CONCERNED CITIZENS OF LIVINGSTON VS. TOWNSHIP OF LIVINGSTON (L-2171-16, ESSEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2018 )


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  •                         NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-4171-15T3
    CONCERNED CITIZENS OF LIVINGSTON,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    TOWNSHIP OF LIVINGSTON,
    LIVINGSTON TOWNSHIP COUNCIL,
    and PLANNING BOARD OF LIVINGSTON,
    Defendants-Respondents,
    and
    SUNRISE DEVELOPMENT, INC.,
    Defendant/Intervenor-
    Respondent.
    _______________________________________
    Argued September 26, 2017 – Decided June 11, 2018
    Before Judges Carroll and Leone.
    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Law Division, Essex County, Docket No. L-2171-
    16.
    Charles X. Gormally argued the cause for
    appellant (Brach Eichler, LLC, attorneys;
    Charles X. Gormally, of counsel and on the
    brief; Autumn M. McCourt, on the briefs).
    James   T.  Bryce   argued   the cause for
    respondents (Murphy McKeon, PC, attorneys;
    James T. Bryce, on the brief).
    Paul H. Schneider argued the cause for
    intervenor-respondent (Giordano, Halleran &
    Ciesla, PC, attorneys; Paul H. Schneider, of
    counsel  and on the brief; Matthew N.
    Fiorovanti, on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Plaintiff Concerned Citizens of Livingston appeals from a May
    10, 2016 order dismissing its complaint challenging the notice
    given concerning zoning ordinance 22-2015 (Ordinance) of defendant
    Township of Livingston (Township).   The trial court dismissed the
    complaint as untimely under Rule 4:69-6(a).     We agree with the
    court that notice was fatally deficient because the Ordinance
    changed the classification of the zone.    We also agree that the
    complaint was filed beyond the rule's time period.     However, we
    find the fatal notice deficiency justified an enlargement of time
    under Rule 4:69-6(c).   Accordingly, we affirm in part, reverse in
    part, and remand.
    I.
    Plaintiff filed a verified complaint, stating plaintiff is a
    representational plaintiff comprised of residents of Livingston
    living within 200 feet of a particular lot (Lot) as well as
    residents living beyond 200 feet who are impacted by the Ordinance.
    Plaintiff claimed that, prior to the adoption of the Ordinance,
    2                          A-4171-15T3
    the Township's zoning ordinances prohibited the development of an
    assisted living facility on the Lot.                Plaintiff alleged the
    Ordinance was passed to enable intervenor Sunrise Development,
    Inc. (Sunrise) to build an assisted living facility on the Lot.
    At its September 24, 2015 meeting, defendant Planning Board
    of the Township of Livingston (Board) recommended the proposed
    Ordinance to defendant Livingston Township Council (Council), the
    Township's governing body.       The Council gave published notice of
    its October 26, 2015 meeting by faxing the agenda to the West
    Essex Tribune and the Star-Ledger.        The agenda stated there was a
    proposed Ordinance about "Assisted Living - Conditional Use," and
    added: "Purpose: Amends Township Code to allow Assisted Living
    Facilities as a conditional use when certain criteria are met."
    No other notice was given to members of the public.
    On October 26, the Council introduced the proposed Ordinance
    for first reading.      The Council referred the proposed Ordinance
    to the Board to determine if the Ordinance was consistent with
    Livingston's master plan.        As discussed below, the Council on
    October   29,   2015,   gave   notice   only   by   publication   that   the
    Ordinance would be considered for final passage on November 9,
    2015.     The Council did not provide written notice to property
    owners within 200 feet of the affected zones.
    3                               A-4171-15T3
    At its November 3, 2015 meeting, the Board considered the
    Ordinance.   Notice of the meeting was published in the West Essex
    Tribune and posted on a bulletin board.       The Board's agenda simply
    stated that it was reviewing the Ordinance about "Assisted Living
    -   Conditional   Use."   No   members   of   the   public    appeared    in
    connection with the Board's review of the Ordinance.            The Board
    determined the Ordinance about "Assisted Living - Conditional Use"
    was consistent with the master plan.
    On November 9, twelve days after the Ordinance's introduction
    in the Council, the Council adopted the Ordinance by title only,
    without reading it publicly.     No members of the public appeared
    or spoke at the Council meeting regarding the Ordinance.                  On
    November 12, 2015, the Township clerk published in the West Essex
    Tribune a notice simply stating that the Ordinance had been passed
    on November 9.
    On February 2, 2016, the Board held a hearing on Sunrise's
    application to build an assisted living facility on the Lot.
    Sunrise concedes its proposal was designed to be consistent with
    the Ordinance.
    On March 31, 2016, plaintiff filed an action against the
    Township, the Council, and the Board (defendants).           The complaint
    contained three counts, alleging violation of: (1) the notice
    requirements of N.J.S.A. 40:55D-62.1; (2) the prohibition on spot
    4                               A-4171-15T3
    zoning; and (3) the New Jersey Civil Rights Act (CRA), N.J.S.A.
    10:6-2. The trial court granted plaintiff's request to temporarily
    restrain the Board from considering Sunrise's application.
    The Township filed an answer, and a motion to dismiss count
    three for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted
    under Rule 4:6-2(e).     On April 22, 2016, the trial court issued
    an order granting Sunrise's motion to intervene.
