JAMES O. WELCH v. CHAI CENTER FOR LIVING JUDAISM, INC. (C-000153-12, ESSEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2022 )


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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-3447-19
    JAMES O. WELCH, THE
    ROBERT J. DWYER TRUST
    and S. ALEXANDER and
    JESSICA HAVERSTICK,
    Plaintiffs,
    and
    VIRGINIA WELCH,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    CHAI CENTER FOR LIVING
    JUDAISM, INC.,
    Defendant-Appellant,
    and
    HARRY GROSS,
    Defendant.
    Submitted December 7, 2021 – Decided September 9, 2022
    Before Judges Messano and Accurso.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Chancery Division, Essex County, Docket No.
    C-000153-12.
    Epstein Ostrove, LLC and Philip Pfeffer (Herbert
    Smith Freehills New York, LLP), attorneys for
    appellant (Elliot D. Ostrove and Philip Pfeffer, on the
    briefs).
    Connell Foley LLP, attorneys for respondent (Kevin J.
    Coakley and Nicole B. Dory, of counsel and on the
    brief; Mary Hurley Kellett, on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    In 2014, the Chancery Division entered judgment for plaintiff Virginia
    Welch and others, on count II of her 2012 complaint in which she sought, inter
    alia, to declare defendant Chai Center for Living Judaism, Inc.'s "current uses
    of Lot 10 [1 Jefferson Avenue, Short Hills] as violative of the restrictions in
    the 1949 deed" and "[e]njoining the current uses of Lot 10 and restricting the
    uses of Lot 10 to residential use in conformance with the restrictions in the
    1949 deed." Acknowledging, however, that Chai Center had "been functioning
    as an Orthodox Jewish synagogue serving as a place of worship" for many
    people for almost ten years, the judge sua sponte stayed the judgment pending
    appeal. We affirmed that judgment in its entirety, Welch v. Chai Ctr. for
    Living Judaism, Inc., A-4088-13, A-4163-13 (App. Div. Aug. 15, 2016), and
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    2
    the Supreme Court denied Chai Center's petition for certification, Welch v.
    Chai Ctr. for Living Judaism, Inc., 
    230 N.J. 402
     (2017).
    When Chai Center continued its operations with little change after it had
    exhausted its appeal, counsel for Welch sent cease and desist letters in 2018
    and 2019. When those letters did not induce compliance with the judgment,
    Welch filed a motion in aid of litigant's rights under Rule 1:10-3. Relying
    largely on Chai Center's own website and Facebook pages, Welch included in
    her motion papers hundreds of pages of advertisements, posts and photos
    documenting the non-residential activities on the property, including weekly
    religious services, celebrations and services for religious holidays, an adult
    religious education program, and a Hebrew school. By including documents
    from both before and after the first appeal, Welch documented the activities
    that continued on the property after the Supreme Court denied certification in
    2017.
    Among those documents was a July 3, 2019 printout from Chai Center's
    website advertising events held at 1 Jefferson Avenue between March and June
    2019, including weekly prayer services on Sunday, Monday, Thursday, Friday
    and Saturday "open to all," and offering kiddush luncheon sponsorships for
    $375; a matzah baking class for children for $10; community seders at $54 per
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    3
    adult and $25 per child; an annual Shavuot Torah reading and buffet luncheon;
    an evening lecture for $12; and a concert for $20. Welch included another
    printout from the website advertising twice-weekly Torah and Talmud study
    classes "open to all regardless of background or affiliation," and a Hebrew
    school calendar from September 2018 through May 2019. Welch also attached
    printouts from Chai Center's Facebook page advertising a speaking event and
    book-signing at 1 Jefferson Avenue in December 2018, a Shabbat dinner in
    January 2019 for $18 per adult, $10 per child and $54 per family and a
    Hamantash baking event in March 2019 for $10 per baker.
