ROBERT J. PACILLI HOMES, LLC VS. TOWNSHIP OF HARRISON(L-1378-15, GLOUCESTER COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2017 )


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  •                         NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-5236-15T1
    ROBERT J. PACILLI HOMES, LLC,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    TOWNSHIP OF HARRISON, a
    Municipal Corporation of the
    State of New Jersey, HARRISON
    TOWNSHIP JOINT LAND USE BOARD
    and REMINGTON & VERNICK,
    Defendants-Respondents.
    ________________________________
    Submitted September 20, 2017 – Decided November 1, 2017
    Before Judges Simonelli and Rothstadt.
    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Law Division, Gloucester County, Docket No.
    L-1378-15.
    The D'Elia Law Firm, LLC, attorneys for
    appellant (Vincent D'Elia, on the brief).
    Mason, Griffin & Pierson, PC, attorneys for
    respondent Harrison Township Joint Land Use
    Board (Cory K. Kestner, of counsel and on the
    brief).
    Brian J. Duffield, attorney for respondent
    Township of Harrison.
    PER CURIAM
    This    appeal     involves    the      enforcement     of    a   settlement
    agreement    between     plaintiff      Robert    J.   Pacilli     Homes,    LLC,    a
    developer, and defendants Township of Harrison (Township), the
    Harrison Township Joint Land Use Board (Board), and Remington &
    Vernick (R&V), concerning a development known as Tesoro Estates
    I.    The Board passed a resolution granting plaintiff preliminary
    and final major subdivision approvals to construct twenty-one
    single-family residential units on the property, conditioned, in
    part, on the installation of six-inch thick reinforced concrete
    driveway aprons on each lot.
    Plaintiff    installed     asphalt       driveway     aprons      instead     of
    concrete aprons based on an alleged field change approved by the
    Township's former engineer, J. Michael Fralinger, who died in 2009
    without having documented his approval.                In 2012, the Township's
    new   engineer,   R&V,    rejected      the    asphalt     driveway     aprons    and
    required     plaintiff    to   remove    and     replace   them    with     concrete
    driveway aprons as required by the approvals.               Plaintiff responded
    that the project was already completed, and demanded a release of
    the performance bond it posted to ensure completion.
    To resolve the matter, plaintiff submitted an application to
    the Board to amend the approvals and subdivision plan to permit
    asphalt driveway aprons based on Fralinger's approval of the field
    2                                   A-5236-15T1
    change (the proposed change).1          The Board found it appeared that
    Fralinger approved the change, but because it was not a minimal
    or de minimus deviation, it was outside the scope of his authority
    to   approve   and   plaintiff    had   to    return     to    the    Board    for    a
    modification to the requirement for concrete driveway aprons.
    The Board considered plaintiff's application and determined
    that   because   plaintiff   and    the      president    of    the    Homeowner's
    Association, Mary Kay Trace, represented that all property owners
    supported the application and did not want to remove the asphalt
    driveway aprons, plaintiff's application "may be appropriately
    granted upon certification and proof that all [property owners]
    support the application."        The Board passed a resolution, granting
    the application subject to the following condition:
    Within one year of the approvals granted
    herein, [plaintiff] shall obtain and submit
    to the Township's Land Use Administrator, the
    written endorsement of all property owners
    within the development, on a letter in a form
    prepared by the Board Attorney, supporting and
    accepting [plaintiff's] proposed change from
    the concrete driveway aprons originally
    approved to the asphalt aprons installed.
    [(Emphasis added).]
    In other words, plaintiff had to obtain the unanimous consent of
    the property owners to the proposed change.
    1
    Plaintiff also sought other changes not pertinent to this
    appeal.
