IN THE MATTER OF TOWERS ASSOCIATES' MOTION REQUESTING THAT MEPT LINCOLN CROSSING'S WITHDRAWAL OF ITS VARIANCE APPLICATION BE CONSIDERED AS WITH PREJUDICE (NEW JERSEY SPORTS & EXPOSITION AUTHORITY) ( 2019 )


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  •                              NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-0621-17T2
    IN THE MATTER OF TOWERS
    ASSOCIATES' MOTION REQUESTING
    THAT MEPT LINCOLN CROSSING'S
    WITHDRAWAL OF ITS VARIANCE
    APPLICATION BE CONSIDERED
    AS WITH PREJUDICE.
    __________________________________
    Submitted January 10, 2019 – Decided July 30, 2019
    Before Judges O'Connor and DeAlmeida.
    On appeal from the New Jersey Sports & Exposition
    Authority.
    Sills Cummis & Gross, PC, attorneys for appellant
    Towers Associates (Joseph B. Fiorenzo and Kristoffer
    S. Burfitt, on the briefs).
    Waters Mc Pherson Mc Neill, PC, attorneys for
    respondent MEPT Lincoln Crossing, LLC (Eric D. Mc
    Cullough, of counsel and on the brief).
    Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney General, attorney for
    respondent New Jersey Sports & Exposition Authority
    (Melissa Dutton Schaffer, Assistant Attorney General,
    of counsel; Ryan C. Atkinson, Deputy Attorney
    General, on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Respondent MEPT Lincoln Crossing, LLC (MEPT) submitted an
    application to the New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority (NJSEA)
    seeking a use variance and site plan approval.       After the NJSEA staff
    commenced public hearings, MEPT withdrew its application without
    prejudice.   Thereafter, appellant Towers Associates, an objector to the
    application, filed a motion with NJSEA requesting MEPT's application be
    deemed withdrawn with prejudice or, in the alternative, that MEPT
    compensate appellant for the counsel and expert fees and costs it incurred to
    object to MEPT's application. In a resolution dated September 21, 2017, the
    NJSEA Board of Commissioners (Board) denied MEPT's motion. Appellant
    appeals from that resolution. We affirm.
    I
    MEPT is the owner of property in North Bergen and Secaucus, on which
    is a warehouse. The property is located in the Meadowlands District, where
    NJSEA regulates land use. In 2015, MEPT wanted to demolish its warehouse
    in order to build a larger one. To accomplish that goal, in accordance with
    N.J.A.C. 19:4-4.4 and N.J.A.C. 19:4-4.14, MEPT applied to NJSEA for a use
    A-0621-17T2
    2
    variance from zoning regulation N.J.A.C. 19:4-5.52(a) and for site plan
    approval.
    Appellant owns property adjacent to the property on which MEPT's
    current warehouse exists. On appellant's property is a Home Depot and an
    undeveloped lot on which appellant plans to build a hotel. Appellant opposed
    MEPT's application, as did another entity, Vee Jay International (Vee Jay),
    which owned property adjacent to MEPT's, as well.
    The NJSEA staff conducted public hearings on MEPT's application over
    the course of six days in the fall 2015. Both objectors participated in the
    hearings. Shortly before the sixth day of hearings, MEPT modified its site
    plan in order to meet some of Vee Jay's concerns. During the sixth day of
    hearings, MEPT recalled two of its experts to testify about the recent
    alterations to its plan. Both appellant and Vee Jay were unprepared to cross -
    examine the experts, so the matter was scheduled to continue on another day in
    January 2016 to permit the objectors to cross-examine and MEPT to conduct
    redirect examination on these experts, as well as allow the objectors to
    introduce evidence. Thereafter, at MEPT's request, that hearing was adjourned
    to March 2016.
    A-0621-17T2
    3
    Meanwhile, in February 2016, MEPT sent a letter to NJSEA advising
    that MEPT had decided to "evaluate alternative designs for the proposed
    facility, which will necessitate submission of new plans and technical reports.
