasons unnecessary for our resolution of the
appeal, the Company and Caruso III were dismissed from the litigation, and
neither has participated in this appeal.
A-2876-18
2
At its regular meeting the same day, the Town council suspended all
plaintiffs and appointed the town solicitor to investigate Ruberton's complaint. 2
A second member of the Company, Enrico Sepe, also filed a complaint with the
Town, alleging Tomasello harassed him because he was a dwarf. After the
solicitor interviewed J.H. Warren, Jr., and J.M. Warren and absolved them of
any misconduct, the Town reinstated both to full membership in the Company
ten days later, on October 8, 2015.
In January 2016, plaintiffs filed a verified complaint in lieu of prerogative
writs. They alleged the Town violated N.J.S.A. 40A:14-19, which provides that
a "member or officer of [a] paid or part-paid fire department or force shall be
. . . suspended, removed, fined or reduced in rank . . . only upon a written
complaint setting forth the . . . charges" and a hearing thereafter. (emphasis
added). Citing these specific statutory procedural guarantees, each plaintiff
claimed the Town violated his civil rights, specifically, "depriv[ation] of
procedural and substantive due process, equal protection of the law, as well as
privileges and/or immunities secured by the Constitution, and laws of the State
of New Jersey[.]" Within days of plaintiffs' filing, the Town lodged formal
2
Additionally, based on a traffic summons issued in an alleged "road rage"
incident, the Town terminated Caruso III's membership in the Company.
A-2876-18
3
written disciplinary charges with specifications against Caruso, Jr. and
Tomasello.
The Town then moved to dismiss plaintiffs' complaint. Apparently
without any cross-motion by plaintiffs and relying not upon N.J.S.A. 40A:14-
19, but rather certain Town ordinances, the judge denied the motion to dismiss
and granted relief on plaintiffs' prerogative writ claim. He ordered the Town to
appoint "an independent hearing officer[] and provide . . . [p]laintiffs with a
statement of charges, a period of discovery, and a hearing" within one-hundred-
twenty days.
Before the hearing took place, the Town reinstated Caruso, Jr., who by
then had been suspended for thirteen months. Following several days of
testimony, the hearing officer found Tomasello guilty of three disciplinary
charges, none of which dealt with Ruberton's complaints, but one of which dealt
with Sepe's complaints, and dismissed the other charges. He recommended
Tomasello's now nineteen-month suspension as an appropriate penalty. The
Town adopted the hearing officer's findings and recommendations and reinstated
Tomasello.
The Town moved for summary judgment on plaintiffs' remaining civil
rights claims. A different judge partially granted the Town's motion, dismissing
A-2876-18
4
plaintiffs' procedural and substantive due process causes of action; she denied
summary judgment as to plaintiffs' equal protection claims, and the matter
proceeded to trial.3
The jury found in favor of all four plaintiffs on their "class-of-one" equal
protection claims and awarded $15,000 each to Caruso Jr., and Tomasello, and
$25,000 each to J.H. Warren Jr., and J.M. Warren. The jury declined to award
punitive damages. Plaintiffs subsequently sought counsel fees as prevailing
parties under the New Jersey Civil Rights Act, N.J.S.A. 10:6-1 to -2 (the CRA),
and the judge awarded them $85,963.06 in attorney's fees and costs. The judge
stayed execution of the judgment pending this appeal.
The Town argues that the first judge erred in granting plaintiffs relief on
their prerogative writ claim because, as members of a volunteer firefighting
department, plaintiffs were not entitled to the protections of N.J.S.A. 40 A:14-
19, and the judge misinterpreted the relevant ordinances. It notes that in
granting summary judgment on plaintiffs' due process claims, the second judge
3
The order and the judge's extensive decision did not address plaintiffs' claims
under the privileges and immunities clauses of Article IV or the Fourteenth
Amendment of the United States Constitution. Plaintiffs have not cross-
appealed from the order dismissing their due process cause of action and neither
party has addressed the apparent dismissal of plaintiffs' claims under the
privileges and immunities clauses in their brief.
A-2876-18
5
essentially adopted the Town's position that it did not violate plaintiffs'
procedural rights by immediately suspending them.
The Town further contends that the trial judge should have dismissed
plaintiffs' class-of-one equal protection claims as a matter of law, either on
summary judgment, or when the Town sought involuntary dismissal after
plaintiffs' case pursuant to Rule 4:37-2(b), or judgment at the conclusion of all
the evidence pursuant to Rule 4:40-2(a), or judgment notwithstanding the
verdict pursuant to Rule 4:40-2(b). As a corollary argument, the Town contends
the judge should have dismissed the complaints of J.H. Warren, Jr. and J.M.