    3                                     A-5236-15T1
    Plaintiff filed a complaint in lieu of prerogative writs,
    seeking to exscind the condition and compel the Township to release
    the performance bond.2        Judge Georgia M. Curio held a settlement
    conference on January 21, 2016.       In a January 22, 2016 letter, the
    Board's attorney, Kevin A. Van Hise, advised the judge that
    "[p]ursuant to yesterday's settlement discussions . . . the Board
    would   be   amendable   to    modifying    the   condition    of   approval
    pertaining to the driveway aprons (requiring a majority sign-off
    of property owners rather than unanimous consent)[.]"                  Thus,
    instead of unanimous consent of the property owners, the Board
    would approve the proposed change if a majority consented.
    Van Hise enclosed a draft of a letter the Board would send
    to all property owners.        The letter notified the property owners
    of plaintiff's application and the proposed change, and that as a
    condition of approval, plaintiff had "to submit proof to the Board
    that a majority of the [property owners] within the development
    consent to this change by obtaining a countersignature to this
    letter by each [property owner]."          (Emphasis added).    The letter
    instructed the property owners to "indicate [their] consent or
    objection below, sign where indicated, and return this form to
    2
    Plaintiff sought other relief not pertinent to this appeal.
    4                               A-5236-15T1
    [the Board] as soon as possible."     Plaintiff's attorney requested
    a minor change to this letter, which did not affect its substance.
    Trace sent a letter to the property owners, urging them to
    respond to the Board's letter.         The letter also advised the
    property owners that the Board "agreed to abide by the decision
    of the majority of homeowners, a concession from [the Board's]
    original position to require a unanimous decision."
    In a March 24, 2016 letter, Van Hise advised Judge Curio as
    follows:
    The proposed settlement was agreeable to co-
    defendants, and by telephone conversation with
    [p]laintiff's counsel on February 4, with
    minor modification to the originally drafted
    letter, I was advised that the settlement was
    acceptable to [p]laintiff.       As such, on
    February   9th,    the Township   served,   by
    [c]ertified     [m]ail   [r]eturn    [r]eceipt
    [r]equested and [r]egular [m]ail, the agreed
    upon letter to all property owners in the
    development as listed on the official property
    owners report provided by the Tax Assessor's
    Office.
    Van Hise also advised that of the twenty-one property owners,
    seven consented to the proposed change, five objected, and nine
    did not vote, and thus, a majority did not consent to the proposed
    change.
    All parties moved to enforce the settlement, and agreed there
    was a settlement agreement and its terms were contained in Van
    Hise's January 22, 2016 letter.       The parties differed as to the
    5                          A-5236-15T1
    meaning of the term "majority."       Plaintiff argued that under the
    By-Laws of the Homeowners Association, one-fourth, or six, of the
    property owners constituted a quorum.      Thus, under this construct,
    it obtained the consent of more than a majority of the property
    owners because seven consented to the proposed change.     Defendants
    argued that plaintiff did not obtain the consent of a majority of
    all property owners, and thus, had not satisfied the condition of
    the settlement.
    Judge Curio denied plaintiff's motion and granted defendants'
    motion.     After reviewing the documentary evidence, the judge
    interpreted the term "majority" to mean that plaintiff was required
    to obtain the consent of a majority of the twenty-one property
    owners to the proposed change, not a majority of only those who
    voted.    The judge reasoned as follows:
    The conclusion that this has to be a
    majority of the [property owners] is contained
    in the correspondence of Mr. Van Hise . . .
    to the [c]ourt, which memorialized the terms
    of the settlement.
    [It is] further corroborated in the
    language of the [Board's] letter that was
    prepared for circulation among the [property
    owners]. Again, [it is] notable that it was
    submitted to all of the [property owners] and
    that . . . the language of it, the content of
    it, was approved by then counsel for the
    [p]laintiff.
    And also, this notion that it's a
    majority of the [property owners] versus some
    6                            A-5236-15T1
    other construct, is corroborated yet again by
    the language . . . of a letter submitted to
    all of the [property owners] by [Trace].
    And so clearly, the terms of the
    settlement required the vote of the majority
    of the [property owners] and that was not
    accomplished. [I am] not persuaded that the
    argument that a quorum was achieved has
    anything to do with this vote.