    On May 10, 2016, the trial court sua sponte dismissed the
    entire complaint because it was not filed within forty-five days
    of the publication of the enacted Ordinance.         The court denied
    plaintiff's oral motion for a stay. We denied plaintiff's emergent
    motion seeking a stay pending appeal.
    II.
    Whether the complaint challenging the Ordinance should have
    been dismissed as untimely depends in part on whether notice
    concerning   the   Ordinance   was    deficient.   Thus,   we   begin    by
    reviewing the trial court's decision that the notice was fatally
    deficient.
    The notice generally required is set forth in N.J.S.A. 40:49-
    2(a), which provides that, after the first reading, a proposed
    ordinance
    shall be published in its entirety or by title
    or by title and summary at least once in a
    newspaper published and circulated in the
    5                           A-4171-15T3
    municipality, if there be one, and if not in
    a newspaper printed in the county and
    circulating in the municipality, together with
    a notice of the introduction thereof, the time
    and place when and where it will be further
    considered for final passage, a clear and
    concise statement prepared by the clerk of the
    governing body setting forth the purpose of
    the ordinance, and the time and place when and
    where a copy of the ordinance can be obtained
    without cost by any member of the general
    public who wants a copy of the ordinance.
    After the first reading of the Ordinance, the Council issued
    a public notice dated October 29, 2015, published in the West
    Essex Tribune, which stated the Ordinance had been "introduced and
    passed on first reading" on October 26, and would be considered
    for final passage on November 9, 2015, at 8:00 p.m. at the M&PB.
    The published notice printed the entire Ordinance, whose preamble
    stated its purpose, and also advised that copies were available
    at the clerk's office.   This complied with N.J.S.A. 40:49-2(a).
    However, the trial court found that under Robert James Pacilli
    Homes, LLC v. Twp. of Woolwich [Pacilli], 
    394 N.J. Super. 319
    (App. Div. 2007), "the notice provisions of N.J.S.A. 40:55D-62.1
    [we]re triggered, requiring certified mail notices to property
    owners within the affected zones as well as property owners within
    200 feet of the affected zones."    We agree.
    The Municipal Land Use Law (MLUL), N.J.S.A. 40:55D-1 to -163,
    imposes additional notice requirements for certain ordinances.
    6                           A-4171-15T3
    N.J.S.A. 40:55D-62.1 "directs that all property owners within a
    zoning district shall receive personal notice if the municipal
    body seeks to change the classification or boundaries of a zoning
    district."   Pacilli, 394 N.J. Super. at 329; see Grabowsky v. Twp.
    of Montclair, 
    221 N.J. 536
    , 558-59 (2015).   The statute provides:
    Notice of a hearing on an amendment to the
    zoning ordinance proposing a change to the
    classification or boundaries of a zoning
    district . . . shall be given at least 10 days
    prior to the hearing by the municipal clerk
    to the owners of all real property as shown
    on the current tax duplicates, located, in the
    case of a classification change, within the
    district and within the State within 200 feet
    in all directions of the boundaries of the
    district, and located, in the case of a
    boundary change, in the State within 200 feet
    in all directions of the proposed new
    boundaries of the district which is the
    subject of the hearing.
    . . . .
    Notice shall be given to a property owner by:
    (1) serving a copy thereof on the property
    owner as shown on the said current tax
    duplicate, or his agent in charge of the
    property, or (2) mailing a copy thereof by
    certified mail and regular mail to the
    property owner at his address as shown on the
    said current tax duplicate.
    [N.J.S.A. 40:55D-62.1 (emphasis added).]
    It is undisputed the Council did not serve or mail a copy of
    the Ordinance to all property owners within the district and within
    200 feet of the district.      Thus, whether notice was adequate
    7                          A-4171-15T3
    depends on whether the Ordinance "propos[ed] a change to the
    classification . . . of a zoning district."                   
    Ibid.
    "We examined what the MLUL intended by a 'classification'
    change in [Pacilli], recognizing that '[u]nlike many terms found
    in the MLUL, "classification" is not defined.'"                        Mahwah Realty
    Assocs., Inc. v. Twp. of Mahwah, 
    430 N.J. Super. 247
    , 253 (App.
    Div. 2013) (quoting Pacilli, 394 N.J. Super. at 329).                     "Until the
    Legislature adopts some different meaning, we will continue to
    apply, as we apply here, Pacilli's general understanding of the
    term[.]"    Id. at 254 (footnote omitted).
    In     Pacilli,     we   ruled   that     "in     its    most     general    sense,
    classification refers to the use permitted in a zoning district,
    such as residential, commercial or industrial, as well as sub-
    categories     within    the      broader     uses,     such     as    single-family
    residential and high-density residential, highway commercial and
    neighborhood      commercial,      and   highway      retail     and    neighborhood
    retail."     394 N.J. Super. at 330-31.             Classification also refers
    to "uses that may be permitted under certain conditions within a
    generally designated category.               A change in any of these broad
    categories and sub-categories has the capacity to fundamentally
    alter the character of a zoning district."                   Id. at 331.
    We     also    ruled     in    Pacilli     that         "classification"        also
    "include[s] changes to the density, bulk and height standards and
    8                                      A-4171-15T3
    conditions applicable to designated uses," because "changes in
    bulk    and    density   requirements   within   a    zone   can    effect     a
    substantive change in future development within a zone without any
    alteration to the label applied to the zone."                Id. at 331-32.
    Thus, determining "the type of notice to be provided on the
    occasion of a proposed amendment to a zoning ordinance should
    focus on the substantive effect of the amendment rather than the
    appellation given to the zone."         Id. at 332.
