IN THE MATTER OF MICHAEL PICOZZI SADC ID 14-0090-EP/14-0131-EP (NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE) ( 2020 )


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  •                             NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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
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    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-0687-18T2
    IN THE MATTER OF
    MICHAEL PICOZZI SADC
    ID# 14-0090-EP/14-0131-EP.
    ________________________
    Argued telephonically April 20, 2020 –
    Decided May 6, 2020
    Before Judges Sabatino, Geiger and Natali.
    On appeal from the New Jersey Department of
    Agriculture Development Committee.
    Timothy A. Valliere argued the cause for appellant
    Michael Picozzi.
    Stephanie R. Carney, Deputy Attorney General, argued
    the cause for respondent Department of Agriculture
    Development Committee (Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney
    General, attorney; Donna Arons, Assistant Attorney
    General, of counsel; Stephanie R. Carney and Jason T.
    Stypinski, Deputy Attorney General, on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Appellant Michael Picozzi appeals from an August 30, 2018 notice of
    violation by the State Agriculture Development Committee (SADC). In a July
    26, 2018 Resolution, the SADC concluded that appellant violated five
    paragraphs of a development easement (Easement) held by the Morris County
    Agriculture Development Board (MCADB) that restricted non-agricultural
    development and uses on the preserved portion of his property. We affirm in
    part and reverse in part.
    I.
    In 2005, appellant purchased approximately sixteen acres of property in
    Harding Township. Prior to appellant's purchase, Harding Township, with aid
    from an SADC grant, obtained the development rights to a ten-acre portion of
    the property from the previous owners for $2,351,034.00, permanently
    preserving and encumbering that portion of the property with a farmland
    preservation easement.      The terms of the Easement principally tracked the
    language set forth in N.J.A.C. 2:76-6.15, which generally restricts non-
    agricultural development in order to maintain and enhance the agricultural
    industry in the State. MCADB is the holder of the Easement with the SADC
    and Morris County jointly retaining the right to enforce its provisions.
    On October 14, 2015, appellant submitted a zoning application to Harding
    Township for the "construction of a barn for agricultural purposes." Harding
    Township approved appellant's application and allowed construction of an
    A-0687-18T2
    2
    "agricultural building" based on appellant's representation that "the steel
    building [he was] proposing to build will be used only for agricultural purposes."
    When the MCADB asked appellant for additional information regarding use of
    the barn, he explained that "the proposed use [of the barn] is for hay farming"
    and further elaborated that "whether it is hay farming (as currently done) or dairy
    farming or pig farming, which [he was] also considering" the purpose of the barn
    was to "support that agricultural production." Appellant began construction in
    the spring of 2016 and completed construction sometime in the fall.
    Prior to completion of the barn, the MCADB provided appellant with a
    report titled "Interpreting the Provisions of the Deed of Easement, Report No.
    2: Recreational Uses" (Report).       According to the Report, in response to
    increasing requests to use portions of preserved farms for recreational activities,
    the SADC sought to "clarify what the SADC believes are the relevant
    considerations in determining which recreational activities may be permitted on
    preserved farms under the deed of easement, and existing applicable statutes and
    regulations." The SADC emphasized that in accordance with the Agriculture
    Retention and Development Act (ARDA), agricultural production must be the
    first priority use of the premises. It noted that "first priority use means there is
    no activity on the premises that restricts or inhibits the potential to utilize t he
    A-0687-18T2
    3
    entirety of the premises for all types of agricultural production at the present
    time or in the future." Stated differently, the SADC explained that "when a
    landowner affirmatively or effectively 'dedicates' any portion of the preserved
    farm to a recreational use, the SADC believes that violates the principle that
    agriculture is to be the first priority use of the land."
    The Report also discussed paragraph nine of the Easement, which states
    that a landowner may "derive income from certain activities" provided those
    uses do not "do not interfere with the actual use of the land for agricultural
    production" and utilize the property "in its existing condition." With respect to
    such non-agricultural uses, the Report stated that "not all recreational uses are
    intended to be permitted[,]" "recreational uses cannot 'limit' the type of
    agricultural production that can take place on the farm currently or in the
    future[,]" there can be "no improvements made to the premises to accommodate
    the recreational use[,]" and "there cannot be intentional agricultural inactivity to
    accommodate the recreational use." Further, with respect to athletic fields and
    golf courses, the Report noted that "the intent of [paragraph nine] was to not
    allow preserved farms to be used for sporting events and other organized
    recreational activities more suited to public parks and playgrounds . . . [as those
    A-0687-18T2
    4
    activities] are more likely to result in a landowner's dedication of all or part of
    the land for a recreational use and its ancillary needs."
