Timber Glen Phase III, LLC and Jsm at Timber Glen, LLC Vs. , 441 N.J. Super. 514 ( 2015 )


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  •                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-1775-13T1
    TIMBER GLEN PHASE III, LLC,
    a New Jersey Limited Liability
    Company, and JSM AT TIMBER GLEN,
    LLC, a New Jersey Limited Liability
    Company,                                      APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,                        August 6, 2015
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    v.
    TOWNSHIP OF HAMILTON, a Municipal
    Corporation of the State of New
    Jersey,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    _______________________________
    Argued April 20, 2015 - Decided August 6, 2015
    Before   Judges      Lihotz,   St.      John     and
    Rothstadt.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New
    Jersey,   Law  Division, Atlantic County,
    Docket No. L-0988-12.
    Ronald L. Shimanowitz argued the cause for
    appellants   (Hutt   &   Shimanowitz, P.C.,
    attorneys; Mr. Shimanowitz and Bryan D.
    Plocker, on the briefs).
    Robert S. Sandman argued the cause for
    respondent   (Hankin Sandman  Palladino  &
    Weintrob, attorneys; Raymond J. Went, Jr.,
    on the brief).
    Edward Purcell, Associate Counsel, argued
    the cause for amicus curiae New Jersey State
    League   of  Municipalities   (Mr.  Purcell,
    attorney;   William   J.  Kearns,    Jr.,                    of
    counsel; Mr. Purcell, on the brief).
    Sean A. Smith argued           the cause         for amicus
    curiae New Jersey             Apartment          Association
    (Brach Eichler, LLC,          attorneys;         Charles X.
    Gormally, of counsel          and on the          brief; Mr.
    Smith, on the brief).
    Robert M. Washburn argued the cause for
    amicus    curiae    New    Jersey    Builders
    Association    (Flaster   Greenberg,    P.C.,
    attorneys; Mr. Washburn, of counsel; Emily
    Breslin Markos, on the brief).
    Barry S. Goodman argued the cause for amicus
    curiae New Jersey Realtors (Greenbaum, Rowe,
    Smith & Davis, LLP, attorneys; Mr. Goodman,
    of counsel and on the brief; Steven B.
    Gladis, on the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    LIHOTZ, P.J.A.D.
    In     this    appeal,       the   parties   disagree        on    the    scope   of
    municipal authority granted by N.J.S.A. 40:52-1 (the Licensing
    Act),     which     empowers        municipalities          to   adopt        licensing
    ordinances under specific circumstances.                    Plaintiffs Timber Glen
    Phase III, LLC and JSM at Timber Glen, LLC appeal from the
    summary    judgment       dismissal     of     their       complaint    in    lieu    of
    prerogative       writs     that    challenged       an     ordinance     adopted      by
    defendant Township of Hamilton, assessing an annual licensing
    fee on residential apartment units.
    On     appeal,        plaintiffs    attack       the     trial     judge's    legal
    interpretation      of     the     Licensing   Act     as    enabling     defendant's
    2                                    A-1775-13T1
    action and, alternatively, argue the amount of the licensing fee
    imposed by defendant's ordinance was arbitrary, capricious and
    unreasonable.       Several amici appeared and presented arguments
    favoring    or   opposing   the    authorization           to    exercise     municipal
    authority.
    Following    our   consideration        of    the    arguments        presented,
    viewing the evidential materials in the light most favorable to
    plaintiffs, Davis v. Brickman Landscaping, Ltd., 
    219 N.J. 395
    ,
    406    (2014),     we   conclude    the       ordinance         falls    outside        the
    authority granted to municipal governments under the Licensing
    Act.    We reverse the grant of summary judgment to defendant as
    the licensing ordinance is ultra vires and unenforceable.
    The facts are not disputed.            Plaintiffs are incorporated in
    New Jersey and own apartment buildings in Mays Landing.                                   In
    total, the buildings contain 498 units, leased for residential
    purposes.
    Defendant adopted Ordinance No. 1708-2011 in response to
    the findings of its Strategic Planning Smart Growth Committee
    (SMART), whose task included issuing recommendations to improve
    the quality of life and address safety issues in the township's
    residential      properties.       SMART      proposed          defendant      adopt      an
    ordinance     requiring     annual    licensing            for     all       residential
    properties,      specifically     designed      to   "protect       .    .    .   tenants
    3                                       A-1775-13T1
    [and] . . . landlords who may not have been aware of some of the
    activities taking place at the[ir] rental properties."              SMART
    expressed a goal to place landlords on notice of safety and
    habitability issues requiring attention.