    In Pacilli, we held an amendment which made "sweeping" changes
    to the bulk and density requirements in two residential zoning
    districts "dramatically altered the intensity of the residential
    use within each zone and promised to affect the character of the
    future development in both zones."        Id. at 332.    We observed "the
    scope of the changes . . . is illustrated simply by focusing on
    the maximum gross density per acre," which changed from one unit
    per two acres under the existing zoning laws and the ordinance's
    "Option 1" to one unit per ten acres under the ordinance's "Option
    2."    Ibid.     We ruled that change itself "effects a fundamental
    alteration of the character of this zoning district."              Id. at 332.
    Therefore, "the Township Committee was required to follow the
    notice requirements of N.J.S.A. 40:55D-62.1," and as it did not,
    the ordinance was "invalid."       Id. at 333.
    9                                  A-4171-15T3
    As   the   trial      court   found,      the    Ordinance    made   similarly
    "sweeping   changes"       to    the    bulk   and    density   requirements       for
    assisted living facilities.             Before its passage, section 170-88.1
    of the existing Township Code provided that an assisted living
    facility was a permissible conditional use in any zone, with
    specified exceptions.           Such a facility had to have: road frontage
    and direct access to one of seven roads, including South Orange
    Avenue or Passaic Avenue; a minimum lot size of six acres; minimum
    frontage width of 100 feet; minimum setbacks of 100 feet from
    residential     property        lines    and   seventy-five       feet    from   non-
    residential property lines; maximum impervious coverage of 50%; a
    maximum building height of thirty-five feet; a maximum of twenty
    units per acre; and a maximum total number of units of 5% of the
    number of single-family detached dwelling units in the Township.
    The Ordinance added a new subsection to section 170-88.1 that
    provided that an assisted living facility could be permitted as a
    conditional     use   in    any    zone,       with   an   increased      number    of
    exceptions, if it had: road frontage and direct access to South
    Orange Avenue or Passaic Avenue; a minimum lot size of three acres;
    a minimum frontage width of 200 feet; minimum setbacks of twenty-
    five feet from both residential and non-residential property lines
    with 150 feet from any dwelling; a maximum impervious coverage of
    60%; and a maximum building height of thirty-five feet or three
    10                                 A-4171-15T3
    stories, or forty-seven feet or four stories plus a six-foot
    mansard if set back 100 feet; a maximum of 32.31 units per acre.
    The Ordinance also exempted affordable housing units from the
    maximum total number of assisted living units which were limited
    to 5% of the number of single-family detached dwelling units in
    the Township.   The Ordinance also required: a minimum of 102 units
    with thirteen affordable housing units and a maximum of 105 units
    with fourteen affordable housing units; specific setbacks for the
    principal   building   and   gazebo;   and   specific   requirements   for
    parking and landscape buffers.
    We agree with the trial court's findings that the Ordinance's
    changes are sweeping in that they allow for
    32.21 units per acre on 3 acre lots, rather
    than the 20 units per acre on 6 acre lots in
    the pre-existing ordinance.    The Ordinance
    removes most of the protections in place that
    buffered surrounding neighbors, and increases
    the allowable building height from 35 feet to
    47 feet, all while placing the buildings in
    closer proximity to roads and adjoining
    properties.
    The trial court explained that under the Ordinance, "[t]he
    required front yard setback changed from 100 feet to 75 feet," and
    "[r]equired rear and side setbacks" changed from "100 feet from
    residential property lines" "to only 25 feet."           The court found
    the Ordinance "decreases the lot size and increases the density,
    increases the building height and decreases nearly every setback
    11                             A-4171-15T3
    requirement."    The court concluded the Ordinance made "significant
    changes that adversely affect the single family residential nature
    of the R-1 zone, and thereby fundamentally alter the character of
    the zoning district."       We agree.
    Sunrise argues the Ordinance's changes are less sweeping than
    those in Pacilli.        However, like the ordinance in Pacilli, the
    Ordinance changed minimum lot width; minimum front, side, and rear
    setbacks;    maximum    impervious        coverage;    minimum    lot   size;    and
    maximum unit density per acre.                 The Ordinance also changed the
    maximum building height, and made other changes.
    Sunrise notes "the test is not the number of changes but the
    substance of the changes."              Pacilli, 394 N.J. at 333.         However,
    the Ordinance's changes are comparable in substance to those in
    Pacilli.    For example, the Ordinance decreased the minimum acreage
    by   50%,   decreased    the     side    and    rear   setbacks   by    66.6%,   and
    increased the maximum number of units per acre by over 61%.                      The
    Ordinance changed by three acres the minimum lot size, as did the
    ordinance's Option 2 in Pacilli for each half unit.
    Because   the     zoning    code     already     conditionally     permitted
    assisted living facilities in the R-1 zone, Sunrise argues the
    Ordinance did not change the uses or sub-categories of uses.                     The
    same was true in Pacilli - the residential zones already permitted
    homes – but the ordinance changed "the intensity of the permitted
    12                               A-4171-15T3
    use."      Id. at 330.     The Ordinance did the same.           The total effect
    of the Ordinance's changes allowed an assisted living facility
    with 105 units on the Lot, which was half the size of the lot
    required for any assisted living facility or units under the
    existing zoning code.