    On October 27, 2016, a Harding Township zoning officer inspected
    appellant's newly constructed barn and determined that "the use of the structure
    [was] not strictly agricultural." The zoning official's photographs taken during
    the inspection showed "hockey rink boards with plexi[]glass, [a] batting cage,
    hockey goal, hockey sticks and pucks, as well as an artificial skating surface."
    The MCADB also learned of the alleged hockey rink inside the barn soon
    thereafter.
    The MCADB issued a December 14, 2016 notice of violation to appellant
    specifying that the hockey rink constituted a non-agricultural use on the property
    and violated the Easement. According to photographs in the record, appellant
    subsequently removed all hockey-related items from the barn including the
    hockey boards, goal, sticks, pucks, and the skating surface prior to MCADB
    conducting a January 25, 2017 follow-up inspection. MCADB accordingly
    issued a notice of compliance to appellant on March 1, 2017.
    MCADB re-inspected the property on December 21, 2017 and observed
    that appellant reinstalled the hockey rink and equipment, including the
    plexiglass-topped hockey boards bolted to the concrete floor and an ice surface,
    A-0687-18T2
    5
    that were the subject of the original notice of violation.        In response, the
    MCADB issued another notice of violation providing him thirty days "to remove
    the hockey rink, ice surface[,] and hockey-related items from the barn." On a
    January 26, 2018 follow-up inspection, however, the MCADB noted that
    appellant's barn still contained the hockey rink which was now covered by astro-
    turf, the chillers used to cool the temperature of the floor for ice, and the hockey
    equipment.
    At an April 12, 2018 public meeting, the MCADB found that appellant
    violated paragraphs one, two, nine, and fourteen of the Easement, and it referred
    the matter to Harding Township and SADC for investigation and enforcement.
    The SADC inspected appellant's property on July 6, 2018 and observed "hockey
    boards and other hockey-related items remaining inside the barn," it noted that
    "the floor of the skating area was wet, but not ice," and "identified a raised
    platform overlooking the skating floor with what appeared to be an enclosed
    practice/training area and steel framework for a skating treadmill." With respect
    to farm equipment, the inspectors noticed "a small tractor, log splitter, small
    tractor-mounted spreader, lawnmower and all-terrain vehicle."
    The SADC considered the matter at a July 26, 2018 public meeting.
    Despite the SADC's verbal and written notice of the meeting to appellant, as
    A-0687-18T2
    6
    well as mailed and faxed notice to the Newark Star Ledger, Times of Trenton,
    and Camden Courier Post, appellant failed to attend.
    During the meeting, MCADB Administrator Katherine Coyle submitted
    the Board's findings and photographs as a result of the four inspections of
    appellant's property. She also included photographs received directly from
    appellant depicting the hockey rink with boards bolted to the ground and related
    hockey equipment. An SADC manager also spoke at the meeting to describe his
    observations of appellant's property during his July 6, 2018 inspection. He noted
    that he saw the hockey rink and related items, but that the floor was not frozen
    as appellant informed him that the chiller system was not working correctly.
    The SADC manager further noted that there was no hay or farm products stored
    in the barn at the time of the inspection.
    In its accompanying July 26, 2018 Resolution, the SADC determined,
    based on the statements, photographic evidence, and other documents before it,
    that appellant failed to comply with paragraphs one, two, three, nine and
    fourteen of the Easement. It also authorized the Attorney General to institute
    legal action.