Warren because they were reinstated within ten days of their suspensions.
Finally, the Town contends it was error to submit the issue of punitive damages
to the jury, and the judge mistakenly exercised her discretion in calculating the
fee award.
We have considered these arguments in light of the record and applicable
legal standards. We affirm in part, reverse in part, vacate the judgment,
including the award of fees and costs, and dismiss plaintiffs' complaint.
A-2876-18
6
I.
New Jersey’s statutory scheme distinguishes three types of firefighting
forces: paid, part-paid, and volunteer. N.J.S.A. 40A:14-7 and -68. In
municipalities without paid or part-paid fire departments,
the governing body, by ordinance, may contract with a
volunteer fire company or companies . . . upon such
terms and conditions as shall be deemed proper. The
members of any such company shall be under the
supervision and control of said municipality and in
performing fire duty shall be deemed to be exercising a
governmental function; however, the appointment or
election of the chief of the volunteer fire company shall
remain the prerogative of the membership of the fire
company as set forth in the company’s certificate of
incorporation or bylaws.
[N.J.S.A. 40A:14-68(a) (emphasis added).]
As we made clear in Newfield Fire Co. No. 1 v. Borough of Newfield, "[t]he
plain language of this statute reflects the Legislature's intent to assure
governmental supervision and control of volunteer fire companies to the extent
they are charged with performing public functions funded by public taxpayer
resources." 439 N.J. Super. 202, 210–11 (App. Div. 2015) (citing McGovern v.
Rutgers, 211 N.J. 94, 108 (2012)). However, "[t]he municipal management of
volunteer fire companies . . . is limited to 'the authority to control the general
affairs of a volunteer fire department,' and a municipality 'cannot dictate the day-
A-2876-18
7
to-day operations of the department.'" Id. at 213–14 (quoting Sprint Spectrum,
LP v. Borough of Upper Saddle River Zoning Bd. of Adjustment , 352 N.J.
Super. 575, 598 (2002)).
In moving to dismiss the complaint, and, more pointedly when it sought
reconsideration of the order denying its motion, the Town argued that by its
terms, N.J.S.A. 40A:14-19 only applies to a "permanent member or officer of
[a] paid or part-paid fire department." Plaintiffs, however, cited Hammonton
Ordinance 25-2 (O25-2), which provided, "[t]he several fire companies
composing said Fire Department shall be subject to all the laws of this state
pertaining to fire departments in towns and may receive any benefits resulting
therefrom." According to plaintiffs, the Town had extended the statutory
procedural rights contained in N.J.S.A. 40A:14-19 to its volunteer firefighters.
The motion judge correctly rejected the argument.
However, in denying the Town's motions to dismiss and for
reconsideration, the judge focused his attention on two other ordinances.
Hammonton Ordinance 25-6 (O25-6) provided that "[f]or any cause deemed
sufficient, [the] council may reprimand, suspend or remove from office the chief
or any officer or officers of any of the companies composing the fire
department." The Town argued that under this ordinance, the council could
A-2876-18
8
discipline plaintiffs without providing any written statement of charges or a
hearing.
However, Hammonton Ordinance 25-5 (O25-5) provided:
The various fire companies composing the Fire
Department . . . may impose suitable fines or other
penalties on the members in order to promote discipline
and maintain efficiency of the Fire Department. The
Fire Chief shall have the power to compel each or all of
the companies to observe the provisions of this section
as well as any rules that may be adopted by the several
companies . . . .
In initially denying the Town's motion to dismiss, the judge wrote: "Section 25-
5 creates a mechanism by which the Fire Department can discipline its own
officers." He reasoned, because plaintiffs "were entitled to some minimum level
of due process," the Town must provide plaintiffs with written charges,
discovery, and a hearing. In denying reconsideration, the judge added that "there
was sufficient ambiguity as to the whether the Company or the [c]ouncil has
primary disciplinary authority." In construing the two provisions together, the
judge concluded that plaintiffs were entitled to have the Company initially
consider the charges and decide whether to discipline plaintiffs.
In Versarge v. Township of Clinton, a volunteer fire company sought to
expel the plaintiff for conduct unbecoming, specifically, threatening the chief
and disclosing fire company business to the mayor and council. 984 F.2d 1359,
A-2876-18
9
1361–62 (3d. Cir. 1993). After a hearing before the company at which the
plaintiff was afforded the opportunity to address the charges, the membership
voted to expel him. Id. at 1362. The mayor and council refused to hear his
appeal, so the plaintiff filed suit, alleging, in part, violations of his due process
rights. Id. at 1362–63.