    Welch also submitted certifications and a report from a research analyst
    who conducted an internet "sweep" of publicly available information
    pertaining to Chai Center, which included photographs and descriptions from
    Facebook and Instagram of holiday celebrations and Hebrew school events
    held at 1 Jefferson Avenue, social media advertisements of events scheduled
    there and newspaper articles describing those events.
    Finally, Welch included in her motion papers certifications and a report
    from a private investigator whose team conducted in-person observations of 1
    Jefferson Avenue for eight days in March and April 2019. The investigator
    certified on the first day of the investigation, Thursday, March 21, 2019, the
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    4
    team observed between thirty-five and forty cars on the property in the
    evening, which matched an advertisement for a lecture on Chai Center's
    website. The investigator estimated approximately 100 people attended the
    event based in part on the number of people they observed in the cars. On
    another night coinciding with an advertised lecture, investigators observed
    several cars arrive and later depart in the evening. The investigator noted as
    many as three cars in the driveway that evening and another fifteen parked at
    the rear of the property. On the last day, a Saturday, the investigator reported
    as many as eighteen cars parked at 1 Jefferson and two cars parked on a nearby
    side street whose occupants walked over to the property.
    Chai Center opposed the motion, producing an unsigned settlement
    agreement between Chai Center, Rabbi Mendel Bogomilsky, the spiritual
    leader of Chai Center and his wife, and Millburn Township, its zoning board
    and several elected or appointed officials and employees resolving four zoning
    cases. In exchange for $750,000 from Millburn's insurers to Chai Center, the
    Center and the Bogomilskys agreed not to file any application for a variance to
    use 1 Jefferson as a "House of Worship" or to challenge in court, or otherwise,
    the constitutionality or validity of the "House of Worship" prohibition in the
    Township's zoning ordinance as it pertained to the property. Chai Center and
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    the Bogomilskys also agreed not to use 1 Jefferson as a "House of Worship"
    and to other limitations, including that they would not conduct any child care
    at the property except as permitted in the zoning ordinance; would not conduct
    Rosh Hashanah or Yom Kippur services at the property, nor bat or bar mitvah
    parties, weddings, graduations, banquets or similar events for anyone other
    than their family, and would not advertise to the general public in any media
    any events at 1 Jefferson, including family member events. They also agreed
    to limit large gatherings to five per year, limit the number and size of non-
    family vehicles on the property and require them to be parked in the driveway
    and not on the lawn. The agreement also included a liquidated damages
    schedule, permitting the Township to recover up to $5,000 per violation of the
    agreement.
    Chai Center also presented the certification of Bogomilsky describing
    three "dramatic changes" in the use of 1 Jefferson following entry of the 2014
    Chancery Division judgment, to wit, he and his family moved "full time" to the
    property in August 2015 (they had previously lived there only on weekends
    and religious holidays), the Center moved its "High Holiday services to
    Millburn Middle School" and "larger events (such as the annual Menorah
    Lighting and the Lag b'Omer celebration) are no longer held at the property,
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    and instead are held at municipal parks." But beyond noting that Welch's
    investigator's report did not account for how many cars belonged to the
    Bogomilsky family, including their "three married children, who spend most
    weekends with [them]," and that the media "evidence" in the report of Welch's
    research analyst supported his averments and not Welch's "false narrative,"
    Bogomilsky did not deny the very specific allegations made in the
    certifications Welch presented in support of her motion, a fact admitted by
    Chai Center's counsel at oral argument in the Chancery Division.
