STAVROS, INC. VS. STATE OF NEW JERSEY, ETC. VS. SOUTH STATE, INC. (L-2788-13, BURLINGTON COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-0959-17T2
    STAVROS, INC.,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    by the COMMISSIONER OF
    TRANSPORTATION,
    Defendant/Third-Party
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    SOUTH STATE, INC.,
    Third-Party Defendant-
    Respondent.
    ___________________________
    Submitted March 27, 2019 – Decided September 12, 2019
    Before Judges Fuentes, Vernoia and Moynihan.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Burlington County, Docket No. L-2788-13.
    Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney General, attorney for
    appellant (Melissa H. Raksa, Assistant Attorney
    General, of counsel; Fredric R. Cohen, Deputy
    Attorney General, on the briefs).
    Duane Morris, LLP, attorneys for respondent Stavros,
    Inc. (Drew K. Kapur, of counsel and on the brief;
    Meredith E. Carpenter, on the brief).
    Braff, Harris, Sukoneck & Maloof, attorneys for
    respondent South State, Inc. (Adam J. Kipnis, on the
    brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Defendant State of New Jersey, by the Commissioner of the Department
    of Transportation (DOT), appeals from the September 14, 2017 final judgment
    of inverse condemnation entered following a bench trial in favor of plaintiff
    Stavros, Inc.1 We affirm.
    I.
    We discern the following facts based on the trial record and the court's
    findings of fact that are supported by substantial credible evidence. Stavros
    owned and operated "Olga's Diner" for almost fifty years on a rectangular 2.335-
    acre property it owned in fee simple located in Evesham Township near what
    was the Marlton Circle, where Route 70 and Route 73 intersected. The diner
    1
    Defendant South State "joins in the assignment of legal errors set forth in the
    State's appellate brief," but does not separately appeal the trial court's judgment.
    A-0959-17T2
    2
    faced north toward Route 70, with Old Marlton Pike behind it on the south side,
    and Route 73 to the east. The property had two driveways behind the diner on
    Old Marlton Pike. The property did not have road frontage on Route 70 or Route
    73; other parcels of land sat between it and the roads. Stavros leased the parcel
    between its property and Route 70 from the State from 1980 to 2009, used it for
    parking, and thereby had access to Route 70 through the lot's two driveways.
    Stavros also possessed an access driveway permit, issued by the State on April
    14, 1981, which authorized Stavros to construct a driveway to Route 70. Stavros
    accessed Route 73 via a 1959 private easement agreement with Lahn Real Estate,
    which owned the lot to the east of the diner and had a permit for direct access to
    Route 73. In this way, the Stavros property, on which it operated the diner, had
    direct access to Routes 70 and 73, as well as to Old Marlton Pike.
    The DOT undertook a highway construction project, the Marlton Circle
    Elimination Project, to reconfigure the Marlton Circle such that Route 73 would
    be elevated and pass over Route 70. The project included the construction of
    several jug handles, on and off ramps, driveway installations, modifications and
    removals, utility removal and modifications, and basins.        The project also
    included the DOT's permanent fee taking of three portions of Stavros's property
    and a temporary fee taking of a construction easement. The permanent fee
    A-0959-17T2
    3
    takings were for Block 22.01, lots 31 and 32, lot 37 and lot 39 on the Official
    Tax Map of Evesham Township. The temporary fee taking was for a 6088-
    square-foot temporary construction easement with a right of way to enter the
    remaining portion of the Stavros property.
    On July 30, 2004, the DOT sent Stavros a "Change of Access Letter,"
    which proposed eliminating Stavros's Route 70 access, included a plan for
    reasonable alternative access, and advised that Stavros had the right to a hearing.
    On October 27, 2004, Stavros's counsel faxed a copy of Stavros's access
    driveway permit for Route 70 to the DOT. The DOT responded on January 28,
    2005, stating the change in access included a permit revocation for the Route 70
    access, enclosing a Revocation of Access Plan—which also eliminated Stavros's
    Route 73 easement access through the Lahn property—and advising Stavros of
    its right to a hearing.
    Under the Revocation of Access plan, the DOT would construct Ramp K,
    which would terminate the existing direct access to the Stavros property from
    Route 73 but allow access by connecting the new elevated Route 73 with Old
    Marlton Pike.     The plan provided reasonable alternative access and replaced
    Stavros's existing access to Route 70 with a new, shared road, Service Road M,
    which would connect Stavros's property with Centre Boulevard, a road to the
    A-0959-17T2
    4
    west of Stavros's property that extended from Route 70 to Old Marlton Pike.
    The plan required reconfiguration of Stavros's eastern Old Marlton Pike
    driveway and improvements to the other. Thus, the plan proposed three access
    points to Stavros's property: two driveways along Old Marlton Pike and one
    driveway to Service Road M.
    In February 2005, Stavros met with DOT representatives and objected to
    the Revocation of Access Plan. Stavros claimed the plan revoked its state
    highway access without providing reasonable alternative access to the property.
    A meeting was held on May 5, 2005, for the purpose of exchanging information
    and hearing Stavros's concerns with the access design, and was attended by
    sixteen people, including State employees, consultants, engineers, a Deputy
    Attorney General, the Stavros representatives—John Stavros and his son, Tom
    Stavros—and their counsel. The court determined that at the May 2005 meeting,
    "[t]here was no discussion of terminating access to Route 70 in April 2009 or
    the need for any phased or staggered agreements with Stavros for implementing
    the new reasonable access as authorized" pursuant to N.J.S.A. 27:7-94(d).
    On February 21, 2006, the DOT Commissioner issued a final access
    decision, which left the Revocation of Access Plan intact and described all of
    the proposed takings as well as construction for the reasonable alternative
    A-0959-17T2
    5
    access, "but not any dates as to the closing of the Route 70 access." The DOT's
    final determination also provided Stavros with notice of its right to appeal to the
    Office of Administrative Law (OAL) if it contested the DOT's determination
    that the plan provided reasonable alternative access. Stavros did not appeal to
    the OAL and "accepted the DOT determination that the new substituted access
    was reasonable."