    The ordinance, entitled "AN ORDINANCE OF THE TOWNSHIP OF
    HAMILTON, COUNTY OF ATLANTIC, REQUIRING RESIDENTIAL RENTAL UNIT
    LICENSES,   TENANT   OCCUPANCY   PERMITS    AND   PERIODIC   HABITABILITY
    INSPECTIONS AND RE-INSPECTIONS," mandated, among other things,
    the   registration   and   licensing   of   apartment   units    starting
    January 1, 2012.     The ordinance provided in pertinent part:
    222-3.   Residential   Rental     Unit    License
    Required.
    Effective upon adoption of this Ordinance no
    person shall occupy any Residential Rental
    Unit   nor  shall   the  owner   permit  the
    occupancy of any[] residential rental unit
    within the Township of Hamilton if said unit
    has not been Licensed by the Bureau of Fire
    Prevention on forms which shall be provided
    for that purpose.   Any owner permitting the
    occupancy of a Residential Rental Unit
    without said License 90 days after the
    Adoption of this ordinance shall be in
    violation of this ordinance, and each and
    every day thereafter shall be deem[ed] a
    separate offense.
    A "Residential Rental Unit" was defined in 222-1 as:
    Any dwelling . . . which the owner rents or
    leases to any third party for the purposes
    of that third party or parties to reside in
    the premises for a period in excess of
    thirty days regardless of the term of any
    written or verbal lease. . . . Any room or
    4                             A-1775-13T1
    rooms, suite or a part thereof, whether
    furnished or unfurnished, which is occupied
    or intended, arranged or designed to be
    occupied for sleeping or dwelling purposes
    . . . .
    Other     provisions     set       forth      in   the    ordinance          required
    disclosure of names, addresses and phone numbers of all owners
    and   mortgagees,      designation       of    an    Atlantic     County       agent     for
    owners    not    located     in    the     county        and   other    unit-specific
    information.       The license was to be renewed and the $100 per
    unit fee paid annually.            Failure to obtain or renew the license
    prohibited the owner from renting the unit.
    Other      sections     of    the       ordinance        addressed       a    tenant
    occupancy permit, which owners were required to obtain annually
    for   a   $25    fee   per    unit.        Finally,        provisions      for      annual
    habitability inspections, which included a fire inspection, were
    included with a separate fee of $125.
    Plaintiffs filed a complaint in lieu of prerogative writs
    seeking   a     declaratory    judgment        invalidating       the    ordinance        as
    unconstitutional, ordering repayment of all fees collected to
    date, awarding attorney's fees and costs of suit and granting
    other relief not relevant to this appeal.
    Prior to filing its answer, defendant met with plaintiffs
    and   others     affected    by    the    ordinance.           Based    upon       concerns
    raised, defendant adopted an amendment under Ordinance No. 1727-
    5                                       A-1775-13T1
    2012,    eliminating        several    original         provisions,        such    as    the
    tenant      occupancy      permit     fee        and   some       tenant    registration
    requirements.         A    slightly     reduced        annual      licensing      fee   was
    adopted1     and     the    habitability          inspection        requirements        were
    retained.      The modifying ordinance also added a clause stating
    licensing     fees    were      not   intended         as   a    source    of   municipal
    revenue,     but   rather       all   fees       generated       were     designated     for
    enforcement     purposes.         Defendant        later        adopted    Ordinance    No.
    1752-2013, also amending the original ordinance by repealing the
    annual habitability inspection provisions.
    The Law Division reviewed the matter on the parties' cross-
    motions for summary judgment.                Plaintiffs argued the ordinance
    did   not    recite       the   enabling     legislation           granting     defendant
    authority to license residential rentals, and argued it did not
    fall within a municipality's general police power.                                Further,
    plaintiffs asserted the Licensing Act did not allow defendant to
    license and regulate residential apartment buildings with leases
    of 175 days or more, as the clear intent of the statute was
    directed toward temporary or transient housing and short-term
    1
    The $100 fee was reduced to $85.          In a subsequent
    ordinance, the fee was altered to "an amount established by the
    Township Committee through [r]esolution annually as to the cost
    of licenses during that calendar year." At the time the matter
    was heard, the fee was $65 per unit per year, which would be an
    annual expense to plaintiffs of $32,370.
    6                                    A-1775-13T1
    vacation     rentals.          Moreover,         plaintiffs      pointed       out     the
    regulatory ordinance did nothing more than impose another fee on
    apartment units, which were already regulated by the Hotel and
    Multiple    Dwelling     Act      (HMDA),    N.J.S.A.      55:13A-1      to    -28,    and
    local    property     maintenance          and   fire     ordinances.           Finally,
    plaintiffs       asserted         the     ordinance        burdened      tenants       by
    arbitrarily      imposing         the     constantly       changing      annual       fee,
    designed to shift municipal burdens onto landlords and tenants.2
    Defendant challenged plaintiffs' contentions, stating the
    licensing    ordinance       was    validly      enacted    under     the     regulatory
    legislative functions of the township and was implemented for a
    public     purpose,      that       is,     to     aid      tenants      experiencing
    inappropriate       housing         conditions        unabated      by        landlords.