    The     [a]pplicant   therefore   withdraws      without   prejudice   the    pending
    applications, and will resubmit new plans and applications at a future date."
    Appellant then filed a motion with NJSEA requesting that MEPT's
    withdrawal of its application be deemed with prejudice or, in the alternative,
    that appellant be awarded the counsel and experts' fees and costs it incurred
    objecting to MEPT's application.         Although NJSEA is a State agency,
    appellant's principal argument was that it was entitled to such relief pursuant
    to Rule 4:37-1(b).1 From what we can ascertain from the record, the gist of
    appellant's argument was that MEPT withdrew its application because it feared
    the application was going to be rejected.
    1
    Rule 4:37-1(b) provides in pertinent part:
    Except as provided by paragraph (a) hereof, an action
    shall be dismissed at the plaintiff's instance only by
    leave of court and upon such terms and conditions as
    the court deems appropriate. . . . Unless otherwise
    specified in the order, a dismissal under this paragraph
    is without prejudice.
    A-0621-17T2
    4
    In a resolution dated September 21, 2017, the Board denied the motion,
    providing its reasons in a written decision attached to the resolution. 2
    Although the Board found Rule 4:37-1(b) in part governed the resolution of
    2
    In June 2017, MEPT filed a new application for a use variance. In its
    moving brief before us, appellant contends the second application is identical
    to the one MEPT initially submitted. In its brief in response, MEPT maintains
    the application is different from the first in several material respects. In its
    reply brief, appellant again argues the two applications are the same, and filed
    a reply appendix that includes the transcripts of the hearings on the second
    application.
    The hearings on the second application did not commence until April
    2018. When it decided appellant's motion in September 2017, the second
    application was not before the Board and, thus, it did not consider it. In its
    reply brief, appellant argues the transcripts of the hearings on the second
    application support its position such application was the same as the first. In a
    motion MEPT filed to strike appellant's reply appendix and those portions of
    the reply brief that refer to or rely upon the appendix, MEPT argued
    appellant's position the two applications are the same is incorrect and the
    product of "cherry-picking" from the extensive record on the second
    application. MEPT further noted it cannot respond to the reply brief and
    provide reasons why appellant's assertion the applications are the same are
    unfounded by the record.
    We entered an order that strikes from the reply appendix the transcripts
    of the hearings on the second application, as well as any arguments in the reply
    brief that rely upon the evidence adduced at those hearings. The Board did not
    take into consideration any of the evidence adduced during the hearings on the
    second application when it decided appellant's motion in September 2017. In
    fact, the hearings on the second application had not even concluded before
    MEPT filed its response brief before us. We do not consider evidence that was
    not presented to the Board and that was submitted by a party for the first time
    on appeal. See Townsend v. Pierre, 
    221 N.J. 36
    , 45 n.2 (2015).
    A-0621-17T2
    5
    the issue, after applying this Rule to the facts, the Board determined appellant
    was not entitled to relief under this Rule. However, for reasons unrelated to
    Rule 4:37-1(b), the Board found that MEPT's withdrawal of its application
    without prejudice was an appropriate disposition, and that MEPT was not
    obligated to compensate appellant for its fees and costs.
    When evaluating the application of Rule 4:37-1(b), the Board found that
    when MEPT withdrew its application, the hearing on this matter was "far from
    complete." The NJSEA staff had yet to hear the cross-examination of MEPT's
    remaining witnesses, the testimony of the objectors' witnesses, the public's
    comments on the application, and closing arguments. More important, the
    Board observed that when MEPT withdrew its application, there was no
    indication of how the Board was going to rule. The Board therefore rejected
    appellant's claim that MEPT withdrew its application to preclude NJSEA from
    making a decision that would have been adverse to it.
    As stated, the Board found reasons unrelated to the application of Rule
    4:37-1(b) to support the withdrawal of MEPT's application without prejudice.
    The Board noted that permitting applicants to amend or resubmit applications
    to address concerns raised by objectors or by the Board should be encouraged.