    The SADC explained that paragraph one of the Easement provided that
    "[a]ny development of the [p]remises for non[-]agricultural purposes is
    A-0687-18T2
    7
    expressly prohibited," and appellant's "[d]evelopment of the farm for purposes
    of ice skating and/or athletic facility purposes . . . is . . . prohibited." Further,
    paragraph two stated that the encumbered property was limited to "agricultural
    use1 and production in compliance with N.J.S.A. 4:1C-11 . . . and all other rules
    promulgated by the [SADC]" and "[t]he conversion of preserved land to a
    structure which does not service an agricultural use renders the land no longer
    available for agricultural use or production [and] is therefore prohibited."
    The SADC also relied on paragraph three of the Easement and noted that
    the original grantor of the Easement certified that "at the time of [its]
    execution[,] . . . the non[-]agricultural uses indicated on attached Schedule (B)
    existed . . . [and] [a]ll other non[-]agricultural uses are prohibited . . . ." The
    SADC concluded that "[n]o non[]agricultural uses existed at the time of
    preservation [,] . . . none are listed in Schedule (B)," and appellant's "[u]se of
    1
    Paragraph two defines agricultural use as:
    the use of the [property] for common farmsite activities
    including, but not limited to: production, harvesting,
    storage, grading, packaging, processing and the
    wholesale and retail marketing of crops, plants, animals
    and other related commodities and the use and
    application of techniques and methods of soil
    preparation and management, fertilization, weed,
    disease and pest control, disposal of farm waste,
    irrigation, drainage and water management and grazing.
    A-0687-18T2
    8
    the farm for the construction of an ice skating rink/athletic facility constitutes a
    non[-]agricultural use . . . which was not in existence at the time of the
    conveyance of the easement, and is therefore prohibited."
    Additionally, the SADC noted that paragraph nine of the Easement
    permitted appellant to "use the [property] to derive income from certain
    recreational activities . . . only if such activities do not interfere with the actual
    use of the land for agricultural production and that the activities only utilize the
    [property] in its existing condition."         It further provided that "[o]ther
    recreational activities from which income is derived and which alter the
    [property], such as golf courses and athletic fields, are prohibited." The SADC
    found that appellant's "ice skating rink/athletic facility complete with optional
    ice or artificial turf floor, hockey boards[,] and training infrastructure does not
    utilize the [property] in its existing condition, does interfere with use of the area
    for agricultural production, does alter the land to create an athletic field and is
    therefore prohibited."
    Finally, the SADC explained in the July 26, 2018 Resolution that
    paragraph fourteen of the Easement provided that appellant "may construct any
    new buildings for agricultural purposes[,]" but that his "[i]ce skating and/or
    A-0687-18T2
    9
    athletic facility uses are not considered an agricultural purpose and therefore
    construction of a building for these activities is prohibited."
    The SADC issued a formal notice of violation on August 30, 2018, which
    appended the July 26, 2018 Resolution. This appeal followed.
    II.
    Our review of a final agency decision is limited, and we "do not ordinarily
    overturn such a decision 'in the absence of a showing that it was arbitrary,
    capricious or unreasonable, or that it lacked fair support in the evidence.'" In re
    Carter, 
    191 N.J. 474
    , 482 (2007) (citations omitted). Further, we may not
    substitute our judgment for that of the agency's when "substantial credible
    evidence supports [the] agency's conclusion . . . ." Greenwood v. State Police
    Training Ctr., 
    127 N.J. 500
    , 513 (1992) (citations omitted). Instead, we "defer
    to an agency's expertise and superior knowledge of a particular field."
    Ibid. (citations omitted). "The
    burden of demonstrating that the agency's action was
    arbitrary, capricious or unreasonable rests upon the [party] challenging the
    administrative action." In re Adoption of Amendments to Ne., Upper Raritan,
    Sussex Cty., 
    435 N.J. Super. 571
    , 582 (App. Div. 2014) (alteration in original)
    (quoting In re Arenas, 
    385 N.J. Super. 440
    , 443-44 (App. Div. 2006)).
    A-0687-18T2
    10
    "While we must defer to the agency's expertise, we need not surrender to
    it." N.J. Chapter of Nat'l. Ass'n of Indus. and Office Parks v. N.J. Dep't of Envt'l
    Prot., 
    241 N.J. Super. 145
    , 165 (App. Div. 1990). An appellate court therefore
    does not automatically accept an agency's interpretation of a statute or a
    regulation, and reviews strictly legal questions de novo. Bowser v. Bd. of Trs.,
    Police & Fireman's Ret. Sys., 
    455 N.J. Super. 165
    , 170-71 (App. Div. 2018).