    The    trial   court    found   the       Ordinance   "allow[ed]     for     the
    construction of an assisted living facility on a lot where it
    could not have previously been constructed."                  The court noted the
    R-1 zone was "designed for single-family homes on lots not smaller
    than 35,520 square feet," that is, one house per lot of at least
    7.28    acres.        Allowing   the    densely-populated        assisted       living
    facility      in   the   R-1   zone    of    seven-acre      housing    lots    was    a
    substantial change comparable to that made by Option 2 in the
    ordinance in Pacilli, which "transform[ed] a zoning district of
    generous lots to one of manorial proportions."                   Id. at 332.
    We recognize the change in Pacilli affected the housing lots
    in   the     residential    zones,     while      the   change   here   affected       a
    conditional use in the R-1 residential zone.1                    However, we have
    already found that a change in one of many uses may constitute a
    significant enough change under Pacilli.                 In Mahwah, we held "an
    1
    The Ordinance also changed the uses in other zones, including
    by providing that "[a]n assisted living facility, congregate
    senior living facility or nursing home" were no longer permitted
    in zones R-5F, R-5G, R-5H, and R-5I.
    13                                 A-4171-15T3
    ordinance    that     authorizes     'health       and    wellness       centers'     and
    'fitness and health clubs' in two industrial zones changes the
    'classification' of those zones."                 430 N.J. Super. at 250.               We
    ruled "[t]he additional uses in question fundamentally alter the
    industrial     zoning       districts"     because       the    "proposed      uses   are
    clearly   discordant         from   the    uses    permitted       in    the   affected
    industrial zoning districts[,]" which included "public parks,
    playgrounds or athletic fields."                Id. at 254-55.          The Ordinance
    allowed a densely-populated assisted living facility that was
    comparably "dissimilar" to and "discordant" from the seven-acre
    per unit residential lots in the R-1 zone.                     Ibid.
    Because     the    Ordinance         worked     a    classification        change,
    N.J.S.A. 40:55D-62.1 required certified mail notices to property
    owners    within      the     affected     zones     concerning         the    proposed
    Ordinance.      As the trial court found: "This was not done by
    Livingston,     and    the    failure      to   do   so    would       invalidate     the
    Ordinance."2
    2
    Plaintiff contends that the personal notice here should have
    included "an identification of the affected zoning districts and
    proposed boundary changes, if any, by street names, common names
    or other identifiable landmarks, and by reference to lot and block
    numbers."   N.J.S.A. 40:55D-62.1.    In Mahwah, however, we held
    "N.J.S.A. 40:55D-62.1 requires only identification of the zoning
    districts affected by the classification change. The additional
    requirement for identification of the specific impacted properties
    only applies when a change in boundaries is proposed." 430 N.J.
    Super. at 250, 255-60.
    14                                     A-4171-15T3
    III.
    Despite    finding    that   required    personal   notice    of   the
    Ordinance was not given to plaintiff's members, the trial court
    sua   sponte    dismissed    plaintiff's      complaint   because   it   was
    untimely.   The court found the complaint was not filed within the
    period set in Rule 4:69-6(a), and there was no reason to enlarge
    that period under Rule 4:69-6(c).          We address each in turn.
    A.
    Plaintiff does not contest that its action is governed by
    Rule 4:69-6(a).    "No action in lieu of prerogative writs shall be
    commenced later than 45 days after the accrual of the right to the
    review, hearing or relief claimed, except as provided by paragraph
    (b) of this rule."         Ibid.   Here, the Ordinance was adopted on
    November 9, 2015, and notice of its adoption was given by a
    publication on November 12, 2015.
    Defendants argue that the right to review accrued on the date
    of the notice.    N.J.S.A. 40:49-2(d) provides:
    Upon passage, every ordinance, or the title,
    or the title and a summary, together with a
    notice of the date of passage or approval, or
    both, shall be published at least once in a
    newspaper circulating in the municipality, if
    there be one, and if not, in a newspaper
    printed in the county and circulating in the
    municipality.   No other notice or procedure
    with respect to the introduction or passage
    of any ordinance shall be required.
    15                              A-4171-15T3
    Plaintiff argues the lack of personal notice meant that its
    cause of action did not accrue upon publication and that the forty-
    five    days     never   began     to   run.         Plaintiff      cites   Harrison
    Redevelopment Agency v. DeRose, 
    398 N.J. Super. 361
    , 401 (App.
    Div. 2008).       However, DeRose concerned the question
    whether a property owner who fails to
    challenge    a    redevelopment    designation
    containing his or her property within forty-
    five days of its adoption by a municipal
    governing   body,   pursuant   to  the   Local
    Redevelopment and Housing Law ("LRHL"),
    N.J.S.A.   40A:12A-1   to    -49,  may   still
    challenge, in full or in part, the public
    purpose of the taking of his or her property,
    by way of a defense in an ensuing condemnation
    action.
    [Id. at 367.]
    In DeRose, we held an owner could raise such a challenge
    "unless     a    municipality      provides        the     property    owner     with
    contemporaneous written notice that" the owner's property has been
    designated for redevelopment and could be acquired against the
    owner's will unless he challenged that designation with a specified
    period.     
    Id. at 367-68
    .       "Conversely, we also h[e]ld that if the
    municipality's       notice      does   contain       these      constitutionally-
    essential       components,   an    owner    who     wishes    to    challenge     the
    designation       presumptively     must     bring    an    action,    in   lieu    of
    prerogative writs, within forty-five days of the municipality's
    adoption of the designation."           
    Id. at 368
    .