The district court rejected the due process claim, concluding that the
plaintiff had "received all the process he was due." Id. at 1370. The Third
Circuit somewhat modified that holding, concluding that because any benefits
received by the plaintiff from his status as a volunteer firefighter "were de
minimis[,]" he "was not entitled to the constitutional requirements of due
process." Ibid. In the absence of the Ordinances, therefore, we might agree with
the Town that plaintiffs had no constitutional or statutory right to notice of the
charges and a hearing.
However, the Ordinances essentially form the contract between the Town
and the Company referenced in N.J.S.A. 40A:14-68(a), and "nothing . . .
preclude[d] the [Town] from adopting an ordinance defining the conditions it
requires of any volunteer fire company seeking to act as the [Town's] designated
fire company." Newfield Fire Co., 439 N.J. Super. at 215. The motion judge
A-2876-18
10
was faced with the need to construe the seemingly contradictory language of
O25-5 and O25-6 in pari materia.
Because the issues are purely legal in nature, we owe no deference to the
motion judge's interpretation of the ordinances or the implied contract they
represent, and we review the judge's order de novo. See Bubis v. Kassin, 184
N.J. 612, 627 (2005) ("As with other legislative provisions, the meaning of an
ordinance's language is a question of law that we review de novo." (first citing
In re Distrib. of Liquid Assets Upon Dissolution of the Union Cnty. Reg'l High
Sch. Dist. No. 1, 168 N.J. 1, 11 (2001); and then citing DePetro v. Twp. of
Wayne Plan. Bd., 367 N.J. Super. 161, 174 (App. Div. 2004))); see also Serico
v. Rothberg, 234 N.J. 168, 178 (2018) ("In the absence of a factual dispute, we
review the interpretation of a contract de novo." (citing In re Cnty. of Atlantic,
230 N.J. 237, 255 (2017))).
The Town argues that given the permissive language of O25-5 and O25-
6, the ability to discipline members of the Company was co-extensive and shared
by the council and the Company. In exercising its authority, the council was not
required to provide any notice of the charges or a hearing prior to suspending
plaintiffs.
A-2876-18
11
Plaintiffs concede that the ordinances provide contractual terms that bind
the Company. However, they contend that subsequent testimony at trial
demonstrated O25-6 limited the council's disciplinary authority to "line
officers," the appointed chief, assistant chief and officers selected from both
companies that make up the command structure of the fire department. Plaintiffs
argue the trial testimony demonstrated that as to the "staff officers" of the
Company, i.e., its president, vice-president, et cetera, O25-5 controlled and "the
[T]own had no authority of discipline." According to plaintiffs, the motion
judge correctly ordered the Town to proffer formal charges and provide them
with a hearing.
"The established rules of statutory construction govern the interpretation
of a municipal ordinance." State v. Schad, 160 N.J. 156, 170 (1999) (citing
AMN, Inc. of N.J. v. Twp. of S. Brunswick Rent Leveling Bd., 93 N.J. 518,
524–25 (1983)). We first examine the language of the ordinance, which if "clear
and unambiguous" controls. Ibid. (citing Bergen Com. Bank v. Sisler, 157 N.J.
188, 202 (1999)). Otherwise, we may resort to "extrinsic factors," including the
purpose, context, and history of the enactment. Ibid.
"Statutes are considered to be in pari materia when they relate to the same
person or thing, to the same class of persons or things, or have the same purpose
A-2876-18
12
or object." Carlson v. City of Hackensack, 410 N.J. Super. 491, 497 (App. Div.
2009) (quoting Marino v. Marino, 200 N.J. 315, 330 (2009)). "Statutes in pari
materia are to be construed together when helpful in resolving doubts or
uncertainties and the ascertainment of legislative intent." In re Return of
Weapons to J.W.D., 149 N.J. 108, 115 (1997) (quoting State v. Green, 62 N.J.
547, 554–55 (1973)).