    Underlying Condemnation Action
    On June 12, 2008, the DOT filed a complaint for permanent and temporary
    condemnation of portions of Stavros's property, including temporary easements
    for construction of the designated reasonable alternative access "with rights to
    use the remainder of the Stavros property until completed." The complaint did
    not include a claim related to the temporary condemnation of Stavros's
    reasonable access property rights. The initial State appraisal for the takings
    alleged in the complaint was based on the assumption that the reasonable
    alternative access described in the Revocation of Access Plan would be provided
    by the DOT prior to its termination of Stavros's existing access to Routes 70 and
    73 during construction of the project, and suggested $410,000 in just
    compensation, without any consideration of the DOT's temporary possession of
    the remaining land.
    A-0959-17T2
    6
    On September 19, 2008, the court entered an order for final judgment
    permitting the DOT to exercise its power of eminent domain and appointing
    commissioners to fix the compensation to be paid for the DOT's acquisition of
    Stavros's property. Stavros did not object to the order. It is not disputed that
    the diner closed in November 2008 for unrelated reasons.
    Marlton Circle Construction Project
    The DOT awarded the contract for the highway construction project to
    South State on March 30, 2009. On April 1, 2009, the DOT issued a letter to
    Stavros canceling Stavros's lease of the State-owned lot between Stavros's
    property and Route 70, effective April 15, 2009, because the DOT required use
    of the lot for the project. The court found that the DOT and South State decided
    to use the State's lot as South State's construction staging area for the project
    prior to April 1, 2009.
    Route 70 Access and the April 15, 2009 Meeting
    Sometime between April 1 and 15, 2009, an informal meeting took place
    between the DOT, South State and Stavros's representatives at the DOT's
    request. The meeting was not held in accordance with any statutory or
    administrative requirements, no prior notice of the meeting was given, and there
    is no official record of what occurred. However, trial testimony revealed that a
    A-0959-17T2
    7
    sketch of a proposed construction yard and temporary fence on the State's lot,
    prepared by South State "for the State," was presented at the meeting. The court
    inferred that "the decision to erect the fence was, at a minimum, partly the
    decision of the State, if not wholly, because the sketch was prepared for the
    State," and found credible Tom Stavros's testimony that he did not know he
    could object to the fence's installation and "never thought it was his place to
    make a decision regarding South State using the State [lot] because neither the
    State nor South State ever indicated he could object." The court also noted that
    Tom Stavros reasonably believed he had no basis to object to the construction
    of a fence on the property because, prior to the meeting, the State notified
    Stavros that it was terminating Stavros's lease for the property.
    On April 15, 2009, South State moved onto the State lot and cut off
    Stavros's access to the Route 70 driveway by placement of a construction trailer
    and installation of a fence. At this time, the reasonable alternative access to the
    Stavros property described in the DOT's Revocation of Access Plan—through
    the two Old Marlton Pike driveways, Service Road M and Centre Boulevard—
    was not completed or open for public access. Indeed, the court determined that
    the reasonable alternative access described in the plan was not actually provided
    and available until November 2011.
    A-0959-17T2
    8
    Use of the Stavros Property and the Stavros Lease
    On April 15, 2009, with the DOT's full knowledge, South State began
    storing its materials and vehicles on Stavros's property without Stavros's
    permission. While Stavros had indicated an interest in leasing the property, at
    that time there was no lease and South State did not have Stavros's permission
    to utilize the property.
    From April 2009 to January 10, 2010, the DOT, through South State,
    occupied the Stavros property without permission and used it as a construction
    yard and staging area. On January 10, 2010, Stavros and South State entered
    into a lease allowing South State the use of the Stavros property's parking l ot
    areas for the construction project.
    As the court found, "Stavros received a rent of $23,400 for [thirty] months
    which both [the DOT's and Stavros's] appraisers characterize as nominal . . . ."
    The lease did not contain any waiver by Stavros of any claim for damages or
    Stavros's consent to the DOT's taking of any of Stavros's property right.
    Route 73 Driveway
    Stavros's easement access to Route 73 ended no later than September 2009
    as a result of utility work and the construction of Ramp K. In early October, a
    millings ramp was installed where the prior driveway over the easement on the
    A-0959-17T2
    9
    Lahn property was located. There was a gate to South State's construction yard
    on the State's lot north of the Route 73 driveway. South State unilaterally
    extended the millings ramp to Stavros's property, but Stavros never requested
    its installation, and the court inferred that the extension "was done for the benefit
    of South State to access its construction yard." The court found the millings
    ramp was "constructed in an active construction area" and was a "temporary
    construction fix." Stavros's original access to Route 73 was available from April
    2009 to September 2009. The court determined Route 73 access was only
    available via the millings road from September 2009 to April 2010, but the
    millings road was not for "public use."
    Completion of Reasonable Alternative Access
    The construction project was completed on November 4, 2011.
    Reasonable alternative access, as defined by the DOT in the Revocation of
    Access Plan, was not available at the time Stavros's access to Routes 70 and 73
    ended in 2009. The court found South State's actions, which resulted in blocking
    Stavros's Route 70 and 73 entrances and the denial of access to these roadways,
    were taken with the full knowledge, understanding and supervision of the DOT.
    The Old Marlton Pike driveways, both existing and new, were blocked at times
    from October 2009 to October 2011 by cones, barricades, a metal gate, and
    A-0959-17T2
    10
    trucks. The Old Marlton Pike driveways were not completed and open for public
    use until November 2011. Only construction vehicles had access to Service
    Road M and Centre Boulevard throughout 2010, as the Traffic Control and
    Staging (TCS) Plans provided that those roads have road closure signs. There
    were not three access points to the Stavros property open to the public at all
    times during construction.
    The court found that "[a] review of the TCS Plans and admitted documents
    clearly shows that the State did not intend to permit the public to utilize the
    reasonable alternative access construction areas before [they were] completed
    in November 2011." The court found the "TCS Plans provided that access to all
    properties and businesses was to be maintained throughout the . . . Project," and
    "the reasonable alternative access was to be installed prior to revoking the
    Access Permit and/or closing the Route 70 driveway." The court also found "the
    TCS Plans did not provide for a fence erected on the State Lease Property, nor
    did it provide for such a fence to block the access of the Route 70 driveways."
    Underlying Condemnation Action
    On November 23, 2010, one year before the reasonable alternative access
    was complete, a Commissioners' hearing was held on the DOT's underlying
    condemnation action. A State appraisal expert testified that, at the time of
    A-0959-17T2
    11
    writing his appraisal report, he assumed the reasonable alternative access
    driveways "would be in," and their construction had begun, but they were not
    fully completed. Another State expert testified that Stavros's Route 70 and
    Route 73 driveways were closed and "reasonable alternative access was not
    available to the Property for use of the Property as Olga's Diner as of the date
    of the Commissioners' Hearing."     As the court has explained, "No item of
    damages as to the two and one half year construction period was provided to the
    Commissioners . . . ." Stavros objected to the omission of compensation for the
    loss of access to the property because the property was not usable for two and
    one-half years.