    16                                   A-4171-15T3
    The question we faced in DeRose is not posed here.        This case
    does not concern redevelopment or condemnation, let alone the
    defenses available in condemnation.        See Milford Mill 128, LLC v.
    Borough of Milford, 
    400 N.J. Super. 96
    , 115 n.10 (App. Div. 2008)
    (distinguishing DeRose).       The Ordinance did not threaten to take
    the properties of plaintiff's members against their will.             See
    Town of Kearny v. Disc. City of Old Bridge, Inc., 
    205 N.J. 386
    ,
    404-05 (2011) (distinguishing DeRose where the plaintiff was a
    tenant   and   not     the   owner   of   the   property   targeted   for
    redevelopment).      No constitutional challenge has been raised here.
    See Iron Mountain Info. Mgmt., Inc. v. City of Newark, 
    202 N.J. 74
    , 78 (2010) (same).         Because DeRose "addressed an entirely
    different question," the trial court properly did not find DeRose
    controlling.   See 
    ibid.
    Thus, the right of review accrued on November 12, 2015, when
    notice of the Ordinance's passage was published.3            Plaintiff's
    complaint was not filed until March 31, 2016.         Thus, plaintiff's
    action was not filed within the forty-five day period in Rule
    4:69-6(a).
    3
    Thus, this case does not resemble Trenkamp v. Burlington, 
    170 N.J. Super. 251
     (Law Div. 1979), where the court found accrual was
    delayed because there was "no statute requiring a public
    announcement in connection with applications for or issuance of
    building permits." 
    Id. at 259
    .
    17                          A-4171-15T3
    B.
    Rule 4:69-6(c) provides that "[t]he court may enlarge the
    period of time provided in paragraph (a) or (b) of this rule where
    it is manifest that the interest of justice so requires."        The
    trial court found it was not in the interests of justice to relax
    the time limit.   The court reasoned: "Despite the fact that mailed
    written notice was not provided to individual landowners, notice
    was provided by publication, in the same manner that all other
    ordinance change notices are provided."   The court found that "was
    sufficient notice to the residents of Livingston that the Ordinance
    change was to take effect."
    However, the notice provided after the Ordinance's passage
    bore no resemblance to the notice that plaintiff's members were
    entitled to receive.    As discussed above, N.J.S.A. 40:55D-62.1
    required defendants to give plaintiff's members personal notice
    by hand-service or by both certified and regular mail that the
    Ordinance was being considered for final passage.   That notice was
    required to state "the nature of the matter to be considered and
    an identification of the affected zoning districts."    
    Ibid.
        Had
    defendants sent plaintiff's members the October 29 notice, they
    would have received the full text of the Ordinance, which would
    have alerted them not only to the zoning districts affected, but
    also the Ordinance's rationale that assisted living facilities
    18                          A-4171-15T3
    should "be encouraged at appropriate locations by reductions in
    minimum lot size requirements, limited increases in permitted
    density and building height and other bulk changes," and to the
    details of the lot size, density, height, setback, and other
    changes.
    By contrast, the only notice that the Ordinance had been
    passed was a tiny item published on November 12, 2015, in the West
    Essex Tribune stating that the "TOWNSHIP OF LIVINGSTON PASSED [AN]
    ORDINANCE" on November 9, 2015, and describing only as "ORDINANCE
    NO. 22-2015[:] ORDINANCE OF THE TOWNSHIP OF LIVINGSTON AMENDING
    CHAPTER 170 OF THE CODE OF THE TOWNSHIP OF LIVINGSTON."        That
    notice gave no clue about the subject or content of the Ordinance
    unless the reader knew Chapter 170 was the "Land Use" chapter of
    the Code, and even then the notice did not specify the section or
    subsection amended.     That notice published in the West Essex
    Tribune provided none of the information which plaintiff's members
    would have received through personal service of the October 29
    notice under N.J.S.A. 40:55D-62.1.
    These circumstances "satisfy the standards in Rule 4:69-6(c)
    and warrant enlargement of the forty-five-day period because 'it
    is manifest that the interest of justice so requires.'"         See
    Hopewell Valley Citizens' Grp. v. Berwind Prop. Grp. Dev. Co., 
    204 N.J. 569
    , 571 (2011).     "[T]he plain language of paragraph (c)
    19                          A-4171-15T3
    suggests that a court has discretion to enlarge a Rule 4:69-6(a)
    or   (b)    timeframe   when     it   perceives   a   clear   potential   for
    injustice."     
    Id. at 578
    .
    "Our Supreme Court has recognized that cases 'involving: (1)
    important and novel constitutional questions; (2) informal or ex
    parte      determinations   of    legal     questions   by    administrative
    officials; and (3) important public rather than private interests
    which require adjudication or clarification' have satisfied the
    'interest of justice' standard in Rule 4:69-6(c)."                Mullen v.
    Ippolito Corp., 
    428 N.J. Super. 85
    , 106 (App. Div. 2012) (citation
    omitted); see In re Ordinance 2354-12 of W. Orange, 
    223 N.J. 589
    ,
    601 (2015).      However, that "list of exceptions was not intended
    to be exhaustive."      Hopewell Valley, 
    204 N.J. at 584
    .
    Courts have also "recognized municipal negligence as a basis
    for invoking Rule 4:69."         
    Ibid.
     (citing Reilly v. Brice, 
    109 N.J. 555
    , 557 (1988)).       In Reilly, "the challenge to the council's
    ratification of a four-year $20,000 municipal consulting contract
    was not brought until five months after it occurred."             