In this case, O25-5 and O25-6, while clear on their respective faces, are
difficult to reconcile when placed side by side. As noted, the motion judge
confronted only a motion to dismiss plaintiffs' complaint, and, at several points
in his opinion, he applied the appropriately indulgent standard under Rule 4:6-
2(e). See Dimitrakopoulos v. Borrus, Goldin, Foley, Vignuolo, Hyman & Stahl,
PC, 237 N.J. 91, 107 (2019) ("[R]eview of a complaint's factual allegations must
be 'undertaken with a generous and hospitable approach.'" (quoting Printing
Mart-Morristown v. Sharp Elecs. Corp., 116 N.J. 739, 746 (1989))). Although
we have not been provided with any documents supporting the Town's motion
to dismiss, or plaintiffs' opposition to the motion, it would appear the judge
essentially granted plaintiffs' summary judgment on their prerogative writ claim
based solely on the complaint and the ordinances.
A-2876-18
13
Neither O25-5 nor O25-6 mandate that written charges must be filed and
a hearing take place before a member of the Company could be disciplined. If
the judge concluded that the Company had the initial responsibility to discipline
its members, we fail to see why he did not refer the Ruberton and Sepe
complaints for an administrative hearing before the Company. We therefore
disagree with the judge's apparent conclusion that O25-5 compelled referral of
the matter to an outside hearing officer.
To reconcile the ambiguity created by the two ordinances, we consider
extrinsic evidence, unavailable to the motion judge when he rendered his
decisions. In support of its later-filed summary judgment motion, the Town
supplied the fire department's "Rules of Conduct/Disciplinary Code" (the Code),
part of the department's "personnel management policy" which applied to the
Company and its counterpart, Independent Volunteer Fire Company No. 1 (No.
1).4 In addition to defining standards of conduct, the Code included disciplinary
procedures for members of the fire department, with the more serious forms of
discipline, i.e., suspension and dismissal, which required initiation by an officer.
If such serious forms of discipline were invoked, the Code required the filing of
4
Later trial testimony asserted the Code had been drafted by a former fire chief
but was never formally adopted by the Town council.
A-2876-18
14
written charges by an officer and a formal hearing. Only the chief of the
department or his designee could suspend a member, after which, before any
final discipline was imposed, a formal hearing before the "Hearing Committee"
was available to the member.
In 2013, the Town council passed Resolution 29-2013, which adopted a
handbook for both the Company and No. 1 as the official policies, procedures,
rules, and regulations applicable to all the Town's volunteer firefighters. The
handbook provided that firefighters who
observe actions they believe to constitute harassment,
sexual harassment, or any other workplace wrongdoing
should immediately report the matter to their
supervisor, or, if they prefer, or do not think that the
matter can be discussed with their supervisor, they
should contact the Fire Chief or Assistant Fire Chief if
they believe the Fire Chief cannot be impartial.
Reports of harassment would be promptly investigated. If the
investigation substantiated the complaint, disciplinary action would be "swiftly
pursued." The handbook included form complaints to utilize; Ruberton and
Sepe used these forms in making their complaints to the Town Administrator.
With the benefit of this extrinsic evidence, we conclude that for purposes
of N.J.S.A. 40A:14-68, the contract between the Town and the Company,
formed by the two ordinances and the extrinsic material we have cited, called
A-2876-18
15
for complaints, such as those made by Ruberton and Sepe, to be first made to
the Company pursuant to the duly adopted handbook and O25-5.5 Ultimately,
however, O25-6 gave the Town council the authority to, "[f]or any cause deemed
sufficient, . . . reprimand, suspend or remove from office the Chief or any officer
or officers of any of the companies composing the Fire Department." (emphasis
added). Because the ordinance applies to "officers of any of the companies," we
reject the false distinction plaintiffs draw, limiting the council's disciplinary
authority to appointed officers of the Fire Department and not elected officers
within each company. This interpretation is consistent with N.J.S.A. 40A:14-
68(a), which provides that every member of a volunteer firefighting company
"shall be under the supervision and control" of the municipality.
5
The resolution adopting the handbook contains an explicit disclaimer, stating
the handbook was "not intended to be construed actually or by implication as a
contract and does not supersede County, State or Federal regulations pertaining
to [v]olunteer [fire] [c]ompanies or [v]olunteer [f]ighters." However, the
resolution must be read in conjunction with O25-5, which provided some level
of disciplinary authority over firefighters, including for violations of applicable
rules and regulations. We agree the disclaimer is clear evidence that contrary to
plaintiffs' continuous assertions throughout this litigation, the Town never
intended to and did not adopt the statutory procedural guarantees provided to
paid and part-paid fire department members by N.J.S.A. 40:14A-19.
A-2876-18
16
We therefore affirm, as modified, the motion judge's orders denying the
Town's motion to dismiss and its motion for reconsideration of that denial. 6
II.