    The DOT filed a notice of appeal from the Commissioners' award and a
    Demand for Jury Trial on or about December 22, 2010, and Stavros did the same
    on December 30, 2010.
    The parties disputed the amount of just compensation owed to Stavros for
    the DOT's permanent and temporary takings. Stavros argued it was entitled to
    damages for the loss of reasonable access to the state highways. As explained
    by the court here, "[a]fter considerable in limine motion practice," including a
    third motion in limine by the DOT in which the court heard testimony from Gary
    Petersen, South State's General Superintendent, and Michael Lipartito, DOT
    A-0959-17T2
    12
    Project Engineer, "the court [in the condemnation action] ultimately severed the
    inverse condemnation claim from the underlying condemnation action." The
    court directed Stavros to file an inverse condemnation counterclaim.
    Inverse Condemnation Action
    Stavros filed an inverse condemnation counterclaim on March 22, 2013.
    On July 24, 2013, the DOT filed an answer and a third-party complaint against
    its contractor, South State.    South State answered the DOT's third-party
    complaint on December 17, 2013.
    Underlying Condemnation Jury Trial
    In May 2014, a jury trial was held in the underlying condemnation action.
    Stavros's inverse condemnation claim, having been severed, was not presented
    to the jury. On May 30, 2014, the jury awarded $998,400 to Stavros as just
    compensation for the value of property the DOT acquired as of June 2008,
    assuming alternative access and all other improvements to the Stavros property
    had been completed at that time. Specifically, the jury considered the value of
    the fee takings and temporary taking of a 6088-square-foot work area but did
    not consider the impact of the DOT's takings on the rest of the Stavros property
    or Stavros's claim that the DOT denied its rights of reasonable access over the
    two and one-half years of construction.
    A-0959-17T2
    13
    Inverse Condemnation Bench Trial
    Judge John E. Harrington conducted a bench trial on Stavros's inverse
    condemnation claim. Stephen Carullo, South State's Project Manager, Gary
    Petersen, South State's General Superintendent, Michael Lipartito, DOT Project
    Engineer, Jay Etzel, Urban Engineers Traffic Engineer Expert on behalf of the
    State, and Tom Stavros, the property owner, testified.
    In a thorough, detailed and comprehensive 152-page written decision,
    Judge Harrington found the DOT had inversely condemned Stavros's right of
    reasonable access to its property from April 2009 to November 2011. The court
    determined that, "[f]or purposes of [its] opinion . . . South State was an agent of
    the State and acted in conformance with the construction specifications." The
    court based this determination on its finding that, throughout construction, there
    were always approximately ten State engineers and investigators on site
    inspecting the work, and "South State did not have any input in establishing the
    staging and phasing contained within the plans, and needed DOT approval for
    any change." Judge Harrington found "South State was basically charged with
    implementing the plans that it received from the State under the direction and
    control of the State's engineers and supervisors."
    A-0959-17T2
    14
    The court also determined Stavros had a property right in the reasonable
    alternative access that the DOT specified in its Revocation of Access Plan. The
    court found that the reasonable alternative access—which was identified by the
    DOT in its 2006 plan—did not exist for a two and a half year period, from April
    2009 to November 2011, and explained that the State Highway Access
    Management Act (SHAM Act), N.J.S.A. 27:7-89 to -98, "clearly provides that
    the original access is to exist until the new access is constructed." The court
    found the DOT "exceeded the State's police power" by revoking Stavros's access
    permit to Route 70 and erecting a fence preventing any access to Route 70 before
    providing the reasonable alternative access set forth in its plan because such
    action was non-compliant with the SHAM Act.
    The court further found the DOT not only failed to provide reasonable
    alternative access in accordance with its own plan under the SHAM Act, it also:
    substantially interfered with both the general and the
    particularized right of reasonable access. Even if one
    argues there is no property right in a particularized
    reasonable access, the evidence in the instant case
    shows that the State had substantially interfered with
    the general right of reasonable access to a highway
    system and would be sufficient in and of itself.
    Judge Harrington determined that without that access, Stavros could not
    utilize the property for its permitted commercial uses and had no choice but to
    A-0959-17T2
    15
    lease it to the DOT's agent, South State, for the non-permitted use of a
    construction yard.    The court found the Stavros property was substantially
    deprived of its beneficial and/or economic value for two and one-half years,
    thereby frustrating Stavros's investment-backed expectations because the
    property "could not have been used for any lawful (zoning permitted use)
    purpose but was in fact used as a construction yard for . . . considerably less
    than fair market value."
    The court further determined that Stavros "clearly and convincingly
    established that a taking of [its] right of reasonable access occurred for a two
    and one[-]half year period from April 15, 2009 to November 4, 2011." Judge
    Harrington conducted a detailed analysis and found that, "regardless of the
    takings jurisprudence utilized," "[t]he State's activities require[] a takings
    conclusion" and thus required compensation.       The court applied the Penn
    Central2 factors and found a regulatory taking occurred because: there was a
    deprivation of substantially all of the economically viable use of the property
    for a two and one-half year period, the removal of two direct access points
    (without a new access installed) and the construction in and around the property
    interfered with the property owners' investment-backed expectations, and the
    2
    Penn Cent. Transp. Co. v. New York City, 
    438 U.S. 104
    , 124 (1978).
    A-0959-17T2
    16
    State action here was not for the purpose of supporting public safety, but instead
    merely provided its contractor a staging area, and only impacted Stavros. The
    court also concluded a physical taking occurred in that the DOT possessed
    Stavros's reasonable access by failing to provide reasonable alternative access
    while blocking the existing access. In addition, the court found a temporary
    physical invasion of Stavros's property interest of reasonable access.
    The court addressed the DOT's defenses, finding Stavros did not waive
    any of its rights; Stavros did not consent to the DOT's actions and merely
    attempted to mitigate its damages by entering into a lease with South State; and
    there was no evidence Stavros "concealed or misrepresented its position that it
    was entitled to reasonable compensation for the value of the occupation of the
    reasonable alternative access" and no evidence of any discussion for staggered
    construction or deviation from the approved plans, so Stavros's inverse claim
    was not equitably estopped. Addressing the statute of limitations, the court
    found April 2009 was the earliest date on which the DOT's conduct in denying
    reasonable access was known and could be known to cause damage. Stavros
    brought its inverse claim in March 2013 and was "well within the six-year statute
    of limitations set forth in N.J.S.A. 2A:14-1."