    Id.
     at 580
    (citing Reilly, 
    109 N.J. at 557
    ).           The published agenda for the
    meeting did not list the contract as an agenda item, and the
    minutes of the meeting "failed to state any of the specifics of
    the contract."     Reilly, 
    109 N.J. at 559-60
    .
    20                            A-4171-15T3
    Our Supreme Court in Reilly "attributed the blame for the
    lateness of that proceeding to the negligence of the municipality"
    because "'the descriptions of the proposed public action [could
    have] been more specific' on the agenda of the meeting that was
    published."    Hopewell Valley, 
    204 N.J. at 580-81
     (quoting Reilly,
    
    109 N.J. at 559-60
    ).      The Court "h[e]ld that in the circumstances
    of this case the proper exercise of discretion is to enlarge the
    forty-five    day   limitation    to   allow   review    of   the   challenged
    municipal action."       Reilly, 
    109 N.J. at 557
    .        The Court reversed
    the trial court's denial of an extension, and itself enlarged the
    time.   
    Id. at 560-61
    .
    In Reilly, the Court noted "[p]laintiffs assert no private
    interest in challenging this contract, but rather seek vindication
    of the public interest."      
    Id. at 558
    .      The Court acknowledged that
    "[b]alanced    against    these   public    interests,    however,      is   the
    important policy of repose expressed in the forty-five day rule."
    
    Id. at 559
    .     The rule "is designed to encourage parties not to
    rest on their rights.       In general, ignorance of the existence of
    a cause of action will not prevent the running of a period of
    limitations except when there has been concealment."                
    Id. at 559
    .
    However, "[i]mportantly, the concealment need not be intentional
    or malicious, as evidenced by the fact[s] . . . in Reilly[.]"
    Hopewell Valley, 
    204 N.J. at 580
    .
    21                               A-4171-15T3
    Here,     even   if    unintentional        and     non-malicious,        the
    concealment     of   the   nature   of    the   Ordinance    was   at   least    as
    significant as the concealment in Reilly.                   As in Reilly, the
    concealment primarily occurred in the notice preceding the meeting
    in which the challenged municipal action was taken, and was
    compounded by the lack of detail in the subsequent statement of
    what action had been taken.              As set forth above, defendants'
    failure to mail personal notice to plaintiff's members deprived
    them of the individual service of information required by N.J.S.A.
    40:55D-69.1, and the notice after the Ordinance's passage gave
    them little if any information.           The delay in filing the complaint
    here was shorter than the five-month delay in Reilly.
    In addition to the private interests of plaintiff's members,
    there are public interests at stake here.               "Our courts have found
    a sufficient public interest to justify an extension of time for
    filing a prerogative writ action in a variety of circumstances,
    including challenges to the validity of ordinances on the ground
    that they were not adopted in conformity with the applicable
    statutory requirements."       Willoughby v. Planning Bd. of Deptford,
    
    306 N.J. Super. 266
    , 277 (App. Div. 1997) (citing Reilly, 
    109 N.J. at 560-61
    ).     The failure to provide personal notice as required
    by   N.J.S.A.    40:55D-62.1    contravenes       the     public   interest      in
    ensuring residents in a district know of their opportunity to
    22                              A-4171-15T3
    oppose a change in its classification.                   See Pacilli, 394 N.J.
    Super. at 333.       There is also a public interest in opposing spot
    zoning,   which      is   "'the   use    of    the   zoning     power   to   benefit
    particular private interests rather than the collective interests
    of the community.'"        Riya Finnegan Ltd. Liab. Co. v. Twp. Council
    of S. Brunswick, 
    197 N.J. 184
    , 195 (2008) (citation omitted).
    Considered together, there was "sufficient public interest to
    warrant relaxation of the forty-five-day filing limitation through
    application of Rule 4:69-6(c)."              Concerned Citizens of Princeton,
    Inc. v. Mayor & Council of Princeton, 
    370 N.J. Super. 429
    , 447
    (App. Div. 2004); see DeRose, 
    398 N.J. Super. 361
    , 418 (App. Div.
    2008) (ruling an enlargement under Rule 4:69-6(c) was justified
    by the public interest and "[t]he multiple defects of notice");
    Wolf v. Shrewsbury, 
    182 N.J. Super. 289
    , 296 (App. Div. 1981)
    (reversing     the    denial      of    an    enlargement     where     notice    was
    inadequate).
    Sunrise cites Rocky Hill Citizens for Responsible Growth v.
    Planning Bd. of Rocky Hill, 
    406 N.J. Super. 384
     (App. Div. 2009).
    In Rocky Hill, we upheld denial of an enlargement largely because
    "the ordinance was the subject of intense debate at all times.
    Public    consideration      of    this      ordinance    was    extensive,"      and
    "participation was substantial" at the public hearings, which one
    of the plaintiffs attended, yet plaintiffs adopted "a 'wait and
    23                                  A-4171-15T3
    see' strategy" and failed to file a complaint for nearly two years.
    
    Id. at 402-03
    .4
    Here, by contrast, the notice for the hearing on the Ordinance
    was   fatally    deficient,   no    member    of    the   public   appeared    in
    connection with the Council's review of the Ordinance, there is
    no claim any member of plaintiff was aware of the Ordinance at or
    near its November 2015 passage, and plaintiff filed its complaint
    within five months. Those circumstances were sufficient to justify
    an enlargement under Reilly.