    In response to a specific question from the court as to whether the
    Bogomilskys denied that other activities "not associated with their residential
    lives" take place at 1 Jefferson, their counsel said, "No. They are not denying
    that any other activities take place there." Counsel made clear the
    Bogomilskys "welcome people into their home to gather, to study and to learn,
    and to enjoy the holidays." Counsel argued, however, that it was "the
    Township, through its police power, that gets to decide what is appropriate use
    of a residential home," and not the Welches. Counsel further argued the stay
    the Chancery judge entered sua sponte in 2014 had never been lifted; that the
    1949 deed restriction only limited the type of building on the property and not
    the use of the property; that the 2014 "decision was specifically addressing the
    A-3447-19
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    proposed use of the lot, the proposed building at the lot, which was to build
    something other than a single family home, notwithstanding . . . that the
    proposal was to build a synagogue that looked like a single family home so as
    to not interrupt the neighborhood"; and that at the time of the judgment, "1
    Jefferson wasn't [the Bogomilskys'] full-time residence."
    When the judge followed up by asking whether it was Chai Center's
    position that so long as the property only contained one house and a garage for
    one family, "anything else [the Bogomilskys] do there is not in violation" of
    the 2014 judgment, counsel replied "so long as it is consistent with the use of a
    private residence." And when the judge asked whether it was "their contention
    that everything that they have been doing is consistent with the use of a private
    residential house," counsel responded, "correct." The court then reviewed with
    counsel the advertisements referenced above on Chai Center's own website,
    asking if the "events that are described here, the invitations, the charges for
    them, the regularity of them and the types of events, that that is just typical of
    what would take place in anybody's residence," counsel responded "there is
    nothing inconsistent with those events with the use of a single family home,"
    and that there was "nothing in any court order . . . that has been presented
    otherwise."
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    After hearing argument, the court granted Welch's motion to enforce the
    2014 judgment. After summarizing the history of this long-running neighbor
    dispute over Chai Center's use of a home burdened by a deed restriction in a
    residential neighborhood as a shul, the court again ordered Chai Center to
    cease any non-residential activities on the property, "including but not limited
    to operating a synagogue or shul," and to stop advertising activities the court
    has precluded.
    The court rejected Chai Center's argument that the 2014 judgment was
    limited to the synagogue the Center proposed to build on the property and not
    its ongoing use as a synagogue or shul, reasoning that if that were true, there
    would have been no reason for the judge hearing the case in 2014 to have
    stayed his judgment. The court also rejected the argument that the stay
    somehow had never been lifted following the Court's denial of Chai Center's
    petition for certification, noting the judge made "it clear that the sole purpose
    of that stay was pending the appeal."
    The court rejected Chai Center's argument that it lacked "guidance" as to
    what would be permitted at the property and was "not clear what restrictions
    there are" as "disingenuous." The court pronounced itself "particularly
    persuaded" by the documents Welch submitted on the motion from Chai
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    Center's own website, advertising "a litany of activities . . . to the public and
    inviting everybody to this residential location, 1 Jefferson Avenue, Short Hills
    for open times, for various different holidays, various different activities,
    charging entry fees every month, more than once a month with these
    invitations going out," and noted the surveillance reports linking forty cars on
    the property to an advertised event "apparently taking place." Although
    acknowledging the three changes Bogomilsky claimed the Center had made
    since entry of the 2014 judgment, based on Welch's submission of the
    documents from Chai Center's website and Facebook page, the court found it
    "just does not accept" that 1 Jefferson "is being used as nothing more than a
    single family residence for the rabbi and his family."
    Finding a clear violation of the 2014 judgment, the judge entered an
    order enforcing it and directed Welch to submit a certification for the counsel
    fees she had incurred on the motion. The judge also noted she would
    "consider sanctions next time" in the event of further violations. Welch
    thereafter submitted an application for fees and costs of $81,461.67, which
    Chai Center opposed.
    In a comprehensive written statement of reasons for awarding Welch
    fees, the judge found Welch was entitled to counsel fees for the Center's
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    10
    "willful failure to comply with the court's prior Order." The judge wrote,
    "[c]learly, defendants knew or should have known that their activities at the
    property," including their "many advertisements online to the general public
    for a range of activities," many for which they charged "entry fees," were
    "non-residential" uses that violated the April 2, 2014 Order. The judge noted,
    however, that three experienced partners billed time on the enforcement
    motion, two of whom had worked on the case since its inception, where one
    would have sufficed. Applying one of the partner's $410 hourly rate, which
    the judge deemed reasonable based on the lawyer's experience and fees in the
    area, and reducing the hours to what she deemed was a reasonable expenditure
    of time for the tasks noted, the court awarded Welch $25,994 in fees and
    $5,915.57 in costs for a total of $31,909.57.