    This was not a vote of the [H]omeowner's
    [A]ssociation. This was a canvassing of all
    of the [property owners] and . . . going from
    the condition requiring unanimity of all
    [property owners] to a lesser burden of a
    majority of the [property owners].
    I [do not] think that [there is] any
    conclusion but that, clearly, the majority of
    the [property owners] was required in order
    to achieve [p]laintiff's preferred result.
    Judge   Curio    also   noted       that    plaintiff     was   "not     an
    unsophisticated participant in all of this[,]" and if "he relied
    on [a] purported field change, he did so at his own risk. . . .
    [T]here is no authority for a field change of this nature, even
    if, in fact, there was one made and that the condition imposed
    [could not] be changed in the fashion urged by [p]laintiff."                 The
    judge entered an order on June 22, 2016, denying plaintiff's
    motion, granting defendants' motion, confirming the settlement,
    and   dismissing      the   complaint      with    prejudice.         Plaintiff
    subsequently moved for reconsideration, which the judge denied.
    7                                 A-5236-15T1
    Plaintiff then filed a notice of appeal from the June 22, 2016
    order.
    On    appeal,   plaintiff    contends         Judge       Curio   erred   in   her
    interpretation of the term "majority."                 Plaintiff argues the judge
    should have interpreted the term "majority" in accordance with the
    definition of "majority vote" in Robert's Rules of Order, which
    states    that   "[o]nly   a   majority       of       those   actually   voting      is
    required."       Plaintiff posits that the Board's letter to the
    property   owners    did   not   refer       to    a    majority   of   the    "entire
    membership" of property owners, and again relies on the quorum
    argument it raised before the judge.3
    3
    We decline to address plaintiff's alternative argument that the
    judge should have voided the settlement because there was no
    meeting of the minds as to the definition of the term "majority."
    Plaintiff did not raise this issue before Judge Curio on its motion
    to enforce and it is not jurisdictional in nature and does not
    substantially implicate the public interest. Zaman v. Felton, 
    219 N.J. 199
    , 226-27 (2014) (citation omitted). Plaintiff improperly
    raised this issue for the first time in its motion for
    reconsideration.    However, a party may not use a motion for
    reconsideration as a basis for presenting facts or arguments that
    could have been provided in opposition to the original motion.
    Cummings v. Bahr, 
    295 N.J. Super. 374
    , 384 (App. Div. 1996).
    Further, plaintiff only designated the June 22, 2016 order in its
    notice of appeal, not the order denying its motion for
    reconsideration. "[I]t is only the judgments or orders or parts
    thereof designated in the notice of appeal which are subject to
    the appeal process and review." Pressler and Verniero, Current
    N.J. Court Rules, comment 6 on R. 2:5-1(f)(1) (2018).       We also
    decline to address plaintiff's contention that the Township was
    bound by Fralinger's approval of the field change, as the
    settlement subsumed this issue. An issue settled by the parties
    8                                     A-5236-15T1
    A settlement of a legal claim between parties is a contract
    like any other contract, Nolan v. Lee Ho, 
    120 N.J. 465
    , 472 (1990),
    which "may be freely entered into and which a court, absent a
    demonstration of 'fraud or other compelling circumstances,' should
    honor and enforce as it does other contracts."     Brundage v. Estate
    of Carambio, 
    195 N.J. 575
    , 601 (2008) (quoting Pascarella v. Bruck,
    190 N.J. Super 118, 124-25 (App. Div.) (citation omitted), certif.
    denied, 
    94 N.J. 600
    (1983)).   "The interpretation and construction
    of a contract is a matter of law for the trial court, subject to
    de novo review on appeal."     Cumberland Farms, Inc. v. N.J. Dep't
    of Envtl. Prot., 
    447 N.J. Super. 423
    , 438 (App. Div. 2016).     "[We]
    give 'no special deference to the trial court's interpretation and
    look at the contract with fresh eyes.'"       Manahawkin Convalescent
    v. O'Neill, 
    217 N.J. 99
    , 115 (2014) (quoting Kieffer v. Best Buy,
    
    205 N.J. 213
    , 223 (2011)).