    Sunrise claims plaintiff had actual knowledge of the adoption
    of the Ordinance in early January 2016. Sunrise cites the verified
    complaint    and    certification    signed    by    Lidia   Dumytsch.        She
    identified herself as "an owner of property within 200 feet of the
    [Lot],"     "a     member   of"     plaintiff,       plaintiff's     volunteer
    "Secretary/Treasurer," and the "Tax Assessor for the Township of
    Livingston."     In the complaint and her certification, she attested
    she was unaware of the Ordinance until after she received a request
    as the Tax Assessor to prepare a list of property owners who lived
    within 200 feet of the Lot for Sunrise's application to the Board
    4
    In Rocky Hill, we also noted other aspects of cases granting
    enlargement were not present, such as issues of "the constitutional
    adequacy of the notice to property owners" present in DeRose, and
    "significant impact on density" as in Willoughby. 
    406 N.J. Super. at 400-01
    . Here, we have statutorily-inadequate notice to property
    owners and a significant impact on density.
    24                                 A-4171-15T3
    for approval of its site plan, when she investigated and discovered
    the Council had passed the Ordinance in November 2015.
    However, Dumytsch did not state when she received the request
    for the list or when her investigation discovered the Ordinance.
    Sunrise claims that occurred in early January, and cites its site
    plan application.       However, the application appears to have been
    signed January 26, 2016.        Notice of Sunrise's application to all
    property owners "within 200 feet in all directions of the" Lot was
    not required until "at least 10 days prior to the date of the
    hearing" on the site application, which was held on February 2.
    N.J.S.A. 40:55D-12, -12(b).            Even assuming Dumytsch's discovery
    of the Ordinance occurred in early rather than late January, it
    would not necessarily bar an enlargement for plaintiff or its
    other members.
    In Rockaway Shoprite Assocs., Inc. v. City of Linden, 
    424 N.J. Super. 337
     (App. Div. 2011), the city sent notice of proposed
    ordinances      that   was   fatally    defective.    
    Id. at 344
    .        The
    "[d]efendants and intervenor nevertheless contend[ed] that because
    plaintiff's representative attended the public hearing . . . and
    did not object to the lack of proper notice, plaintiff 'waived'
    its right to challenge the ordinances on that basis."             
    Id. at 351
    .
    In rejecting that argument, we cited "[t]he general rule . . .
    that   strict    compliance    with    statutory   notice   requirements        is
    25                                A-4171-15T3
    mandatory    and   jurisdictional,    and    non-conformity        renders      the
    governing body's resultant action a nullity."                
    Id. at 352
    .          We
    also found "compelling" "'the principle that the entire public is
    entitled to notice in full compliance with the governing statutory
    provisions, and that the public's entitlement to such notice may
    not be waived by those individual members of the public who
    actually attend the improperly noticed hearing.'"                   
    Id. at 354
    (citation omitted).      "On the issue of public notice of adopting
    or amending a zoning ordinance, a jurisdictional defect is not
    personal to a single objector but rather the right of the public,
    and therefore cannot be waived by one individual."                 
    Ibid.
    If in Rockaway Shoprite the appearance at the hearing of
    Shoprite's    attorney   and   professional        planner   "who    voiced       no
    objection to the ordinance" did not waive Shoprite's right to
    claim lack of notice, 
    id. at 342, 355
    , then Dumytsch's post-hearing
    discovery of the fatal lack of notice here did not waive the right
    of any other member of the public to seek an enlargement to claim
    lack of notice, including the persons represented by plaintiff.
    Although Sunrise notes Dumytsch is plaintiff's only identified
    member,   Dumytsch    certified   that      "the    number    of    members       of
    [plaintiff] is currently in excess of 75 residents, [and] as each
    day goes by I am being contacted by others who are learning of the
    26                                    A-4171-15T3
    amended zoning at issue in this lawsuit and who express an interest
    in joining [plaintiff]'s efforts."
    Sunrise cites "the imputation doctrine" that "a principal is
    deemed to know facts that are known to its agent."          NCP Litig. Tr.
    v. KPMG LLP, 
    187 N.J. 353
    , 366 (2006).             However, in Rockaway
    Shoprite,   despite   the    knowledge   of    Shoprite's   attorney    and
    planner, we held Shoprite could challenge the fatally-defective
    notice to vindicate the public's "jurisdictional and non-waivable"
    right to notice of zoning amendments.         
    424 N.J. Super. at 355
    .     We
    are even more reluctant to wield the doctrine to prevent plaintiff
    from challenging the fatally-defective notice here, because it is
    a representational plaintiff which apparently was not in existence
    when Dumytsch discovered the Ordinance, and whose other members
    learned of the Ordinance after Dumytsch did.
    Rule 4:69-6 is "aimed at those who slumber on their rights."
    Hopewell Valley, 
    204 N.J. at 579
     (quoting Schack v. Trimble, 
    28 N.J. 40
    , 49 (1958)).        We cannot say all of plaintiff's members
    slumbered on their rights as the record contains no information
    when each member, deprived of the notice required by N.J.S.A.
    40:55D-62.1, first learned of the Ordinance.             See id. at 585
    (finding a plaintiff did not "slumber on its rights" when it
    received incorrect information from a Board employee).