    In its written decision attached to the resolution, the Board stated:
    A-0621-17T2
    6
    While [appellant] might have expected a conclusion to
    this matter and some semblance of finality, at this
    stage of the proceedings such expectations are
    unreasonable. Often in land use hearings such as this,
    applicants amend and/or withdraw and resubmit
    applications to address concerns raised by objectors
    and/or the governing authority. Such cooperation is
    encouraged and allows the concerns of the objectors to
    be addressed while at the same time protecting the
    rights of property owners. To suggest that an
    applicant may not withdraw an application to address
    such concerns would discourage cooperation and
    defeat NJSEA's ability to perform its stated mission.
    As the hearing was not complete and the
    procedures set forth in N.J.A.C. 19:4-4.14 had not
    concluded, MEPT's application was properly
    withdrawn without prejudice.
    Although the Board did not specifically identify what its "mission" is,
    N.J.S.A. 5:10A-2(h) provides that one of NJSEA's goals or interests is to
    promote the economic growth of the meadowlands and northern New Jersey.
    Further, in February 2015, NJSEA and the New Jersey Meadowlands
    Commission merged and became collectively known as the New Jersey Sports
    and Exposition Authority.    N.J.S.A. 5:10A-1 to -68.      N.J.S.A. 5:10A-6
    provides that, in addition to dissolving the New Jersey Meadowlands
    Commission and vesting in NJSEA the Commission's property, funds and
    assets, NJSEA shall carry out the purposes of N.J.S.A. 13:17-1. The latter
    statute declares that one of the purposes of the Hackensack Meadowlands
    A-0621-17T2
    7
    Reclamation and Development Act, N.J.S.A. 13:17-1 to -3.1, is "to reclaim,
    plan, develop and redevelop the Hackensack meadowlands." N.J.S.A. 13:17-1.
    II
    On appeal, appellant asserts the following arguments for our
    consideration:
    POINT I: THE NEW JERSEY SPORTS AND
    EXPOSITION AUTHORITY ACTED
    ARBITRARILY, CAPRICIOUSLY, AND
    UNREASONABLY IN DENYING TOWERS
    ASSOCIATES' MOTION TO TREAT MEPT
    LINCOLN CROSSING'S WITHDRAWAL OF ITS
    VARIANCE APPLICATION AS WITH PREJUDICE.
    POINT II: ALTERNATIVELY, HAVING FAILED
    TO DISMISS MEPT'S APPLICATION WITH
    PREJUDICE, THE POLICY CONCERNS OF
    FINALITY, AVOIDANCE OF DUPLICATION,
    REDUCTION OF UNNECESSARY BURDENS,
    PREVENTION OF NEEDLESS LITIGATION, AND
    BASIC FAIRNESS UNDERPINNING RULE 4:37-
    1(b) REQUIRED THE BOARD TO GRANT
    TOWERS' MOTION FOR ATTORNEY AND
    EXPERT WITNESS FEES.
    Our review of the subject resolution is limited. "A strong presumption
    of reasonableness accompanies an administrative agency's exercise of
    statutorily-delegated responsibility." In re Proposed Xanadu Redevelopment
    Project, 
    402 N.J. Super. 607
    , 632 (App. Div. 2008) (quoting Gloucester Cty.
    Welfare Bd. v. State Civil Serv. Comm'n., 
    93 N.J. 384
    , 390 (1983)). A court
    A-0621-17T2
    8
    may reverse an agency's decision only if it "conclude[s] that the decision of the
    administrative agency is arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable, or is not
    supported by substantial credible evidence in the record as a whole." J.D. v.
    N.J. Div. of Developmental Disabilities, 
    329 N.J. Super. 516
    , 521 (App. Div.
    2000). That said, we are not in any way "bound by the agency's interpretation
    of a statute or its determination of a strictly legal issue." Mayflower Sec. Co.
    v. Bureau of Sec., 
    64 N.J. 85
    , 93 (1973).