In denying the Town's motion for summary judgment on plaintiffs' CRA
claims, the trial judge reasoned that plaintiffs'
arguments . . . as to the implications of [O25-2] raise a
serious material question of fact regarding whether
[O25-2] creates greater rights and protection for them
than those set forth in N.J.S.A. 40A:14-68. It is the
vague and expansive language of this Ordinance, taken
together with all legitimate inferences favoring the
[p]laintiffs, which requires submission of this issue to
the trier of fact.
Turning to plaintiffs' class-of-one equal protection claim, the judge noted their
contention that O25-2 and O25-5 provided them with the procedural benefits of
N.J.S.A. 40A:14-19 or "fundamental due process," because the Town
6
We take judicial notice, see N.J.R.E. 201(a), of amendments to the ordinances
at issue. See Hammonton, N.J., Code § 25-7 to -10 (2019). We have addressed
the issue, rather than dismiss it as moot, for the sake of completeness and to
place the summary judgment motion and trial that followed in correct context.
In addition, we reject the Town's argument that the trial judge's partial
grant of summary judgment dismissing plaintiffs' due process claims implicitly
reversed the motion judge's orders. Certainly, in dicta, she disapproved of the
motion judge's, and now our, interpretation of O25-5 and O25-6. Her decision
to grant partial summary judgment, however, was premised more squarely on
the de minimis benefits plaintiffs enjoyed as volunteer firefighters. Versarge,
984 F.2d at 1370.
A-2876-18
17
"determined that its volunteer firefighters were to be treated similarly to paid or
part-paid firefighters in New Jersey." Because they were suspended "without
any process," plaintiffs contended "the Town treated [them] differently from
others similarly situated." In denying summary judgment, the judge reasoned,
"If the Town intended to convey . . . the same rights and benefits as paid or part-
paid firefighters . . . , then a jury could find that [p]laintiffs were treated
differently than other firefighters similarly situated." In other words, for
purposes of their equal protection claim, the judge believed the treatment
accorded plaintiffs was to be compared to the treatment accorded firefighters in
paid and part-paid fire departments throughout the State.
The Town's reconsideration motion asserted, among other things, that the
judge erred in leaving the meaning of O25-2 to a jury to determine. It noted that
having already dismissed plaintiffs' due process claims, plaintiffs' class-of-one
equal protection claim based upon the procedural protections guaranteed by
N.J.S.A. 40A:14-19 must also fail. Again, noting the broad language of O25-2,
the judge apparently reconsidered her earlier statement and recognized the Town
did not actually "subject [its volunteer firefighters] to 'all the laws of [New
Jersey] pertaining to fire departments.'" She concluded the issue involved
A-2876-18
18
"implementation" of the ordinance, which in turn required resolution of factual
disputes.
III.
We need not summarize the trial testimony in great detail. In 2015, the
Company had twenty-seven firefighters, as well as three junior firefighters, that
assisted with gear and apparatus but did not actually fight fires. Nicole
Ruberton's husband, Michael, was chief of the fire department and chief of the
Company. Chief Ruberton was also employed as the Town's fire inspector, and
his supervisor was Frank Domenico, who was also captain of No. 1. Domenico
had been chief of the department from 2001 to 2007.
Caruso Jr. had been with the fire department for thirty years and was
president of the Company; Tomasello joined the Company in 1990, was a
captain and supervised Nicole Ruberton. Tomasello’s brother-in-law, J.M.
Warren, was also a captain of the Company. His father, J.H. Warren Jr. was
treasurer of the Company.
In broad terms, plaintiffs denied ever sexually or otherwise harassing
Nicole Ruberton or Sepe. Instead, they painted a picture of being the victims of
vindicative action by the Town's mayor, Steve DiDonato, who was aligned with
Domenico and Chief Ruberton. In particular, there was testimony about specific
A-2876-18
19
complaints made against Domenico, who, plaintiffs claimed, had a difficult
personality; some said he behaved in an unsafe manner at fire scenes.
On December 21, 2014, Tomasello reported that Domenico illegally drove
over a median on the Atlantic City Expressway (the Expressway incident) and
got into a verbal confrontation with J.M. Warren, who at that time was assistant
chief; because of the Expressway incident, Domenico imposed a thirty-day
suspension on himself. There had been previous intra-department complaints
made by Tomasello and others about Domenico's behavior.
On December 23, 2014, Chief Ruberton called J.M. Warren to discuss the
Expressway incident and put Domenico on the phone. Domenico warned J.M.
Warren not to continue with the "lynch mob" and threatened that if members of
the Company continued to take further action against him regarding the
Expressway incident, they would be suspended.