    A-0959-17T2
    17
    The court found that, "[a]t its simplest level, the State's failure to maintain
    access in accordance with the DOT 2006 reasonable [alternative] access
    decision as implemented through the contract specifications with respect to
    timing and staging requires compensation pursuant to State ex rel.
    Commissioner of Transportation v. Marlton Plaza Associates, L.P., 426 N.J.
    Super. 337 (App. Div. 2012)." The court issued an order for final judgment on
    inverse condemnation on September 14, 2017, concluding the DOT took
    Stavros's "property right of reasonable access to its property . . . without having
    instituted condemnation proceedings and without having paid just compensation
    therefore." The court found a temporary inverse taking of Stavros's property
    right of reasonable access from April 15, 2009, until November 4, 2011,
    requiring just compensation "[f]or the reasons expressed in" its written opinion.
    The September 14, 2017 order further required the DOT to file its
    complaint for the inverse valuation proceeding, scheduled a trial for same,
    certified that the court's findings and conclusions as to the determination of a
    temporary taking from April 2009 to November 2011 were a final judgment for
    A-0959-17T2
    18
    purposes   of    appeal, 3   and   retained   jurisdiction   over   the   third-party
    indemnification issues. The DOT appealed.
    On appeal, the DOT presents the following arguments for our
    consideration.
    POINT I
    THE TRIAL COURT LACKED JURISDICTION TO
    REVIEW AND DECIDE STRAVROS' ACCESS
    CLAIMS.
    POINT II
    THE COURT FAILED TO APPLY THE STANDARD
    GOVERNING     INVERSE    CONDEMNATION
    ACTIONS.
    POINT III
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN RELYING ON AN
    UNPRECEDENTED AND UNFOUNDED LEGAL
    THEORY.
    A. The Per Se Theory Is Inconsistent with Prevailing
    Legal Authority.
    B. The Trial Court Incorrectly Concluded That
    Stavros'[s] Property Interest Was Impaired.
    C. The Per Se Theory Is Not Practically Possible To
    Implement.
    3
    See Janicky v. Point Bay Fuel, Inc., 
    396 N.J. Super. 545
    , 550-51 (App. Div.
    2007), explaining the conditions required before a trial court may certify an
    order as final for purposes of appeal pursuant to Rule 4:42-2.
    A-0959-17T2
    19
    POINT IV
    THE NJDOT'S ACTIONS DID NOT GIVE RISE TO
    A VALID CLAIM FOR INVERSE CONDEMNATION
    BY A REGULATORY TAKING.
    A. Stavros Did Not Seek Relief From A Regulatory
    Taking, And No Regulation Caused a Taking.
    B. Only a Total Taking Is Recognized, and Regulatory
    Taking Factors Are Absent.
    POINT V
    THE NJDOT'S ACTIONS DID NOT GIVE RISE TO
    A VALID CLAIM FOR INVERSE CONDEMNATION
    BY PHYSICAL TAKING.
    POINT VI
    THE COURT ERRED IN CONCLUDING THAT THE
    NJDOT EXERCISED ITS POLICE POWER TO
    HAVE THE FENCE ERECTED.
    A. Stavros'[s] Route 70 Access Permit Can Be
    Compromised.
    B. The Police Power May Be Exercised Without
    Compensation.
    POINT VII
    THE COURT ERRED IN REJECTING THE NJDOT'S
    DEFENSES OF WAIVER, CONSENT, AND
    EQUITABLE ESTOPPEL.
    A. Stavros Waived Its Inverse Action.
    A-0959-17T2
    20
    B. Stavros's Consent to South State's Construction of
    the Fence and Use of the Entire Property through the
    Lease Bars This Inverse Action.
    C. The Doctrine of Equitable Estoppel Bars This
    Inverse Action.
    POINT VIII
    BECAUSE THE NJDOT AS A MATTER OF LAW
    CANNOT BE HELD LIABLE FOR THE ACTIONS
    OF SOUTH STATE, PURSUANT TO THE NEW
    JERSEY TORT CLAIMS ACT, THE TRIAL COURT
    IMPROPERLY APPLIED AGENCY LAW.
    II.
    Our review of "the findings and conclusions of a trial court following a
    bench trial are well-established." Allstate Ins. Co. v. Northfield Med. Ctr., PC,
    
    228 N.J. 596
    , 619 (2017). We review the trial court's interpretation of law de
    novo. Manalapan Realty, LP v. Twp. Comm. of Manalapan, 
    140 N.J. 366
    , 378
    (1995).
    [W]e give deference to the trial court that heard the
    witnesses, sifted the competing evidence, and made
    reasoned conclusions. Reviewing appellate courts
    should "not disturb the factual findings and legal
    conclusions of the trial judge" unless convinced that
    those findings and conclusions were "so manifestly
    unsupported by or inconsistent with the competent,
    relevant and reasonably credible evidence as to offend
    the interests of justice."
    A-0959-17T2
    21
    [Allstate Ins. 
    Co., 228 N.J. at 619
    (alteration in
    original) (citations omitted) (quoting Griepenburg v.
    Township of Ocean, 
    220 N.J. 239
    , 254 (2015)).]
    We do not "engage in an independent assessment of the evidence as if
    [we] were the court of first instance," State v. Locurto, 
    157 N.J. 463
    , 471 (1999),
    and will "not weigh the evidence, assess the credibility of witnesses, or make
    conclusions about the evidence," Mountain Hill, LLC v. Township of
    Middletown, 
    399 N.J. Super. 486
    , 498 (App. Div. 2008) (quoting State v.
    Barone, 
    147 N.J. 599
    , 615 (1997)).          "Reversal is reserved only for those
    circumstances when we determine the factual findings and legal conclusions of
    the trial judge went 'so wide of the mark that a mistake must have been made.'"
    Llewelyn v. Shewchuk, 
    440 N.J. Super. 207
    , 214 (App. Div. 2015) (quoting N.J.