    On appeal, appellant maintains that the SADC's July 26, 2018 Resolution
    is entitled to no deference because it "ignores the actual use of the barn for
    agricultural purposes," "relies on labelling the barn as an ice skating/athletic
    training facility to justify the purported violations of the . . . Easement," and
    "does not discuss how any feature of the barn . . . interferes, restricts, inhibits or
    precludes the agricultural use of the barn."
    The Right to Farm Act (RTFA) embodies the public policy that "[t]he
    retention of agricultural activities would serve the best interest of all citizens of
    this State by insuring the numerous social, economic and environmental benefits
    which accrue from one of the largest industries in the Garden State." N.J.S.A.
    4:1C-2(a). To effectuate these objectives, the Legislature determined it was
    "necessary to authorize the establishment of State and county organizations to
    coordinate the development of farmland preservation programs within identified
    A-0687-18T2
    11
    areas where . . . certain financial, administrative and regulatory benefits will be
    made available to those landowners who choose to participate." N.J.S.A. 4:1C-
    12(c).
    The SADC, created by the RTFA, "share[s] the same purpose to protect
    and encourage agriculture[,]" Twp. of S. Brunswick v. SADC, 
    352 N.J. Super. 361
    , 365 (App. Div. 2002) (citing N.J.S.A. 4:1C-2 and -12), and ensures "the
    State's regulatory action with respect to agricultural activities may be
    undertaken with a more complete understanding of the needs and difficulties of
    agriculture," N.J.S.A. 4:1C-4(a).      See also In re Agric., Aquacultural, &
    Horticultural Water Usage Certification Rules, 
    410 N.J. Super. 209
    , 227 (App.
    Div. 2009).
    The SADC is empowered to "[e]stablish guidelines . . . for identification
    of agricultural lands suitable for inclusion in agricultural development areas and
    farmland preservation programs[,]" and to "[r]eview and approve, conditionally
    approve or disapprove all applications for funds." N.J.S.A. 4:1C-7(a), (e). The
    SADC also has specific authority to "[a]pply for, receive, and accept . . . grants
    or loans for, or in aid of, the committee's authorized purposes;" to "[e]nter into
    any agreement or contract . . . necessary, convenient, or desirable . . . to carry
    out [its] power . . . ;" and to "[a]dopt, pursuant to the 'Administrative Procedure
    A-0687-18T2
    12
    Act,' [N.J.S.A. 52:14B-1 to -30], rules and regulations necessary to implement
    the [RTFA's] provisions." N.J.S.A. 4:1C-5(d), (e), and (f).
    The statutory scheme specifically envisions the purchase of farmland
    development easements requiring land to be dedicated to agricultural purposes.
    See N.J.S.A. 4:1C-24(a)(2) ("Any landowner whose land is within a municipally
    approved program or other farmland preservation program . . . , and which is
    included in an agricultural development area, may enter into an agreement to
    convey a development easement on the land to the board."). In interpreting
    provisions of those development easements, the regulation itself requires that
    "the deed restrictions . . . be liberally construed" to further the 1981 Farmland
    Preservation Bond Act and ARDA. N.J.A.C. 2:76-6.15(c).
    When the SADC's July 28, 2018 Resolution and attendant notice of
    violation are considered against these legal principles, it is clear that its
    determinations that appellant violated paragraphs one, two, three, and fourteen
    of the Easement were fully supported by substantial, credible evidence in the
    record, consistent with the aforementioned statutes, and were therefore neither
    arbitrary nor capricious. We reach a different conclusion, however, with respect
    A-0687-18T2
    13
    to paragraph nine. 2    While paragraph nine is illustrative of the types of
    permissible and proscribed recreational activities (e.g., golf courses and athletic
    fields), there was no evidence before the SADC that appellant derived any
    income from the use of the hockey rink or related activities. SADC's erroneous
    finding as to paragraph nine, however, does not alter our determination that
    appellant's conduct violated paragraphs one, two, three, and fourteen of the
    Easement.