    Chai Center appeals, arguing the 2014 judgment was insufficiently
    specific to support Rule 1:10-3 relief, and that the court erred by finding it
    willfully violated the 2014 judgment based on incompetent evidence,
    improperly infringed on its religious rights, and imposed counsel fees as a
    sanction. Our review of the record convinces us that none of these arguments
    is of sufficient merit to warrant discussion in a written opinion. R. 2:11-
    3(e)(1)(E).
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    11
    As the Chancery judge noted, Chai Center and the Bogomilskys'
    continued operation of a shul at 1 Jefferson, evidenced by documents and
    photos from the Center's website and Facebook page, did not constitute trivial
    or isolated violations of the 2014 judgment but a wholesale flouting of its
    terms. The property is burdened by a deed restriction, which the Bogomilskys
    knew when they purchased it. Welch and other neighbors litigated the
    continued vitality of that restriction in protracted proceedings at great expense
    to themselves. Although awarding judgment to Welch and her fellow plaintiffs
    upholding the restriction and declaring Chai Center and the Bogomilskys' then
    "current uses of Lot 10 as violative of the restrictions in the 1949 deed ,"
    "[e]njoining the current uses of Lot 10" and restricting its future use "to
    residential use in conformance with the restrictions in the 1949 deed," the
    judge, sua sponte, stayed his judgment in light of the proofs that the synagogue
    had served approximately 100 families for many years — over the objections
    of its residential neighbors.
    In light of the extensive, competent, evidence Welch put before the court
    on her enforcement motion, the judge rejected as "disingenuous" the Center
    and the Bogomilskys' arguments that the stay of the 2014 judgment had never
    been lifted, the Bogomilskys' full-time move to the property following entry of
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    12
    the judgment constituted changed circumstances, the judgment enjoined only
    the new structure Chai Center proposed to build on the lot and not its many
    years' use as a shul operating out of the single family home on the property, no
    court had ever adjudicated the uses to which the property could be put
    consistent with the deed restriction and the 2014 judgment was too vague to
    enforce — as do we.1 In addition, we've already ruled the deed restriction and
    1
    The court addressed the competency of the evidence on the motion, which
    Chai Center raised in its brief opposing the motion, but did not continue to
    press at oral argument, likely for good reason. As our Supreme Court has
    explained, "[e]videntiary decisions are reviewed under the abuse of discretion
    standard because, from its genesis, the decision to admit or exclude evidence is
    one firmly entrusted to the trial court's discretion." Est. of Hanges v. Metro.
    Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co., 
    202 N.J. 369
    , 383-84 (2010). We will only disturb such
    determinations when we find "a clear error of judgment," State v. Koedatich,
    
    112 N.J. 225
    , 313 (1988), which we do not find here. It is hornbook law that
    "[p]roof of authentication may proceed with relatively little attention to detail
    and technicality." Biunno, Weissbard & Zegas, Current N.J. Rules of
    Evidence, cmt. 1 on N.J.R.E. 901 (2022-23). All that is required of the
    proponent is "evidence sufficient to support a finding that the item is what its
    proponent claims." N.J.R.E. 901. Social media posts require no special
    authentication in our State, and are readily admitted, especially in a bench
    trial, as here, where the judge is the fact-finder. State v. Hannah, 
    448 N.J. Super. 78
    , 89 (App. Div. 2016). We are satisfied Welch produced prima facie
    proof linking the posts with Chai Center, which did not deny they came from
    its own website and Facebook pages. The Center's argument that Welch was
    precluded from arguing on appeal that the documents were also properly
    admissible under N.J.R.E. 803 and supported the Chancery Division's Rule
    1:10-3 order is simply incorrect. See Tymczyszyn v. Columbus Gardens, 
    422 N.J. Super. 253
    , 256 n.1 (App. Div. 2011) (noting a respondent is free to raise
    alternative arguments in support of the trial court judgment).