    Div. of Youth & Family Servs. v. M.M., 
    189 N.J. 261
    , 279 (2007)). "If we are
    satisfied that the trial judge's findings and result could reasonably have been
    reached on sufficient credible evidence in the record as a whole, his [or her]
    determination should not be disturbed." Pioneer Nat'l Title Ins. Co. v. Lucas,
    
    155 N.J. Super. 332
    , 338 (App. Div. 1978).
    Applying these standards, we find no merit in the DOT's arguments and
    affirm substantially for the reasons set forth in Judge Harrington's well-reasoned
    A-0959-17T2
    22
    written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E). Nonetheless, we address the DOT's claims
    of purported error.
    A.
    The DOT first argues the trial court lacked jurisdiction to review and
    decide Stavros's inverse condemnation claims.       The DOT claims this case
    "involves a consensual access change due to the fence construction and does not
    constitute any cause of action," "Stavros was obligated to prospectively protect"
    its interest in the availability of its Route 70 access "during the 2006 access
    administrative process before the [DOT]" and failed to do so, and "Stavros'[s]
    failure to exhaust administrative remedies . . . precludes an inverse
    condemnation action."
    Under the Eminent Domain Act of 1971, "[t]he court shall have
    jurisdiction of all matters in condemnation, and all matters incidental thereto
    and arising therefrom . . . ." N.J.S.A. 20:3-5. The Fifth Amendment to the
    United States Constitution provides that "private property" shall not "be taken
    for public use, without just compensation." This provision has been made
    applicable to the states through the Due Process clause of the Fourteenth
    Amendment. Lingle v. Chevron U.S.A. Inc., 
    544 U.S. 528
    , 536 (2005). The
    New Jersey Constitution, article I, paragraph 20, and article IV, section 6,
    A-0959-17T2
    23
    paragraph 3, also protect against governmental takings of private property
    without just compensation, and its protections are coextensive with that of the
    federal provision. Klumpp v. Borough of Avalon, 
    202 N.J. 390
    , 404-05 (2010).
    The SHAM Act and the State Highway Access Management Code (SHAM
    Code), N.J.A.C. 16:47-1.1 to -14.1, regulate a property's access to the State's
    highways. The SHAM Act codifies a property owner's "right of reasonable
    access to the general system of streets and highways in the State" and subjects
    that right "to regulation for the purpose of protecting the public health, safety
    and welfare." N.J.S.A. 27:7-90(e). The DOT Commissioner has authority to
    issue and revoke access permits for the construction or removal of driveways
    onto State highways. N.J.S.A. 27:7-92(a) and -94(a).
    However, before the Commissioner may revoke an existing access permit,
    the Commissioner must first find that "alternative access," N.J.S.A. 27:7 -94(c),
    is or will be available to the property and that revoking the existing access permit
    serves the purposes of the Act, N.J.S.A. 27:7-94(a).        The Act provides for
    written notice to the property owner as well as an opportunity to be heard. 
    Ibid. The Commissioner must
    provide the owner "a plan depicting how . . . alternative
    access shall be obtained . . . and the improvements which will be provided by
    the department to secure the alternative means of access." N.J.S.A. 27:7-94(b).
    A-0959-17T2
    24
    "[A]lternative access shall be assumed to exist if the property owner
    enjoys reasonable access to the general system of streets and highways."
    N.J.S.A. 27:7-94(c). N.J.S.A. 27:7-94(c)(1) provides that alternative access is
    presumptively reasonable for property zoned for commercial use if the property
    has access:
    [o]nto any parallel or perpendicular street, highway,
    easement, service road or common driveway, which is
    of sufficient design to support commercial traffic to the
    business or use, and is so situated that motorists will
    have a convenient, direct, and well-marked means of
    both reaching the business or use and returning to the
    highway.
    [N.J.S.A. 27:7-94(c)(1).]
    The DOT's determination regarding reasonable alternative access "shall be
    final" for the purposes of appeal and binding on the property owner and the
    State. N.J.S.A. 27:7-95(b).
    Here, the DOT made a determination as to what constituted reasonable
    alternative access during the construction project, and Stavros accepted the
    DOT's determination.      The court, however, found as a matter of fact that the
    reasonable alternative access which the DOT defined in the Revocation of
    Access Plan was never provided to Stavros during the thirty months from April
    2009 through November 2011.
    A-0959-17T2
    25
    When the DOT revokes an access permit, the DOT must "provid[e] all
    necessary assistance to the property owner in establishing the alternative
    access," which includes, but is not limited to, "funding of any such
    improvements by the department," costs associated with relocation and removal
    of access drives, "on-site circulation improvements to accommodate changes in
    access drives," installation of traffic signs, and the "cost of any lands, or any
    rights or interests in lands, and any other right required to accomplish the
    relocation or removal."    N.J.S.A. 27:7-94(d).      The SHAM Act includes a
    limitation on the revocation of an access permit. "Until the alternative access is
    completed and available for use, the [existing access] permit shall not be
    revoked." N.J.S.A. 27:7-94(d) (emphasis added). However, the DOT and a
    property owner may enter into an agreement for phased development of a project
    providing for reasonable alternative access. 
    Ibid. A challenge to
    the DOT's determination as to the reasonable access it
    commits to provide in a Revocation of Access Plan would require that Stavros
    exhaust its administrative remedies by appealing that determination to the
    Commissioner.     See Marlton Plaza 
    Assocs., 426 N.J. Super. at 348-50
    (explaining the procedure for appealing the revocation of an access permit).
    However, Stavros did not, and does not, challenge the DOT's Revocation of
    A-0959-17T2
    26
    Access Plan, or the reasonable alternative access the DOT determined it would
    provide under the plan. Instead, Stavros challenged the DOT's taking of its
    property interest in the alternative reasonable access the DOT said it would
    provide under the plan and to which Stavros was otherwise entitled. Stavros
    alleged the DOT failed to provide the reasonable alternative access by revoking
    Stavros's lease to the property over which access to Route 70 was provided under
    its access permit, allowing South State's construction of a fence which resulted
    in the denial of any access to Route 70, and other actions that resulted in no
    reasonable access to the property from Route 73 and Old Marlton Pike for thirty
    months.
    The trial court made findings of fact, supported by testimony it found
    credible, that Stavros did not consent to, and never entered into an agreement
    under N.J.S.A. 27:7-94(d) permitting, a loss of its right to the reasonable
    alternative access expressly provided for in the Revocation of Access Plan
    promulgated by the DOT. Nothing in the SHAM Act required Stavros to engage
    in an administrative appeal to preserve its right to reasonable access under the
    statute and as provided in the DOT's plan. To the contrary, the SHAM Act
    specifically provides that, absent a clear agreement to the contrary between the
    Commissioner and the property owner, an existing access permit cannot be
    A-0959-17T2
    27
    revoked until alternative access is complete and available for use.4 N.J.S.A.