    Courts should read contracts "as a whole in a fair and common
    sense manner," and enforce them "based on the intent of the
    parties,   the   express   terms   of   the   contract,   surrounding
    circumstances and the underlying purpose of the contract."         
    Id. at 118
    (quoting Hardy ex rel. Dowdell v. Abdul-Matin, 
    198 N.J. 95
    ,
    103 (2009); Caruso v. Ravenswood Developers, Inc., 337 N.J. Super.
    may not be raised on appeal. River Vale v. E. & R Off. Interiors,
    
    241 N.J. Super. 391
    , 402 (App. Div. 1990).
    9                          A-5236-15T1
    499, 506 (App. Div. 2001)).           The language of the contract, by
    itself, must determine the agreement's force and effect if it "is
    plain and capable of legal construction."          
    Ibid. (quoting Twp. of
    White v. Castle Ridge Dev. Corp., 
    419 N.J. Super. 68
    , 74-75 (App.
    Div. 2011)).    However, even in an unambiguous contract, the court
    "may consider 'all of the relevant evidence that will assist in
    determining    [its]   intent   and   meaning.'"   
    Ibid. (alteration in original)
    (quoting Conway v. 287 Corporate Ctr. Assocs., 
    187 N.J. 259
    , 269 (2006)).
    Generally, courts do not supply terms or re-write contracts
    to afford parties a better bargain than the one negotiated at the
    time of its formation.      Barr v. Barr, 
    418 N.J. Super. 18
    , 31-32
    (App. Div. 2011).      "The parties are bound by the contracts they
    make for themselves, with the understanding that 'a meeting of the
    minds is an essential element to the valid consummation' of any
    agreement."    
    Id. at 32
    (quoting Center 48 Ltd. P'ship v. May Dept.
    Stores Co., 
    355 N.J. Super. 390
    , 406 (App. Div. 2002)).
    When interpreting and enforcing contracts, courts focus on
    the parties' intent, the express contract terms, the surrounding
    circumstances at the time of its formation, and the purpose for
    which it was entered.      Manahawkin 
    Convalescent, supra
    , 217 N.J.
    at 118.   The court's purpose is to give the agreement its plain
    and rational meaning that aligns with the general purpose of the
    10                          A-5236-15T1
    contract. 
    Conway, supra
    , 187 N.J. at 269 (citing Atl. N. Airlines,
    Inc. v. Schwimmer, 
    12 N.J. 293
    , 301-02 (1953)).
    Here, the documents in evidence confirm the parties agreed
    that a majority of the twenty-one property owners, not a majority
    of those who voted, had to consent to the proposed change.               Van
    Hise's    January   22,   2016   letter   specifically   states   that   the
    condition of approval of the proposed change "require[d] a majority
    sign-off of property owners[.]"           (Emphasis added).   The Board's
    letter to the property owners also specified that plaintiff "was
    required to submit proof to the Board that a majority of homeowners
    within the development consent to this change by obtaining a
    countersignature to this letter by each homeowner.                (Emphasis
    added).     As well, Trace's letter to the property owners makes
    clear that the Board "agreed to abide by the decision of the
    majority of homeowners."         The clear language of these documents
    expressed the parties' intent that a majority of the property
    owners had to consent to the proposed change as a condition of the
    Board's approval of plaintiff's application.
    Moreover, no document in evidence contains any reference to
    the Homeowners Association's By-Laws, the necessity of a quorum,
    or that a majority will be defined as only a majority of those who
    actually voted. Thus, based on the plain language of the documents
    memorializing the settlement agreement, we are satisfied that
    11                             A-5236-15T1
    Judge Curio correctly interpreted the term "majority" to mean a
    majority of the twenty-one property owners, not the majority of
    those who actually voted.
    Affirmed.
    12                        A-5236-15T1