On December 26, 2014, J.M. Warren filed a report regarding the phone
call and Tomasello sent the report to Chief Ruberton. According to Tomasello,
Domenico began to retaliate against him and Caruso Jr., accusing them of
discrimination and harassment. Tomasello wrote an email to the mayor about
Domenico's allegations and detailed the history of his relationship with
Domenico.
A-2876-18
20
When Nicole Ruberton filed her complaint, plaintiffs were shocked by
their immediate suspension and that the nature of the complaint was made public
and disclosed in the local press. The Company had a disciplinary board that met
and handled complaints about firefighter's behavior at fire scenes; a membership
committee convened to resolve disputes between members in other contexts.
Plaintiffs asserted that members of the department were always disciplined from
within.
A few days after the suspensions, Joseph Lizza, secretary of the Company,
recorded a meeting where the mayor spoke to all members of the fire department.
The mayor gave reasons for the suspensions and alluded to alleged inappropriate
remarks made by one plaintiff at the January 2015 department installation
dinner. The mayor said that he "got the goods" on the firefighters and warned
what was coming if they got out of line.
Chief Ruberton's deposition testimony was read to the jury. He
acknowledged placing the December 2014 phone call to J.M. Warren but did not
know that Domenico had threatened members if they continued to speak out
about the Atlantic Expressway incident. When his wife spoke to him about
filing a harassment complaint, Chief Ruberton instructed her to speak to the
assistant chief, and not the Town council. He also corroborated that the fire
A-2876-18
21
department had followed the procedures in its Code regarding discipline of
members.
We discuss the judge's jury instructions on plaintiffs' class-of-one equal
protection claims below. For now, it suffices to say that the jury was provided
with a verdict sheet that asked it to answer the following questions:
1. Have plaintiffs proven . . . that . . . [O25-2] provides
volunteer firefighters with the similar rights and
benefits of paid or part-paid firefighters in the [S]tate
of New Jersey?
2. Have plaintiffs proven . . . that they are similar in all
relevant and material respects, or have a high degree of
similarity to a comparator, namely . . . Domenico?
3. Have plaintiffs proven . . . that they were treated
differently from other similarly situated firefighters?
4. Have plaintiffs established . . . that the difference in
treatment . . . was done intentionally?
5. Have plaintiffs established . . . that defendant had no
rational basis for the difference in treatment . . . ?
The jury answered all five questions in the affirmative. The verdict sheet then
directed jurors to consider, as to each plaintiff, if the "differenc e in treatment"
proximately caused that plaintiff's injuries. Having answered in the affirmative
as to all four plaintiffs, the jurors then awarded damages that would reasonably
compensate each plaintiff for his injuries.
A-2876-18
22
IV.
As already noted, the Town repeatedly asserted that O25-2 did not confer
the same procedural rights enjoyed by members of paid or part-paid fire
departments pursuant to N.J.S.A. 40A:14-19 on members of the Company. The
trial judge never decided that legal issue. Instead, she concluded there was a
factual issue for the jury to resolve whether in its implementation of O25-2, the
Town intended to accord the same statutory rights to its volunteer firefighters.
In his summation, plaintiffs' counsel harped on this issue. He referred to
O25-2 and told jurors that plaintiffs were entitled to the same rights as Jason
Macri, one of plaintiffs' witnesses, who was a paid firefighter in Cherry Hill. At
one point, counsel said:
The government has no business being involved in a
private business or company. And here, it's not my
opinion that the mayor . . . and council should be
uninvolved. It's the law. Why is it the law? Because
after the particular part of the ordinance talking about
we are entitled and may receive the benefits of [S]tate
law, what benefits are we talking about? We're talking
about the benefits that you do not throw me out of my
building. You don't call me a sexual harasser unless
you prove me guilty.
You can't just do what you want. You've got to
charge me. You've got to prove it. I'm entitled to a fair
hearing. This is America. . . . Those are the rights of
paid firefighters.
A-2876-18
23
In denying the Town's reconsideration motion, the trial judge seemin gly
recognized that O25-2 did not confer the same rights and benefits as those
enjoyed by firefighters in paid or part-paid departments. She cited several
examples of benefits not enjoyed by plaintiffs as volunteers. Nevertheless,
question one on the verdict sheet asked whether O25-2 provided plaintiffs with
the same rights as those enjoyed by firefighters in paid and part -paid
departments.