    27:7-94(d).
    Where the Commissioner seeks to acquire "any right of access to any
    highway," he or she may do so by "purchase or condemnation." N.J.S.A. 27:7-
    98.   The DOT granted Stavros reasonable access under a plan the DOT
    promulgated and Stavros accepted, but then failed to comply not only with its
    own plan, but also with the statutory prohibition against revoking access until
    the promised reasonable alternative access was provided. See N.J.S.A. 27:7-
    97(d).     As correctly found by the court, the DOT's actions resulted in no
    reasonable access to the Stavros property from April 2009 to November 2011,
    deprived Stavros of the beneficial use of its right of access and property, and
    constituted a de facto taking of Stavros's property for which an inverse
    condemnation claim lies. See Greenway Dev. Co. v. Borough of Paramus, 
    163 N.J. 546
    , 553 (2000); see also Marlton Plaza 
    Assocs., 426 N.J. Super. at 356
    (finding that under the SHAM Act and the common law, where "access that
    4
    The DOT also argues in its reply brief that Stavros's inverse taking claim is
    time-barred under the six-year statute of limitations, N.J.S.A. 2A:14-1, because
    the DOT's final agency decision letter was dated February 21, 2006, and Stavros
    did not file its inverse affirmative pleading until March 22, 2013. As the trial
    court noted, Stavros's claim concerns State actions beginning in 2009. Thus,
    Stavros's claim is not time-barred.
    A-0959-17T2
    28
    remains following DOT regulation is not reasonable," the State is required to
    "acquire the property interest through condemnation"); Magliochetti v. State by
    Comm'r of Transp., 
    276 N.J. Super. 361
    , 371 (Law Div. 1994) (explaining that
    "[i]n lieu of providing reasonable alternative access when revoking a permit,
    'the commissioner may acquire, by purchase or condemnation, any right of
    access to any highway . . . .'"). We therefore reject the DOT's arguments and
    find the court properly exercised its jurisdiction in deciding Stavros's inverse
    condemnation claim.
    B.
    The DOT next argues Stavros must prove its claim for inverse taking by
    clear and convincing evidence and prove deprivation of all or substantially all
    of the beneficial use of the whole property, as opposed to the loss of a "property
    right of reasonable access." The DOT asserts that the court failed to apply this
    standard because the court did not find that the loss of direct access to Route 70
    constituted substantial destruction of the beneficial use of the property as a
    whole. Moreover, the DOT argues the court could not reach such a conclusion
    because the property retained two-thirds of the property's access during
    construction.
    A-0959-17T2
    29
    We reject the DOT's arguments because they are undermined by the
    court's factual findings which are supported by substantial credible evidence.
    Contrary to the DOT's assertions, the court did not find that the April 2009 cutoff
    of access to Route 70 was the only interruption in access to the property. The
    court also determined the Route 73 access was replaced by a millings road that
    was not available for public access, the property's two Old Marlton Pike
    driveways did not remain open and available for public use throughout the
    construction project, that neither of the Old Marlton Pike driveways constituted
    the reasonable alternative access to Routes 70 and 73 set forth in the DOT's 2006
    Revocation of Access Plan, and that the DOT did not provide access through
    Service Road M until November 2011. The DOT illogically contends that
    Stavros is bound by the reasonable alternative access determination set forth in
    the DOT's Revocation of Access Plan but that the DOT's failure to provide
    access in accordance with the plan and as required under N.J.S.A. 27:7-94 did
    not deprive Stavros of reasonable access. The trial court found that, without the
    reasonable access the DOT said it would provide under its plan or any other
    reasonable access, Stavros could not utilize the property for its permitted
    commercial uses and the property "could not have been used for any lawful . . .
    purpose" for two and one-half years.
    A-0959-17T2
    30
    We defer to the trial judge's findings that the Stavros property did not have
    reasonable access pursuant to N.J.S.A. 27:7-94(c)(1) or otherwise from April
    2009 to November 2011 and the loss of reasonable access resulted in a
    concomitant loss of the beneficial use of Stavros's property for its permitted
    commercial uses during that time because both findings are supported by
    substantial credible evidence in the record. See Allstate Ins. 
    Co., 228 N.J. at 619
    .
    C.
    The DOT also contends the trial court erred in finding that the SHAM Act
    required the DOT to maintain Stavros's existing access until the reasonable
    alternative access was available. The DOT argues the court "relied on the per
    se theory to conclude a taking had occurred, merely due to a change in the
    original access, before the alternative access was complete" and repeats its
    earlier argument, which we have addressed and rejected, that the court ignored
    "a required element of the inverse condemnation review: whether, after such an
    access change, Stavros lost the beneficial use of the totality of its Property."
    The DOT contends a property owner has no right to a particular access point on
    his or her property under the SHAM Act.
    A-0959-17T2
    31
    The trial court correctly found under the plain language of the SHAM Act
    that Stavros had a right to continual reasonable access during construction of the
    reasonable alternative access. The SHAM Act provides:
    When the commissioner revokes an access permit
    pursuant to this section, the commissioner shall be
    responsible for providing all necessary assistance to the
    property owner in establishing the alternative access,
    which shall include the funding of any such
    improvements by the department. Until the alternative
    access is completed and available for use, the permit
    shall not be revoked. The commissioner shall also erect
    on the State highway and on connecting local highways
    suitable signs directing motorists to the new access
    location. The commissioner may enter into agreements
    with property owners for phased development and
    provisions of this subsection shall not supersede any
    such agreements.
    [N.J.S.A. 27:7-94(d) (emphasis added).]
    For a commercial property like Stavros's, alternative access exists if the
    property has reasonable access onto a street, road or driveway "of sufficient
    design to support commercial traffic . . . so situated that motorists will have a
    convenient, direct, and well-marked means of . . . reaching the business . . . and
    returning to the highway." N.J.S.A. 27:7-94(c)(1). Here, the DOT determined
    what constituted reasonable alternative access to Routes 70 and 73 from
    Stavros's property in its 2006 final Revocation of Access Plan. But, as the court
    found, and as the evidence shows, the DOT failed to provide the reasonable
    A-0959-17T2
    32
    alternative access the DOT defined and committed to provide, and no other
    reasonable access to the property was otherwise available from April 2009 to
    November 2011.