    Defendant    also     cited       the    HMDA,   which     provides      authority     to
    license and inspect when a new tenancy commences.                              Defendant
    suggests the HMDA did not prohibit adoption of an ordinance for
    more frequent licensing, and as remedial legislation, it must be
    liberally construed to permit such ordinances.
    The     judge,     in    a    memorandum      decision      accompanying          the
    November    6,   2013    order,         interpreted      N.J.S.A.     40:52-1(d)       and
    2
    Plaintiffs   raised  additional  issues  before  the  Law
    Division, including constitutional challenges and a demand for
    attorney's fees under 42 U.S.C.A. § 1983; however, they chose
    not to pursue these issues on appeal.
    7                                   A-1775-13T1
    N.J.S.A. 40:48-2.12a as authorizing defendant to license rental
    properties.              Accordingly,           he        granted       summary       judgment       to
    defendant         and    dismissed         plaintiffs'           complaint.           This     appeal
    followed.
    Our examination of this statutory interpretation challenge
    presents legal questions, warranting de novo review.                                     See Redd
    v. Bowman, 
    433 N.J. Super. 178
    , 187 (App. Div. 2013), certif.
    granted, 
    217 N.J. 293
    (2014).                     We "owe no deference to the trial
    court    .    .    .     if    [we     conclude          it    has]   wrongly      interpreted        a
    statute."         Zabilowicz v. Kelsey, 
    200 N.J. 507
    , 512 (2009).
    In construing the meaning of a statute, our task is well-
    defined:      we       must        "determine   and           effectuate     the   Legislature's
    intent," examining the language used and statutory objectives to
    be achieved.            
    Redd, supra
    , 433 N.J. Super. at 187 (citation and
    internal quotation marks omitted).                             See also N.J.S.A. 1:1-1 ("In
    the construction of . . . statutes[,] . . . words and phrases
    shall    be       read    and       construed        with       their      context,    and    shall,
    unless        inconsistent             with      the           manifest       intent      of       the
    legislature[,] . . . be given their generally accepted meaning,
    according          to         the     approved           usage        of     the      language.").
    "'Construction                of     any    statute             necessarily        begins        with
    consideration of its plain language.'"                                Mun. Council v. James,
    
    183 N.J. 361
    , 370 (2005) (quoting Merin v. Maglaki, 
    126 N.J. 8
                                          A-1775-13T1
    430,   434    (1992)).          We    give    plainly         written     statutes   their
    "ordinary meaning, absent a legislative intent to the contrary,"
    with the understanding the language must be construed "in a
    fashion      consistent        with    the    statutory         context    in    which      it
    appears."          
    Ibid. (citations and internal
          quotation    marks
    omitted).       See also Shelton v. Restaurant.com, Inc., 
    214 N.J. 419
    , 428-29 (2013).
    If our review finds the statutory provisions are ambiguous,
    we   are   free      to    examine     extrinsic        aids,    such     as   legislative
    history,      to     ascertain        the    Legislature's         intended      meaning.
    
    Shelton, supra
    , 
    214 N.J. 429
    .                     In interpreting two seemingly
    conflicting        sections     of    the    same   statute,       we     must   read    the
    provisions      in      pari   materia,       construing        them    "together      as    a
    unitary and harmonious whole."                Am. Fire & Cas. Co. v. N.J. Div.
    of Taxation, 
    189 N.J. 65
    , 80 (2006) (citations and internal
    quotation marks omitted).              "Every reasonable construction should
    be   applied"      to     assure     each    section     is     meaningful.       Twp.      of
    Mahwah v. Bergen Cnty. Bd. of Taxation, 
    98 N.J. 268
    , 281, cert.
    denied, 
    471 U.S. 1136
    , 
    105 S. Ct. 2677
    , 
    86 L. Ed. 2d 696
    (1985).
    Finally, we keep in mind "every word in a statute has meaning
    and is not mere surplusage."                 Jersey Cent. Power & Light Co. v.
    Melcar     Util.     Co.,      
    212 N.J. 576
    ,       587    (2013)     (citations     and
    internal quotation marks omitted).
    9                                   A-1775-13T1
    Guided    by    these      rules,    we   examine        defendant's       position
    arguing the ordinance followed supportive enabling legislation,
    which authorized its imposition of licensing requirements for
    rental    residential            real    estate,     as     well       as   plaintiffs'
    challenges to that asserted authority.