    With respect to paragraphs one and two of the Easement, which require
    that the encumbered portion of appellant's property be maintained for
    agricultural use and proscribing non-agricultural uses, the SADC did not abuse
    its discretion in determining that appellant breached these provision when he
    used his barn to create a hockey rink. Neither ice skating nor hockey are
    agricultural uses.
    The evidence before the SADC clearly established that appellant's use of
    the barn also violated paragraph three of the Easement.            As the SADC
    2
    As noted, that provision of the Easement permits "use [of] the [property] to
    derive income from certain recreational activities . . . only if such activities do
    not interfere with the actual use of the land for agricultural production and that
    the activities only utilize the [property] in its existing condition" and prohibits
    other activities "from which income is derived and which alter the [property],
    such as golf courses and athletic fields." (Emphasis added).
    A-0687-18T2
    14
    concluded, "[n]o non-agricultural uses existed at the time of preservation."
    Appellant has not identified anything in the record to dispute this finding. By
    constructing a hockey rink in the barn, he commenced a non-agricultural use
    that did not exist at the time of preservation.
    Finally, appellant's construction of a barn that covered a functioning ice-
    hockey rink violated paragraph fourteen of the Easement as the SADC found.
    Under paragraph fourteen appellant was permitted to engage in new construction
    on the property for agricultural purposes. We are satisfied that the evidence
    before the SADC supported its conclusion that appellant's use of the barn was
    not for such a permitted purpose.
    We disagree with appellant's argument that the MCADB's and SADC's
    decision was arbitrary and capricious because they "focused on the look and
    potential use of the barn rather than its actual use," as he "purchased over
    $70,000 of farm equipment . . . and stores that equipment in the barn." Appellant
    ignores the substantial evidence in the record before the SADC that he used his
    newly constructed facility not "to support . . . agricultural production," but
    clearly to house an ice skating rink and to support hockey-related activities.
    That conclusion by the SADC was based on the statements provided to it by the
    inspector based upon his numerous observations of the interior of the barn, as
    A-0687-18T2
    15
    well as the photographs appellant himself provided evidencing that the interior
    of the barn included, at a minimum, an oval-shaped hockey rink with hockey
    boards bolted to the concrete floor containing plexiglass barriers, a hockey goal,
    hockey sticks and pucks, and most significantly an ice-covered floor. That
    appellant intermittently (based on the photographs submitted to the SADC)
    parked certain equipment on top of an ice floor covered by astro-turf does not
    refute the conclusion that he violated multiple paragraphs of the Easement when
    he principally used the barn for "non[-]agricultural purposes" in violation of
    paragraph one, did not use the barn "for common farmsite activities" in violation
    of paragraph two, and did not "construct [a] new building[] for agricultural
    purposes," in violation of paragraph fourteen as found by the SADC.
    The SADC was clearly unpersuaded by appellant's explanation that his
    bolted down circular rink with plexiglass extenders was related to farming
    activities or to protect his workers or the barn structure. Nor was it convinced
    that appellant's installation of multiple chillers attached to the barn were for
    controlling temperature for agricultural purposes, particularly when the
    photographs clearly showed ice on the floor. Indeed, appellant does not dispute
    that there was an ice floor in the barn, and he provided no logical explanation
    A-0687-18T2
    16
    for its existence or evidence that those chillers related to any current (e.g., hay
    production) or future farming activities (e.g., dairy or pig farming).
    Appellant also argues that "the [SADC] does not . . . explain how any
    feature or décor of the barn interferes, restricts, inhibits or prohibits the
    agricultural use of the barn." More specifically, appellant emphasizes that the
    SADC "fails to describe how an ambient cooling system restricts or inhibits
    farming[,]" "how the use of second-hand hockey boards . . . restrict or inhibit
    farming[,]" or why he "cannot configure the interior partitions in his barn in an
    oval configuration if he deems it appropriate to protect the walls of the barn and
    to ensure the safety of those working in the barn."
    There is no dispute that appellant is permitted to utilize the barn for
    agricultural activities, install a cooling system to manage the temperature inside
    the barn for permitted agricultural purposes, and support the barn's structure.