    Although the DOT is correct that a property owner has no right under the
    SHAM Act to a particular access point on his or her property, N.J.S.A. 27:7-
    90(e), "modification or revocation of an access point" will not constitute a taking
    only "so long as free and reasonable access remains," Marlton Plaza 
    Assocs., 426 N.J. Super. at 355
    . Here, however, the DOT made a final determination in
    the Revocation of Access Plan that Stavros had a right to a defined and specified
    reasonable alternative access. Indeed, the DOT argues its promulgation of the
    plan constituted a final agency decision that Stavros could challenge onl y by
    appeal to this court.       Stavros did not appeal and accepted the DOT's
    determination and, in our view, therefore became vested with a property interest
    in the reasonable alternative access the DOT adopted in its final agency decision.
    The DOT never modified the Revocation of Access Plan to change the proposed
    reasonable alternative access and therefore did not afford Stavros the
    opportunity to appeal any proposed change to the reasonable alternative access
    that the DOT defined and committed to provide in its plan. See N.J.S.A. 27:7-
    94(c).     Instead, the DOT violated N.J.S.A. 27:7-94(d) by taking actions—
    A-0959-17T2
    33
    revoking Stavros's access permit and allowing South Street's construction of a
    fence blocking access to the Stavros property from Route 70—prior to the
    construction of the reasonable alternative access defined in the DOT's final
    agency decision, the Revocation of Access Plan.        As the court found, "[t]he
    State should have known that by eliminating direct ingress and egress to Route
    70, it was both revoking access and completing the revocation [of Stavros's
    access permit] process without providing the determined, accepted and required
    means of alternative access."
    "[I]f the access that remains following DOT regulation is not reasonable,
    the property owner's Fifth Amendment rights are implicated . . . since lack of
    reasonable access would interfere with the property owner's distinct investment -
    backed expectations."     Marlton Plaza 
    Assocs., 426 N.J. Super. at 356
    .           In
    Marlton Plaza Associates, on which the DOT relies, the property retained two
    of its original three access points to the highway, losing only one point of access.
    
    Id. at 343-44.
    The court found the remaining access was clearly reasonable. 
    Id. at 356.
    The DOT correctly argues that a property owner is not entitled to a
    particular point of access, see High Horizons Dev. Co. v. Dep't of Transp., 
    120 N.J. 40
    , 48 (1990); Marlton Plaza 
    Assocs., 426 N.J. Super. at 355
    , but ignores
    A-0959-17T2
    34
    the court's well-supported factual findings that the DOT failed to provide any
    reasonable alternative access—indeed any access by the public—either as
    specified in its plan or otherwise from April 2009 to November 2011.
    Reasonable access for commercial property is defined as access that "is of
    sufficient design to support commercial traffic to the business or use, and is so
    situated that motorists will have a convenient, direct, and well-marked means of
    both reaching the business or use and returning to the highway." N.J.S.A. 27:7-
    94(c)(1). The court found as a matter of fact that no such access was provided
    during the project.   We affirm those findings because they are supported by
    substantial credible evidence. See Allstate Ins. 
    Co., 228 N.J. at 619
    .
    D.
    The DOT contends Stavros did not allege a regulatory taking in its
    complaint, and is therefore not entitled to seek relief from a regulatory taking .
    The DOT is correct that Stavros's complaint did not specifically use the phrase
    "regulatory taking," and the court noted in its opinion that Stavros "has not
    requested a regulatory takings determination, but has submitted arguments
    supporting same." However, Stavros alleged an inverse condemnation action
    based on conduct arising from regulatory action in its inverse condemnation
    cross-claim and, given that "reasonable inferences and implications are to be
    A-0959-17T2
    35
    considered most strongly in favor of the pleader," Spring Motors Distribs., Inc.
    v. Ford Motor Co., 
    191 N.J. Super. 22
    , 30 (App. Div. 1983), the DOT was "fairly
    apprise[d]," 
    id. at 29,
    of the claim. We therefore discern no basis to conclude
    that the court erred by considering, in its comprehensive analysis of Stavros's
    taking claims, whether the DOT's actions constituted a regulatory taking.
    The DOT also contends no regulation caused a taking, and regulatory
    taking factors are absent. In addition, the DOT argues the court erred in finding
    a physical taking because "a revocable access permit is not a contractual
    easement," Stavros leased all of its rights in its property to South State, including
    the right to access roadways, and the court's reliance on United States v. Gerlach
    Live Stock Co., 
    339 U.S. 725
    (1950), is misplaced because unlike riparian rights,
    "Stavros had no . . . uninterrupted property right to Route 70 access."
    The court recognized the complexities attendant to conducting a
    regulatory takings analysis "[w]hen it is not clear whether the taking is
    regulatory or physical" and noted that "[t]he State activities in this case are not
    the typical regulatory permitting circumstance." The court found that the DOT
    took regulatory action in its adoption of the Revocation of Access Plan because
    it revoked Stavros's access permit, while substituting what it defined as
    reasonable alternative access as a condition of the revocation under the SHAM
    A-0959-17T2
    36
    Act. The court further found the DOT violated its plan by allowing its agent,
    South State, to erect a fence on the property barring access to Route 70, prior to
    providing reasonable alternative access.
    The Court has "staked out two narrow categories of regulatory action that
    generally will be deemed per se takings." Marlton Plaza Assocs., 426 N.J.
    Super. at 352-53. The first category is "where government requires an owner to
    suffer a permanent physical invasion of her property." 
    Id. at 353
    (quoting
    
    Lingle, 544 U.S. at 538
    ). "The second 'applies to regulations that completely
    deprive an owner of all economically beneficial use of her property.'" Ibid.
    (quoting 
    Lingle, 544 U.S. at 538
    ). However, as recognized by the court, under
    the Penn Central analysis:
    when a regulation impedes the use of property without
    depriving the owner of all economically beneficial use,
    a taking still may be found based on "a complex of
    factors," including (1) the economic impact of the
    regulation on the claimant; (2) the extent to which the
    regulation has interfered with distinct investment-
    backed expectations; and (3) the character of the
    governmental action.
    [Murr v. Wisconsin, ___ U.S. ___, ___, 
    137 S. Ct. 1933
    ,
    1943 (2017) (citation omitted).]