    27                              A-4171-15T3
    In Reilly, our Supreme Court ruled: "Without delving into the
    question of when plaintiffs' right to challenge the Council's
    action arose (plaintiffs claim not to have learned of the matter
    until early April), we are satisfied that this factual setting
    properly calls for an exercise of judicial discretion to enlarge
    the time to review the action."           
    109 N.J. at 560
    .      We similarly
    do   not   believe   we   must   remand    to   delve   into   when   each    of
    plaintiff's members learned of the Ordinance, particularly as
    Dumytsch    certified     new    members    had    only   recently      joined
    plaintiff's efforts, and any timely member may be sufficient to
    allow the suit to proceed.       See 
    id. at 560-61
     ("rather than remand
    this matter for further exercise of discretion by [the trial]
    court, we believe that in the interest of expedient disposition
    of this matter, time should be enlarged").
    Moreover, the delay here from the November 12 notice, or
    Dumytsch's discovery of the Ordinance sometime in January, to the
    March 31 filing of plaintiff's complaint was less than the five-
    month delay in Reilly.       
    Id. at 557, 561
    .       The trial court cited
    the Law Division's statement in Trenkamp that courts should "in
    no circumstance enlarge the time period on this ground beyond 45
    days from the time at which plaintiff knew or should have known
    of the cause of action."         
    170 N.J. Super. at 265
    .         However, we
    have since held that where the public interest is involved, "the
    28                                 A-4171-15T3
    court may grant even a very substantial enlargement of the time
    in order to afford affected parties an opportunity to challenge
    the alleged unlawful governmental action."      Willoughby, 306 N.J.
    Super. at 276-77 (citing enlargements of several years).     In any
    event, Dumytsch's certification and the lack of the required
    personal notice indicates some of plaintiff's members neither knew
    nor should have known of the Ordinance until within forty-five
    days of the filing of the complaint.
    "[T]he determination to enlarge a timeframe under [Rule 4:69-
    6](c) [i]s an 'exercise of judicial discretion.'" Hopewell Valley,
    
    204 N.J. at 578
     (reversing the denial of an enlargement) (quoting
    Reilly, 
    109 N.J. at 560
     (same)).       We review the trial court's
    decision for abuse of discretion.   Willoughby, 306 N.J. Super. at
    273 (reversing the denial of an enlargement).    We must hew to that
    standard of review.
    Applying that standard, as our Supreme Court did in Reilly,
    we reverse the dismissal of plaintiff's complaint as untimely
    because we are convinced "that this factual setting properly calls
    for an exercise of judicial discretion to enlarge the time to
    review the action."   
    109 N.J. at 559-60
    .    "The MLUL ensures that
    the public has a chance to be heard . . . by imposing notice
    requirements."   Twp. of Stafford v. Stafford Twp. Zoning Bd. of
    Adjustment, 
    154 N.J. 62
    , 70 (1998).    "The Legislature's choice to
    29                            A-4171-15T3
    compel notice to property owners within a 200-foot radius provides
    an objective measure of a neighboring property owner's interest
    in a zoning dispute."           Grabowsky, 221 N.J. at 559.               Given the
    denial to plaintiff's members of the personal notice of the
    Ordinance    required    by    N.J.S.A.      40:55D-69.1,     "the    interest     of
    justice"    requires    they    have    an    opportunity     to    challenge    the
    Ordinance.     R. 4:69-6(c).        Accordingly, we reverse the dismissal
    of plaintiff's complaint as untimely.
    IV.
    The zoning power "must be exercised in strict conformity with
    the delegating enactment — the MLUL."            Nuckel v. Borough of Little
    Ferry Planning Bd., 
    208 N.J. 95
    , 101 (2011).                  Our Supreme Court
    has ruled "'[t]he giving of statutory notice of hearing is a
    jurisdictional requirement, and unless notice is given as required
    by   statute    the    board    lacks    power    to   hear    or    consider      an
    application.'"        Twp.     of   Stafford,    
    154 N.J. at 79
       (citation
    omitted).      "Non-compliance with the personal notice requirements
    of N.J.S. 40:55D-62.1 renders an amendment invalid." Cox & Koenig,
    New Jersey Zoning & Land Use Administration, § 10-2.3 at 159 (2018)
    (citing Pacilli, 394 N.J. Super. at 333).               Thus, we declare the
    Ordinance is invalid.
    Plaintiff also appeals the trial court's dismissal of its
    count alleging a violation of the CRA.             Although the invalidation
    30                                  A-4171-15T3
    of the Ordinance may remove the need to further litigate that
    claim, plaintiff's CRA count also seeks attorney's fees and costs
    under N.J.S.A. 10:6-2(f).        Out of an abundance of caution, we
    review the dismissal of the CRA count.
    The trial court dismissed the CRA count for failure to state
    a claim.     "[W]e apply a plenary standard of review from a trial
    court's decision to grant a motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule
    4:6-2(e)."    Rezem Family Assocs., LP v. Borough of Millstone, 
    423 N.J. Super. 103
    , 114 (App. Div. 2011).          We affirm the dismissal
    of the CRA count substantially for the reasons set forth in the
    court's May 10, 2016 statement of reasons.        See id. at 113-15; see
    also Nostrame v. Santiago, 
    213 N.J. 109
    , 128 (2013).
    Much time has passed since enactment of the Ordinance in
    November 2015.      We have almost no information on subsequent
    developments.     We remand to the trial court to determine what
    further    proceedings   and   relief   are   needed   under   plaintiff's
    complaint.
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.           We do not
    retain jurisdiction.
    31                              A-4171-15T3