    Indeed, once he removed the offending items from the barn, the MCADB issued
    its March 1, 2017 notice of compliance after confirming he remedied the
    violations.   When examining the totality of the circumstances, however,
    including the testimony, photographs, and the fact that appellant reinstalled all
    of the hockey-related equipment again after he was given the notice of
    compliance, it is evident that appellant intended to use the facility for non[-]
    A-0687-18T2
    17
    agricultural purposes and the SADC did not abuse its discretion in so
    concluding.
    Appellant also contends that the SADC's resolution provides no guidance
    for compliance as it "provides no guidance in terms of the type of flooring that
    it would deem acceptable[,]" "whether another configuration of the second-hand
    hockey boards would be acceptable[,] or whether an oval configuration of so me
    other type of partition would be acceptable." Relying on Boller Beverages, Inc.
    v. Davis, 
    38 N.J. 138
    , 152 (1962), appellant argues that he "is entitled to know
    the [a]gency standards and to have adequate direction from the [a]gency about
    any constraints on the use of his barn." Appellant's arguments, and his reliance
    on Boller, is misplaced.
    It is abundantly clear from the administrative record that appellant had
    sufficient information, both from the clear terms of the Easement and the Report,
    to determine that his installation of a frozen hockey rink violated the terms of
    his Easement. Any reasonable reading of the Easement leads to one inescapable
    conclusion — appellant is not permitted to build a hockey rink on the
    encumbered portion of his property and cover it with a barn. It was not an abuse
    of the SADC's discretion for it to effectively conclude that appellant's storing a
    A-0687-18T2
    18
    few pieces of equipment intermittently on top of a hockey rink does not comply
    with the clear terms of the Easement.
    Nor do we agree with appellant's contention that "there is a lack of
    evidence that any feature or décor of the barn inhibits, restricts, precludes or
    prevents the use of the barn for agricultural purposes" and thus "the SADC
    resolution should be vacated and the matter remanded for a trial-type hearing."
    First, the SADC's decision was not based on the décor of the barn but its clear
    primary use as a hockey rink. There is nothing in the Easement that prohibits
    appellant from decorating the interior of the barn with hockey banners and
    related paraphernalia and nothing in the July 26, 2018 ordinance or the Easement
    can reasonably be interpreted as precluding such decorations.
    Finally, we disagree with appellant that the matter should be remanded so
    he can belatedly "cross-examine the various witnesses upon whom the SADC,
    and [MCADB], relie[d]" including a witness who he alleges "had a personal
    agenda by offering to purchase the barn from [him]," another "who [he] heard
    had said the barn would be torn down in her lifetime," and an inspector regarding
    "comments he made to [him] during a site visit as well as the internet 'research'
    he did as part of his presentation during the SADC meeting."
    A-0687-18T2
    19
    Appellant was provided ample notice of the meeting and elected not to
    attend. Under such circumstances, it would be patently unfair for appellant to
    ignore a duly noticed hearing only to request on appeal the opportunity to
    participate. In any event, we find no substantive support for appellant's request.
    The facts supporting the SADC's determination were primarily based on ample
    and undisputed photographic evidence in the record (some provided by appellant
    himself).
    We stress that our opinion is limited to those portions of the Easement
    which we have concluded appellant violated based on the evidence before the
    SADC. We do not determine that appellant's construction of the barn violated
    any paragraph of the Easement as the SADC did not make that general finding
    or reach such a legal conclusion. Likewise, the SADC did not conclude that
    appellant's installation of the chillers violated any paragraph of the Easement,
    per se. Rather, it was appellant's use of the chillers to support a frozen hockey
    rink as opposed to an agricultural use, as the evidence amply supported, that was
    in contravention of the Easement. Simply put, future uses of the barn and related
    equipment must merely comply with an agricultural use as clearly stated in the
    Easement.
    A-0687-18T2
    20
    In sum, we affirm the SADC's decision determining that appellant violated
    paragraphs one, two, three and fourteen of the development easement. We
    reverse the SADC's determination that appellant violated paragraph nine of the
    development easement.
    To the extent we have not addressed any of appellant's arguments, it is
    because we have concluded they lack sufficient merit to warrant discussion in a
    written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(D) and (E).
    Affirmed in part and reversed in part. We do not retain jurisdiction.
    A-0687-18T2
    21