    The term "arbitrary and capricious" in the law means having no rational
    basis. Bayshore Sewerage Co. v. Dep't of Envtl. Prot., 
    122 N.J. Super. 184
    ,
    199 (Ch. Div.1973), aff'd., 
    131 N.J. Super. 37
    (App. Div.1974). In connection
    with administrative bodies, the term "means willful and unreasoning action,
    without consideration and in disregard of circumstances." 
    Ibid. Having considered the
    record, the parties' arguments and the applicable
    law, we reject the premise Rule 4:37-1(b) governs the outcome here.
    Appellant did not provide and we are unable to find any authority binding
    upon this court that supports its argument Rule 4:37-1(b) applies in an
    administrative proceeding. Moreover, Rule 4:1 instructs that "[t]he rules in
    Part IV, insofar as applicable, govern the practice and procedure of civil
    actions in the Superior Court, Law and Chancery Divisions, and the surrogate's
    A-0621-17T2
    9
    courts and the Tax Court . . . ." The decision under review here was made by a
    State agency in an administrative proceeding, not by the Superior Court in a
    civil action in the Law or Chancery Division, or by the surrogate's court or Tax
    Court.
    Second, we are unable to find any authority that supports the premise
    NJSEA must order the withdrawal of an application of the kind here with
    prejudice, or that NJSEA has the authority to order a party to pay the counsel
    and experts' fees and costs of another.
    We affirm NJSEA substantially for the alternate reason the Board
    provided in the resolution to deny appellant's motion. As the Board noted,
    often in land use hearings applicants amend, withdraw and resubmit
    applications in order to address concerns raised by others.         The Board
    observed that such action allows the concerns of the objectors to be addressed
    while at the same time protecting the rights of property owners, and "to
    suggest that an applicant may not withdraw an application to address such
    concerns would discourage cooperation and defeat NJSEA's ability to perform
    its stated mission."
    Here, MEPT advised the Board and the objectors that it withdrew its
    application because it wanted to evaluate alternative designs for the proposed
    A-0621-17T2
    10
    facility and, as it stated to the NJSEA staff and the objectors, voiced the
    concern such evaluation might require the "submission of new plans and
    technical reports."   Considering the facts as they existed when the Board
    denied appellant's motion in September 2017, appellant provides no reasonable
    basis to preclude MEPT from withdrawing the first application without
    prejudice and submitting a new one, or to compel MEPT to pay for appellant's
    fees and costs.
    One of the NJSEA's statutory goals is to promote development in the
    meadowlands. See N.J.S.A. 5:10A-6 and N.J.S.A. 13:17-1. NJSEA's essential
    finding is that appellant's position would be antithetical to development.
    Problems with an application are often discovered and exposed during the
    hearing process. After all, the fundamental purpose of a hearing is to examine
    an application and determine if there are any flaws that will make its approval
    problematic.
    An applicant will be deterred from submitting an application for
    development if it knows that, if a problem is discovered during the hearing and
    the only remedy is to withdraw the application, the applicant must bear the
    fees and costs of another party, or be precluded from filing a new application if
    the original one is deemed withdrawn with prejudice. Even if there are no
    A-0621-17T2
    11
    problems with an application, an applicant may have sound reasons to alter its
    plans and wish to withdraw its application and file a new one. An applicant
    will be deterred from filing an application under such circumstances, as well.
    We are not unmindful of appellant's contention that it was unfairly
    caused to expend its resources a second time in order to object to the second
    application because, according to appellant, the second application was the
    same as the first. However, that issue is not before us. The Board did not
    make nor could it have made the determination whether the first and second
    applications were the same but, even if it determined they were, the Board is
    not precluded from considering other reasons bearing on the question whether
    appellant is entitled to the relief it seeks.
    Accordingly, under the specific factual circumstances presented here, we
    discern no reason to conclude the Board's ultimate decision to deny appellant's
    motion was arbitrary, capricious or unreasonable.
    Affirmed.
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    12