In her final jury charge, the judge never defined for the jury precisely what
were the "similar rights and benefits of paid or part-paid firefighters in the State
of New Jersey" that the ordinance bestowed on plaintiffs. The closest the judge
came was when she laid out each party's contentions at the start of her
instructions. The judge told the jurors that plaintiffs alleged the Town violated
"their fundamental rights of equal protection by taking certain actions against
plaintiffs without first conducting an investigation, without having a hearing,
and without a legitimate basis to charge plaintiffs." Of course, the judge had
already decided that the denial of those "rights" were not due process violations.
Construing the ordinance was a purely legal issue that should have been
decided by the judge. Bubis, 184 N.J. at 627. We agree with the Town that it
was clear error for the court to pose question one to the jurors. We have
A-2876-18
24
concluded that a reasonable construction of the various ordinances and
handbook meant that Ruberton's and Sepe's complaint should have first been
referred to the fire department for resolution, although the Town retained its
ultimate authority to suspend or dismiss the officers for "any cause deemed
sufficient." The jury should have been instructed that this was the legal
framework in which to consider plaintiffs' class-of-one equal protection claims.
There were other serious problems with the verdict sheet and jury charge.
We digress to explain the framework for a viable class-of-one equal protection
cause of action.
A class-of-one equal protection claim may be asserted "even when the
plaintiff has not alleged discrimination on the basis of membership in a protected
class." DiBuonaventura v. Washington Twp., 462 N.J. Super. 260, 267–68
(App. Div. 2020) (citing Engquist v. Or. Dep't of Agric., 553 U.S. 591, 598
(2008)). "Such 'class-of-one' claims require that a plaintiff show that he or she
was (1) intentionally treated differently from other people who are similarly
situated, and (2) there is no rational basis for the difference in treatment." Id. at
268 (citing Vill. of Willowbrook v. Olech, 528 U.S. 562, 564 (2000)).
"Regarding the first element, '[p]ersons are similarly-situated under the Equal
Protection Clause when they are alike in "all relevant aspects."'" Radiation Data,
A-2876-18
25
Inc. v. N.J. Dep't of Env't Prot., 456 N.J. Super. 550, 562 (App. Div. 2018)
(alteration in original) (quoting Startzell v. City of Phila., 533 F.3d 183, 203 (3d
Cir. 2008)).
Here, who was an appropriate comparator and what was being compared
were moving targets throughout trial. As noted, plaintiffs' counsel's summation
contended the proper comparators were firefighters in paid or part-paid fire
departments, because the Town's implementation of O25-2 was intended to
provide its volunteer firefighters with the same procedural due process rights.
In the jury's mind, this was affirmed by question number one, which asked them
to decide that exact issue. Yet, question two on the verdict sheet asked the jury
to decide if plaintiffs were similarly situated not to firefighters in paid or part-
paid departments, but rather whether they were similarly situated to Domenico.
When providing instructions on the class-of-one equal protection claim,
the judge told the jurors: "As to the class-of-one claim only" — there was no
other claim at this point — "plaintiffs allege that the other volunteer firefighters
in the [T]own . . . were treated more favorably than the plaintiffs for the same
or similar conduct of the plaintiffs, and that there was no rational basis for the
difference in treatment." We may assume the jury understood who plaintiffs
claimed was the appropriate comparator, since question two asked jurors to
A-2876-18
26
consider plaintiffs' proofs as to Domenico. Yet, in question three, the jury was
asked if plaintiffs had proven "that they were treated differently from other
similarly situated firefighters"; in other words, not treated differently than
Domenico, but rather other "firefighters." Certainly, the jury could have
reasonably concluded they were comparing plaintiffs to firefighters in paid and
part-paid departments.
Nor did the judge ever define what exactly the jurors were supposed to
compare. Plaintiffs' counsel's summation stressed the fact that his clients were
disciplined without any hearing. However, if it were differences in the
procedural aspects of how discipline was imposed within the Town's fire
department, and plaintiffs were contending they were singled out for discipline
by the Town without the procedures outlined in the Code or handbook,
Domenico failed as a comparator. It was undisputed that Domenico imposed a
suspension on himself for the Expressway incident without any hearing at all.
Was the jury to compare the length of Domenico's suspension — four months
— versus the much longer suspensions served by Caruso, Jr. and Tomasello? If
so, that was never explained by the judge.
Indeed, any difference in the length of suspensions between those imposed
on plaintiffs and those imposed on other firefighters or how the discipline was
A-2876-18
27
imposed could not support a viable class-of-one equal protection claim as a
matter of law. "[T]he United State[s] Supreme Court has ruled that Fourteenth
Amendment class-of-one claims do not apply to public employment."