    A property owner must establish more than "lost economic opportunities,
    forgone financing, and diminution in market value" to satisfy the economic
    A-0959-17T2
    37
    impact prong. Littman v. Gimello, 
    115 N.J. 154
    , 164 (1989). The owner must
    demonstrate the regulation "'substantially destroys the beneficial use of private
    property,' or does not allow an 'adequate' or 'just and reasonable' return on
    investment." Karam v. Dep't of Envtl. Prot., 
    308 N.J. Super. 225
    , 236 (App.
    Div. 1998) (quoting Gardner v. N.J. Pinelands Comm'n, 
    125 N.J. 193
    , 211
    (1991)).
    In addition, the property owner's investment-backed expectations must be
    reasonable. E. Cape May Assocs. v. Dep't of Envtl. Prot., 
    300 N.J. Super. 325
    ,
    337 (App. Div. 1997). "Whether or not expectations are considered reasonable
    will depend to a significant extent on whether the property owner had notice in
    advance of its investment decision that the governmental regulations which are
    alleged to constitute the taking had been or would be enacted." 
    Ibid. Here, the court
    conducted a detailed analysis of the Penn Central factors
    and found the DOT's regulatory action, exceeding its regulatory authority under
    the SHAM Act by revoking Stavros's access permit without providing the
    reasonable alternative access required under the plan and N.J.S.A. 27:7-94(d),
    effectively deprived Stavros of all economically beneficial use of its property
    for two and one-half years.
    A-0959-17T2
    38
    In Washington Market Enterprises v. City of Trenton, the Court noted
    "[t]he general question as to when governmental action amounts to a taking of
    property has always presented a vexing and thorny problem," which has led to
    seemingly inconsistent results. 
    68 N.J. 107
    , 116 (1975). The Court determined
    that although the City of Trenton's "declaration of blight" of a redevelopment
    area, "in and of itself, [did] not constitute a taking," a taking can occur where
    "in addition to the declaration . . . other related activities . . . are said to have
    shorn property of literally all or most of its value." 
    Id. at 115.
    The court made
    its regulatory taking determination based on a similar finding here. We decline
    to reward the DOT for exceeding its authority under the SHAM Act by finding
    there is no regulatory taking where its regulation by promulgation of the
    Revocation of Action Plan and failure to provide any reasonable access during
    the construction project resulted in Stavros's loss of the beneficial use of its
    property.
    The trial court properly found a taking under its analysis of the Penn
    Central factors. The court determined a regulatory taking occurred because
    Stavros was deprived of substantially all of the economically viable use of the
    property for two and one-half years, the lack of reasonable access and the
    construction around the property interfered with Stavros's investment-backed
    A-0959-17T2
    39
    expectations, and the DOT's actions were not designed to support public safety,
    but instead merely provided its contractor with a staging area, and only impacted
    Stavros. "[W]e are satisfied that the trial judge's findings and result could
    reasonably have been reached on sufficient credible evidence in the record as a
    whole," and the "determination should not be disturbed." Pioneer Nat'l Title Ins.
    
    Co., 155 N.J. Super. at 338
    .
    E.
    The DOT contends Stavros failed to object and/or consented to the
    installation of the fence on the State lot through which access to Route 70 had
    previously been provided, thus the DOT never exercised its police power in
    permitting South State to erect the fence around the State lot between Stavros's
    property and Route 70, cutting off Stavros's access to the highway. In the
    alternative, the DOT claims that even if it did exercise its police power in
    allowing the fence, its exercise was "lawful and explicitly authorized." The
    DOT contends Stavros's Route 70 permit authorizes access changes during
    construction, and the property always had reasonable access after South State
    erected the fence that blocked access to Route 70.
    The court found, and we agree, that the Stavros property did not enjoy
    reasonable access throughout the construction period and the DOT's actions
    A-0959-17T2
    40
    violated the statutory requirements in N.J.S.A. 27:7-94(d). The DOT provides
    no citation to any legal authority supporting its contention that the terms of the
    April 1981 Route 70 permit supersede the substantive and procedural
    requirements of the SHAM Act. The court found, based on testimony from Tom
    Stavros that it found credible, that Stavros did not consent to the construction of
    a fence that barred access to Route 70 because the fence was not indicated on
    the map of the property shown to him, and that he did not know Stavros could
    object to the fence because the meeting at which the fence was referenced
    followed the DOT's notice of termination of Stavros's lease for the property. We
    will "not weigh the evidence, assess the credibility of witnesses, or make
    conclusions about the evidence," Mountain Hill, 
    LLC, 399 N.J. Super. at 498
    (quoting 
    Barone, 147 N.J. at 615
    ), and defer to the trial judge's fact-finding,
    which undermines the DOT's assertion that Stavros consented to installation of
    the fence in a manner resulting in a waiver of its claim that barring its access to
    Route 70 without providing reasonable alternative access resulted in a taking of
    its right to reasonable access during the construction project.
    F.
    The DOT argues the trial court erred in rejecting its defenses of waiver,
    consent and equitable estoppel. The DOT claims Stavros waived its inverse
    A-0959-17T2
    41
    condemnation claim by not filing an administrative appeal of the 2006 access
    determination, failing to "veto the fence" at the informal April 2009 meeting,
    leasing its property to South State, and failing to file suit to remove the fence.
    The DOT further claims this inverse action is barred because Stavros consented
    to the fence and use of its entire property through its lease of the property to
    South State for use as a construction yard. The DOT also argues equitable
    estoppel bars this action because the DOT and South State relied on Stavros's
    consent to the fence, loss of its Route 70 access, and South State 's use of the
    State lot through Stavros's lease with South State. In addition, the DOT contends
    the trial court improperly applied agency law in the analysis of the DOT's
    responsibility for the actions of South State because the New Jersey Tort Claims
    Act, N.J.S.A. 59:1-1 to 12-3, bars the imposition of liability against the State,
    except as provided by the Act, "for an injury, whether such injury arises out of
    an act or omission of the public entity or a public employee or any other person."
    N.J.S.A. 59:2-1.    In the alternative, the DOT argues South State was an
    independent contractor, not an agent, for whose actions the DOT cannot be held
    liable.
    We have considered these arguments and find they are without sufficient
    merit to warrant discussion in a written opinion, R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E). We thus
    A-0959-17T2
    42
    affirm same substantially for the reasons stated in Judge Harrington's written
    opinion.
    Affirmed.
    A-0959-17T2
    43