    Defendant       contends       its   licensing       authority       is    grounded
    generally       in     a      municipality's        police        power,     and,     more
    specifically,          in     subsection      (d)     of        the    Licensing      Act.
    Defendant's view is supported by amicus New Jersey State League
    of Municipalities (League of Municipalities), which additionally
    cites the enforcement provision of the HMDA, N.J.S.A. 55:13A-21,
    suggesting      licensure        is   compatible     with       the   regulatory     power
    over   dwelling        space     upon   termination        of    occupancy       found   in
    N.J.S.A. 40:48-2.12m.
    Plaintiffs       disagree.           Their    primary          challenge     argues
    defendant may only regulate apartment rentals for terms less
    than 175 consecutive days, as allowed by subsection (n) of the
    Licensing       Act,        because     regulation     of       residential        rentals
    generally rests with the State under the HMDA, unless otherwise
    authorized.          Amici New Jersey Builders Association, New Jersey
    Realtors,       and        New    Jersey     Apartment          Association       support
    plaintiffs' positions.
    10                                    A-1775-13T1
    Initially, when reviewing a municipal action, we apply a
    presumption         of      validity        and     reasonableness             to    adopted
    ordinances.         Lake Valley Assocs., LLC v. Twp. of Pemberton, 
    411 N.J. Super. 501
    , 505 (App. Div.), certif. denied, 
    202 N.J. 43
    (2010); see also First Peoples Bank v. Twp. of Medford, 
    126 N.J. 413
    ,    418     (1991)       ("[A]     reviewing        court     should       presume      the
    validity and reasonableness of a municipal ordinance.").                                We do
    not "pass on the wisdom of the ordinance; that is exclusively a
    legislative function."             Pheasant Bridge Corp. v. Twp. of Warren,
    
    169 N.J. 282
    , 290 (2001), cert. denied, 
    535 U.S. 1077
    , 122 S.
    Ct. 1959, 
    152 L. Ed. 2d 1020
    (2002).                          A party challenging an
    ordinance       must      demonstrate       the    ordinance,       "in     whole      or    in
    application         to      any      particular         property,"        is     arbitrary,
    capricious         or     unreasonable.           
    Id. at 289-90
        (citation        and
    internal quotation marks omitted).                      Therefore, the "presumption
    of validity [cannot] be overcome unless the evidence clearly
    establishes         its     unreasonableness."             Twp.    of      Livingston        v.
    Marchev,      85    N.J.     Super.       428,    432    (App.    Div.     1964)     (citing
    Vickers    v.      Twp.    Comm.     of   Gloucester      Twp.,     
    37 N.J. 232
    ,    242
    (1962)), certif. denied, 
    44 N.J. 412
    , appeal dismissed, 
    382 U.S. 201
    , 
    86 S. Ct. 393
    , 
    15 L. Ed. 2d 269
    (1965).
    11                                      A-1775-13T1
    The validity of local legislative action is based on the
    New Jersey State Constitution Article IV, section VII, paragraph
    11, which states:
    The provisions of this Constitution and of
    any law concerning municipal corporations
    formed for local government, or concerning
    counties, shall be liberally construed in
    their favor.    The powers of counties and
    such municipal corporations shall include
    not only those granted in express terms but
    also those of necessary or fair implication,
    or   incident   to   the  powers   expressly
    conferred, or essential thereto, and not
    inconsistent with or prohibited by this
    Constitution or by law.
    See also Moyant v. Paramus, 
    30 N.J. 528
    , 534 (1959) (discussing
    presumptive   validity    of    municipal   ordinances).    This   "[h]ome
    rule is basic in our government" and "embodies the principle
    that the police power of the State may be invested in local
    government to enable local government to discharge its role as
    an arm or agency of the State and to meet other needs of the
    community."     Inganamort v. Ft. Lee, 
    62 N.J. 521
    , 528 (1973).
    "Express powers as well as those that arise by fair implication
    are given broad latitude, so long as they are not wielded in
    contravention of the overarching statutory grant of authority or
    conflict   otherwise     with   an   express   statutory   limitation     or
    prohibition."    Varsolona v. Breen Capital Servs. Corp., 
    180 N.J. 605
    , 625 (2004).
    12                            A-1775-13T1
    The     presumption      of     the     validity         of    local     legislative
    action,      however,    is    constrained          by   the    obvious       understanding
    that    "[a]    statute       has    supremacy       over      an    ordinance,"       In   re
    Ordinance       04-75,    
    192 N.J. 446
    ,    469       (2007),    and     "a   local
    municipality       is    but    a     creature       of     the      State,     capable     of
    exercising only those powers granted to it by the Legislature
    . . . ."       