DiBuonaventura, 462 N.J. Super. at 268 (citing Engquist, 553 U.S. at 594). As
we explained:
In Engquist, the Court . . . held that a public employee
cannot state a claim under the Equal Protection Clause
by alleging that she was fired from her job for arbitrary
and malicious reasons that essentially singled her out as
a class-of-one. Specifically, plaintiff argued that she
was denied a promotion, and ultimately laid-off
because of a grudge held by a supervisor. The Court
reasoned that the Equal Protection Clause is not
implicated in circumstances where "government
employers are alleged to have made an individualized,
subjective personnel decision in a seemingly arbitrary
or irrational manner." The Court went on to reason that
the class-of-one theory of equal protection is simply a
"poor fit in the public employment context" and that to
treat employees differently is not to "classify them in a
way that raises equal protection concerns," but rather is
"simply to exercise the broad discretion that typically
characterizes the employer-employee relationship."
[Ibid. (quoting Engquist, 553 U.S. at 594, 605); accord
Conard v. Pa. State Police, 360 F. App'x 337, 339 (3d
Cir. 2010); Houston v. Twp. of Randolph, 934 F. Supp.
2d 711, 736–37 (D.N.J. 2013).]
A-2876-18
28
Plaintiffs fail to cite a single case in which a class-of-one equal protection claim
was successfully brought in the sphere of public employment, and we found
none.
Plaintiffs' retort to this was and continues to be that they are not public
employees. In Newfield Fire Co., we noted that volunteer fire companies "are
'not direct units of local government.'" 439 N.J. Super. at 210 (quoting Paff v.
N.J. State Firemen's Ass'n, 431 N.J. Super. 278, 292 (App. Div. 2013)).
"Nevertheless, volunteer fire departments have been recognized as quasi-public
in nature." Ibid. (emphasis added) (citing Sprint Spectrum, LP v. Borough of
Upper Saddle River Zoning Bd. of Adjustment, 352 N. J. Super. 575, 598 (App.
Div. 2002)).
The Court has differentiated between the status of a voluntary firefighter
and that of a voluntary emergency medical technician. State v. Morrison, 227
N.J. 295 (2016). "[A] volunteer firefighter [is] a public servant for purposes of
the official-misconduct statute." Id. at 317 (citing State v. Quezada, 402 N.J.
Super. 277, 284–85 (App. Div. 2008)). "New Jersey law has consistently
recognized that firefighting is a public or governmental function." Ibid.
(emphasis added) (quoting Eggert v. Tuckerton Volunteer Fire Co. No. 1, 938 F.
Supp. 1230, 1238 (D.N.J. 1996)). In Schwartz v. Borough of Stockton, the
A-2876-18
29
Court held that "fire protection . . . is a governmental function" and that
"principle necessarily extends to municipal arrangements with volunteer
companies." 32 N.J. 141, 150 (1960). Differences in the discipline imposed on
a volunteer firefighter, whether imposed after procedures within the fire
department or imposed in some other fashion by the governing body, cannot be
the basis for a viable class-of-one equal protection claim.
Having carefully reviewed the trial record, we agree with the Town that it
was entitled to judgment in its favor on plaintiffs' class-of-one equal protection
claims. Once their due process claims were properly dismissed, plaintiffs'
shapeshifting equal protection claim was dubious at best, initially asserting
comparisons between themselves and firefighters in paid and part-paid
departments, then inviting comparison to a vindictive Domenico. In reality,
plaintiffs' true claim was that their discipline was a vendetta carried out by the
Town's mayor, Domenico, and others. That assertion is insufficient to support
a class-of-one equal protection claim in the sphere of public employment. See
Engquist, 553 U.S. 595 (rejecting public employee's claim she was fired for
A-2876-18
30
"arbitrary, vindictive, and malicious reasons" as cognizable under class -of-one
equal protection jurisprudence). 7
Affirmed in part and reversed in part. We vacate the judgment entered,
including the award of counsel fees and costs, and dismiss plaintiffs' complaint.
As a result of our judgment, we need not address the other issues raised by the
Town.
7
Plaintiffs did not assert a claim that the Town violated their First Amendment
rights by punishing them for complaints made about Domenico's behavior. Such
a claim would be subject to a different analysis, even in the public employee -
public employer context. See Engquist, 553 U.S. at 599–600 (discussing
controlling principles governing a claimed violation of a public employee's First
Amendment rights).
A-2876-18
31