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    2014 judgment did not infringe defendants' religious liberty, distinguishing the
    case from State v. Cameron, 
    100 N.J. 586
    , 604 (1985), and they've offered
    nothing to persuade us to revisit our analysis. Welch, slip op. at 18.
    This matter does not involve a government restriction on religious
    activity. The Chancery Division has simply upheld — and now enforced — a
    contractual covenant between private parties. Thus, Kali Bari Temple v.
    Board of Adjustment of Township of Readington, 
    271 N.J. Super. 241
     (App.
    Div. 1994), on which the Center relies in support of its argument, is inapposite.
    Chai Center's argument that the settlement of the zoning cases, purportedly
    defining the "ancillary permissible use" of 1 Jefferson, controls here is
    similarly unavailing. Welch was not a party to those proceedings, and
    settlement of the municipal zoning litigation has no bearing on the 2014
    judgment or its enforcement.
    Finally, we reject Chai Center's argument that the court abused its
    discretion with its award of fees and costs because it imposed punitive relief
    for the Center's noncompliance with a vague order, failed to consider that the
    settlement agreement obviated the need for the motion, and entered an
    unreasonable fee award.
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    As an initial matter, the Center misapprehends the fee order it appeals.
    The Chancery court did not impose "punitive" or coercive relief on the Center;
    it merely awarded Welch her reasonable costs for her motion to enforce the
    2014 judgment. See R. 1:10-3 (permitting "an allowance for counsel fees to be
    paid by any party to the action to a party accorded relief under this rule" in the
    court's discretion). Thus, its argument that the award must be reversed
    because the Chancery judge did not find it in willful noncompliance of the
    2014 judgment (although she plainly did) is misplaced. See In re N.J.A.C.
    5:96 & 5:97, 
    221 N.J. 1
    , 17 (2015) (noting "[t]he focus being on the
    vindication of litigants' rights, relief sought pursuant to Rule 1:10-3 does not
    necessarily require establishing that the violator of an order acted with
    intention to disobey"); Lusardi v. Curtis Point Prop. Owners Ass'n, 
    138 N.J. Super. 44
    , 49 (App. Div. 1975) (explaining "wilful disobedience" of the order
    sought to be enforced is "irrelevant in a proceeding designed simply to enforce
    a judgment on a litigant's behalf"). Although the judge certainly could have
    imposed a coercive sanction to compel Chai Center's compliance with the
    judgment, see Milne v. Goldenberg, 
    428 N.J. Super. 184
    , 198 (App. Div.
    2012), she did not do so, although warning she would "consider sanctions next
    time" in the event of further violations.
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    A trial court's decision to impose fees and the amount awarded are
    matters committed to its considerable discretion, Grow Co. v. Chokshi, 
    424 N.J. Super. 357
    , 367 (App. Div. 2012), which we will disturb "only on the
    rarest occasions, and then only because of a clear abuse of discretion,"
    Rendine v. Pantzer, 
    141 N.J. 292
    , 317 (1995). This is not one of those rare
    occasions. To the contrary, we are satisfied the judge carefully considered
    Welch's application in light of the long history of this case and the time
    required to bring and argue the enforcement motion and entered a fair award.
    In sum, because the record supports the Chancery judge's finding that
    Chai Center and the Bogomilskys have simply ignored the judgment Welch
    and her neighbors obtained in 2014, and we cannot find any abuse of
    discretion in the award of fees on the motion, we affirm the Chancery court's
    orders of October 4, 2019, and February 27, 2020.
    Affirmed.
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