    Moyant, supra
    , 30 N.J. at 535.                   See also Dome Realty,
    Inc. v. Paterson, 
    83 N.J. 212
    , 225 (1980) ("[M]unicipalities,
    being created by the State, have no powers save those delegated
    to them by the Legislature and the State Constitution.").
    "Whether the State alone should act or should leave the
    initiative      and     the    solution       to     local      government,       rests     in
    legislative discretion."               
    Inganamort, supra
    , 62 N.J. at 528.
    Thus, "the Legislature may invest in local government the police
    power to devise measures tailored to the local scene."                                 
    Ibid. (emphasis added). When
    examining the municipal authority to regulate in the
    first    instance,       the    Supreme       Court       in    Inganamort       instructed
    judicial review of an ordinance requires
    three constituent questions: (1) does the
    State Constitution prohibit delegation to
    municipalities of the power . . . ; (2) if
    that   power   may   be   granted,   has the
    Legislature done so; and (3) if the State
    statutes     vesting    police     power  in
    municipalities do embrace this area, is the
    exercise of that power by local government
    13                                   A-1775-13T1
    preempted or barred by reason of the
    existence of other statutes dealing with the
    subject matter.
    [Id. at 527.]
    The general grant defining a municipality's police power is
    found in N.J.S.A. 40:48-2.         The statute provides:
    Any   municipality   may   make,    amend,
    repeal and enforce such other ordinances,
    regulations, rules and by-laws not contrary
    to the laws of this state or of the United
    States, as it may deem necessary and proper
    for   the    good   government,    order    and
    protection of persons and property, and for
    the preservation of the public health,
    safety and welfare of the municipality and
    its inhabitants, and as may be necessary to
    carry into effect the powers and duties
    conferred and imposed by this subtitle, or
    by any law.
    [N.J.S.A. 40:48-2.]
    The Court has held this statute "authorizes a municipality
    to take such action as it deems necessary and proper for the
    purposes    specified    subject     only   to    the   limitation   that   such
    action     not   be     prohibited     by    or    inconsistent      with    the
    Constitution or the other statutes . . . ."                
    Moyant, supra
    , 30
    N.J. at 542 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
    However,    "[n]either      the    constitutional        nor   the   statutory
    provision is a blanket authorization to pursue the governing
    body's particularized notion of the public good or to legislate
    beyond the bestowed powers, express or implied."               Repair Master,
    14                              A-1775-13T1
    Inc. v. Borough of Paulsboro, 
    352 N.J. Super. 1
    , 8 (App. Div.
    2002).
    A      municipality      is     also      granted      specific      authority      to
    regulate    local    "buildings         and    structures         and   their   use   and
    occupation to prevent and abate conditions therein harmful to
    the health and safety of the occupants of said buildings and
    structures     and    the     general         public    in        the   municipality."
    N.J.S.A.     40:48-2.12a.              Specific     statutes        address     imposing
    registration requirements for residences containing two or more
    families, N.J.S.A. 40:48-2.12c, and regulating "the maintenance
    and condition of any unit of dwelling space, upon termination of
    occupancy,"     N.J.S.A.      40:48-2.12m.              These       statutes    do    not
    authorize licensure of residential apartments.
    Contrary to defendant's and the League of Municipalities'
    arguments,    the    powers       to    regulate     and     to    license,     although
    related, are discrete.            See, e.g., 
    Moyant, supra
    , 30 N.J. at 545
    ("Registration       and    licensing         are   commonly       accepted     as    such
    reasonable regulatory means . . . ." (emphasis added)).                               The
    Court addressed this distinction in Nelson Cooney & Sons v.
    Township of South Harrison, 
    57 N.J. 384
    (1971):
    N.J.S.A. 40:52-1 covers a large number of
    business and instrumentalities used therein
    as the permitted subjects of municipal
    licenses.   Essentially all are also proper
    subjects   for   police   power    regulatory
    ordinances, authorized by N.J.S.A.    40:48-1
    15                                   A-1775-13T1
    and 2.          But the latter power does not
    include       the right to require a license
    . . . .
    [Bernardsville   Quarry  v.   Borough   of
    Bernardsville, 
    129 N.J. 221
    , 229-30 (1992)
    (quoting 
    Nelson, supra
    , 57 N.J. at 390
    n.4).]
    See also Colonial Oaks W., Inc. v. E. Brunswick, 
    61 N.J. 560
    ,
    572 (1972) (same).
    As identified during the trial court proceedings, defendant
    had exercised regulatory authority over apartments.                     Ordinances
    were adopted governing inspection of apartments prior to the
    commencement     of   a    new    tenancy,   assuring         maintenance    of   the
    premises and compliance with fire safety.
    Because       the      Legislature       has      specifically      addressed
    licensing   in    Chapter    52    of   Title   40,      we   reject   defendant's
    overarching      proposition      suggesting       the   general    police     power
    regulatory authority, as found in N.J.S.A. 40:48-2 or N.J.S.A.
    40:48-2.12m, encompasses the authority to license residential
    rental units.         See Zullo v. Bd. of Health, 
    9 N.J. 431
    , 437
    (1952) ("The power to license and to levy fees therefor is not
    inherent in local agencies exercising by delegation a portion of
    the State's police power and in the absence of statutory grant
    does not exist in a municipal corporation . . . .").                    Thus, the
    authority granted by the State to license rental properties,
    which by its nature includes a revenue generating component, is
    16                                  A-1775-13T1
    circumscribed       by   the    provisions        of   the    Licensing    Act.      See
    Bernardsville 
    Quarry, supra
    , 129 N.J. at 229 ("N.J.S.A. 40:52-1
    is   simply    a    grant      of   power   allowing         municipalities   to    use
    licenses ancillary to its powers to regulate.").
    The Licensing Act provides, in pertinent part:
    The governing body may make, amend,
    repeal and enforce ordinances to license and
    regulate:
    . . . .
    d.   Hotels,  boardinghouses,   lodging  and
    rooming houses, trailer camps and camp
    sites, motels, furnished and unfurnished
    rented housing or living units and all other
    places and buildings used for sleeping and
    lodging purposes, and the occupancy thereof,
    restaurants and all other eating places, and
    the keepers thereof;
    . . . .
    n.   The rental of real property for a term
    less   than   175    consecutive   days for
    residential purposes by a person having a
    permanent place of residence elsewhere.
    [N.J.S.A. 40:52-1.]
    The Legislature's primary purpose in enacting the Licensing
    Act was to "authorize municipalities to license and regulate, as
    police     measures      for    the      public     health,     safety,    morals    or
    welfare,      the    local     businesses         described     therein,    and     only
    incidentally        to   impose     on    the    businesses      thus   licensed    and
    regulated license fees for revenue which may, at least within
    17                                A-1775-13T1
    reasonable limits, exceed the regulatory costs."                                Salomon v.
    Jersey     City,        
    12 N.J. 379
    ,        390    (1953).         Therefore,        a
    municipality's          exercised      licensing          authority      "cannot    be    an
    arbitrary exertion of th[at] power," Ring v. N. Arlington, 
    136 N.J.L. 494
    , 497 (Sup. Ct.), aff'd o.b., 
    1 N.J. 24
    (1948), nor
    can the exercise be unreasonable, Indep. Warehouses v. Scheele,
    
    134 N.J.L. 133
    , 136 (E. & A. 1946), aff'd, 
    331 U.S. 70
    , 67 S.
    Ct. 1062, 
    91 L. Ed. 1346
    (1947).
    In this matter, the parties' primary positions interpreting
    the Licensing Act can be summed up as follows: defendant argues
    the broad language in subsection (d) encompasses any form of
    licensure     of    rental         residences        as    apartments       fall     within
    "furnished    and       unfurnished       rented         housing    or   living    units."
    Plaintiffs,        on        the     other     hand,        reject       this      sweeping
    interpretation,          suggesting       subsection         (d)     applies      only    to
    temporary residential uses, drawing support from subsection (n),
    which permits licensing authority over short-term residential
    rentals,    not    more       permanent      dwellings.            Plaintiffs     argue    if
    authority to license residential real estate is included within
    subsection (d), subsection (n) is rendered superfluous.
    On its face, the statute appears to contain an ambiguity,
    as the provisions of subsection (d) (directed to "furnished and
    unfurnished rented housing or living units and all other places
    18                                   A-1775-13T1
    and buildings used for sleeping and lodging purposes, and the
    occupancy      thereof")        would   appear    to     include      the    subject      of
    subsection (n) (governing "[t]he rental of real property for a
    term less than 175 consecutive days for residential purposes by
    a    person    having      a    permanent   place      of    residence       elsewhere")
    N.J.S.A. 40:52-1(d), (n) (emphasis added).
    "Applying traditional principles of statutory construction,
    we look to the legislative history to aid in determining the
    legislative intent of a statute whose plain language is subject
    to   more     than   one       reasonable   interpretation."              United    Parcel
    Serv. Gen. Servs. Co. v. Dir., Div. of Taxation, 
    220 N.J. 90
    , 94
    (2014) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).                                  See
    also DiProspero v. Penn, 
    183 N.J. 477
    , 492-93 (2005) ("[I]f
    there is ambiguity in the statutory language that leads to more
    than   one    plausible         interpretation,     we      may    turn    to   extrinsic
    evidence, 'including legislative history, committee reports, and
    contemporaneous         construction.'"          (quoting         Cherry    Hill      Manor
    Assocs. v. Faugno, 
    182 N.J. 64
    , 75 (2004))).
    Subsection       (d)     as   originally    adopted        provided      municipal
    licensing      of    "[h]otels,      boarding     houses,     lodging       and    rooming
    houses, and all other places and buildings used for sleeping and
    lodging purposes, restaurants and all other eating places, and
    the keepers thereof . . . ."                L. 1941, c. 92.               Thereafter the
    19                                     A-1775-13T1
    statute    was      amended,     largely    in   response    to   judicial
    interpretations.
    By 1948, "trailer camps and camp sites" were added.                  L.
    1948, c. 425.        See Edwards v. Mayor & Council of Moonachie, 
    3 N.J. 17
    , 23 (1949) (concluding "[t]railer camps and camp sites,
    in   the   view    of   the    ordinance,   comprise   'places'   used   for
    'sleeping and lodging purposes'" governed by the statute).
    The next amendment came on the heels of the Court's denial
    of certification of this court's affirmance of a trial judge's
    rejection of the scope of subsection (d) to include licensing
    apartments.       In Boulevard Apartments, Inc. v. Hasbrouck Heights,
    
    86 N.J. Super. 189
    (Law Div. 1965), aff'd o.b., 
    90 N.J. Super. 242
    (App. Div.), certif. denied, 
    47 N.J. 239
    (1966), the Law
    Division held:
    We do not consider an apartment house to be
    in the same general or specific class as a
    hotel, boarding house, lodging or rooming
    house.     These are commercial businesses
    requiring regulation for the safety, health
    and morals of the community.   An apartment
    house, where unfurnished apartments are
    rented for a term, without overnight or
    transient business, is in the same category
    as a private or two- or three-family
    residence.
    . . . .
    We are cognizant that the statute,
    N.J.S.A. 40:52-1(d), contains the words "all
    other places and buildings used for sleeping
    20                           A-1775-13T1
    and lodging purposes."    We do not consider
    apartment houses to be in that category.
    [Id. at 193-94.]
    Thereafter, subsection (d) was amended to add "motels, furnished
    and unfurnished rented housing or living units . . . and the
    occupancy thereof."         L. 1968, c. 296.
    In 1998, subsections (m), relating to rental of commercial
    property, and (n), relating to residential rentals, were added.
    L. 1997, c. 317.          A legislative statement attached to the bill
    when introduced, adding this new subsection, stated:
    This bill would limit the authority of a
    municipality   to  license  the   rental  of
    commercial and residential real property to
    leases of less than 125 days. Under current
    law, a municipality has the authority to
    regulate all leases.       This bill would
    effectively limit that authority to seasonal
    leases, such as weekly rentals in shore
    municipalities.
    [Ibid.]
    The   proposal      was   altered   by        the    Senate   Community   Affairs
    Committee, increasing 125 to 175 days.                The amendment as adopted
    did not make changes to subsection (d).
    Since   the    1998    amendment,        few    opportunities   have    been
    presented for judicial review of these statutory provisions.3
    3
    In Lake Valley, a municipal ordinance imposing licensing
    and inspection requirements upon a change in tenancy of
    residential rentals was upheld upon a finding the State did not
    (continued)
    21                               A-1775-13T1
    Importantly, none of those cases considered the issue now before
    the court.
    Obligated as we are to "seek an interpretation that will
    make the most consistent whole of the statute," In re Registrant
    N.B., __ N.J. __, __ (2015) (slip op. at 28) (citations and
    internal     quotation      marks      omitted),     we   determine       the   bill
    statement    accompanying        the   1998   amendment    serves    as    powerful
    evidence of the objectives and intentions of the Legislature
    with   respect    to     licensing     residential    rentals.       We    conclude
    municipalities are not authorized to issue ordinances imposing
    licenses for apartment units which provide tenancies of 175 days
    or more.
    Aligned    with     the   maxim    "expressio      unius     est    exclusio
    alterius," which means the inclusion of one excludes the other,
    
    DiProspero, supra
    ,    183   N.J.    at   495,   we   understand      the   very
    specific addition of subsection (n), which limits licensure to
    (continued)
    preempt the area by enacting the HMDA. Lake 
    Valley, supra
    , 411
    N.J. Super. at 505-07.    Licensing authority was not examined.
    See 
    ibid. Similarly, in Repair
    Master, this court struck down
    an ordinance regulating the nature of occupancy of rental
    property; however, the issue of licensing authority was neither
    challenged nor reviewed. Repair 
    Master, supra
    , 352 N.J. Super.
    at 14. Finally, in United Property Owners Association of Belmar
    v. Borough of Belmar, 
    343 N.J. Super. 1
    , 32 (App. Div.), certif.
    denied, 
    170 N.J. 390
    (2001), we upheld the scope of an ordinance
    regulating summer beach rentals, based on legislative authority,
    including N.J.S.A. 40:52-1(n).
    22                                A-1775-13T1
    residential       rentals     of     "less         than     175       consecutive        days,"
    precludes licensure of residential rentals for 175 days or more.
    Further, the Legislature's addition of this discrete provision,
    expressly limiting licenses to "rental of real property for a
    term less than 175 consecutive days for residential purposes by
    a person having a permanent place of residence elsewhere," must
    be considered purposeful and made while cognizant of subsection
    (d) because "[a] legislative body in this State is presumed to
    be familiar . . . with the statutory law of the State . . . ."
    Yanow v. Seven Oaks Park, Inc., 
    11 N.J. 341
    , 350 (1953).                                     The
    bill's     interpretative          statement          reinforces         this     view       and
    reflects     an    explicit        intent        to   limit        municipal      licensing
    authority "to seasonal leases" and, therefore, assures the full
    meaning of all statutory provisions.                      See Jersey Cent. Power &
    
    Light, supra
    ,     212   N.J.     at    587       (stating       a   court     must    assume
    legislative       enactments        do       not      use     "any       unnecessary          or
    meaningless       language"    (citation           and    internal       quotation        marks
    omitted)).
    The trial judge did not mention the language or impact of
    subsection (n) when rendering his decision.                             However, we find
    this   provision     critical       to   the       overall        understanding        of    the
    scope of statutory authority.                Reading the whole of the statute,
    we   conclude     the   addition        of   a     separate       section       directed       to
    23                                        A-1775-13T1
    short-term       or    seasonal    residential        leases       suggests       temporal
    implications      when    considering        the    meaning        of    "furnished       and
    unfurnished rental units" described in subsection (d).                             This is
    especially      true    because     the     other    arrangements             mentioned    in
    subsection (d) refer to short-term living (e.g., motels, hotels,
    boardinghouses, rooming houses and camp sites).                           Reading these
    two provisions in this way reconciles the Legislature's decision
    not to amend subsection (d) when adding subsection (n).                                   See
    
    Shelton, supra
    , 214 N.J. at 440 ("Words in a statute should not
    be read in isolation.")
    We      cannot       agree     with     defendant        and        the     League    of
    Municipalities that subsection (n) merely provides another type
    of rental housing subject to licensure or was limited to rentals
    in resort communities.            The interpretative statement to the 1998
    amendment       refutes    these       assertions.          Were    defendant's          view
    correct,    a    clarification         in   (d)    would    have    been       sufficient.
    Instead,    we    conclude       the    addition     of     (n)    was        designed    and
    significant as it reflects a specific intent to limit licensing
    of residential rentals, which were viewed differently from the
    living arrangements listed in subsection (d).
    As     we    stated    above,       licensing      is    a     distinct       function
    authorized by N.J.S.A. 40:52-1.                    We conclude the Legislature
    chose to limit municipal licensing authority to short-term lease
    24                                     A-1775-13T1
    arrangements.         If    that     interpretation     is     incorrect,     the
    Legislature will act to provide further clarification.
    Therefore, defendant may not mandate by ordinance licensure
    of residential rentals for 175 days or more, accompanied by an
    annual licensing fee.         The ordinance mandating this licensure is
    invalid as ultra vires and unenforceable.4
    We choose not to address plaintiffs' alternative argument,
    as we conclude it is moot.            Comando v. Nugiel, 
    436 N.J. Super. 203
    , 219 (App. Div. 2014) (declining discussion of issue when
    controversy is concluded).
    We   vacate     the   summary    judgment   dismissal     of   plaintiffs'
    complaint and reverse the order upholding defendant's licensing
    ordinance.      We   remand    this    matter    to   the    Law   Division   for
    further proceedings as necessitated by our opinion.                   We do not
    retain jurisdiction.
    Reversed and remanded.
    4
    Our opinion is confined to the authority to license and
    does not address defendant's regulatory or inspection authority
    granted by other statutes designed to assure rental premises
    remain safe, building and fire code compliant and structurally
    sound. See Devine v. Mantua Twp., 
    28 N.J. Super. 299
    , 305 (Law
    Div. 1953).
    25                               A-1775-13T1