Richard Grabowsky v. Twp. of Montclair (073142) ( 2015 )


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  •                                                       SYLLABUS
    (This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the
    convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please note that, in the
    interest of brevity, portions of any opinion may not have been summarized.)
    Richard Grabowsky v. Township of Montclair (A-53-13) (073142)
    Argued December 3, 2014 -- Decided June 15, 2015
    PATTERSON, J., writing for a unanimous Court.
    In this appeal, the Court considers whether two municipal officials had disqualifying conflicts of interest
    when they voted on an application to amend a zoning ordinance.
    The property at issue in this case is a single-parcel redevelopment area located at 63-65 Church Street in
    Montclair (the “Church Street Lot”). The Unitarian Universalist Congregation Church of Montclair (Unitarian
    Church), located at 67 Church Street, sits on a property adjacent to the western boundary of the Church Street Lot.
    In March 2012, Fountain Square Development, LLC (Fountain Square) submitted a proposal for the
    development of an eighty-eight-unit assisted living facility on the Church Street Lot. The proposal required three
    amendments to the Township’s redevelopment plan. Fountain Square presented its proposal to the Township of
    Montclair Council (Council), which consisted of Township Mayor Jerry Fried, Nick Lewis, and five other members.
    In April, while Fountain Square’s proposed amendments to the redevelopment plan were pending before the
    Planning Board of the Township of Montclair, the Council introduced Ordinance 0-12-28 (Ordinance), which
    included the amendments. By letter to the Township Manager, the Planning Board endorsed two of the three
    amendments and advised the Township that it lacked sufficient information to address the third amendment.
    On May 1, 2012, at a public Council meeting presided over by Fried, Fountain Square presented its
    proposal for an assisted living facility. Several residents stated concerns and objections to the proposal, and Lewis
    suggested an amendment to the Ordinance. Lewis’s amendment was adopted by a vote of six to one, and Fried’s
    subsequent motion to adopt the amended Ordinance passed, four to three. Fried, Lewis and two other Council
    members voted in support of the amended Ordinance, and the remaining three Council members opposed it.
    Plaintiff Richard Grabowsky -- “a citizen of Montclair and an owner and developer of numerous
    commercial properties” in its downtown area -- filed a complaint in lieu of prerogative writs challenging the validity
    of the Ordinance. Plaintiff claimed, among other challenges, that Fried had a direct personal interest in the
    development that should have disqualified him from voting on the zoning issue, and that Fried and Lewis shared a
    disqualifying indirect personal interest because of their membership in the Unitarian Church. Plaintiff sought a
    preliminary injunction barring consideration or approval of development applications for the assisted living facility.
    Although no party filed a motion for any form of dispositive relief, the trial court sua sponte granted summary
    disposition, and dismissed plaintiff’s complaint with prejudice. The trial court observed that Fried’s remark (that his
    mother might reside in the proposed facility) did not give rise to an interest different from the interest of other
    members of the community, and that Fried’s and Lewis’s membership in the Unitarian Church did not warrant
    disqualification based on the facts of this case.
    On plaintiff’s appeal, an appellate panel concluded that the trial court’s summary disposition was
    procedurally improper under Rule 4:67-1, but concurred with the court’s determination that the two Township
    officials had no conflict of interest, and affirmed the trial court’s dismissal of plaintiff’s claims. The Court granted
    plaintiff’s petition for certification. 
    217 N.J. 52
    (2014).
    HELD: Applying the statutory standards set forth in the Municipal Land Use Law, N.J.S.A. 40:55D-1 to -163
    (MLUL), and the Local Government Ethics Law, N.J.S.A. 40A:9-22.1 to -22.25 (LGEL), as well as established
    common law authority, when a church or other organization owns property within 200 feet of a site that is the subject of
    a zoning application, public officials who currently serve in substantive leadership positions in the organization, or who
    will imminently assume such positions, are disqualified from voting on the application.
    1
    1. A court may grant summary disposition in only two settings, neither of which is presented by this case. First,
    Rule 4:67-1 governs all actions in which the court is permitted by rule or by statute to proceed in a summary
    manner, other than actions for the recovery of penalties which shall be brought pursuant to Rule 4:70. Second, Rule
    4:67-1 applies in all other Superior Court actions other than matrimonial actions and actions in which unliquidated
    monetary damages are sought, provided it appears to the court, on motion made pursuant to Rule 1:6-3 and on
    notice, that it is likely that the matter may be completely disposed of in a summary manner. Summary disposition is
    permitted by agreement of the court and the parties, evinced by a clear and unambiguous statement from the judge
    and the unequivocal consent of the parties to a final resolution. Here, no party sought summary disposition, thus
    there was no notice to the parties to the action as Rule 4:67-1 requires. Because the conflict-of-interest claims were
    improvidently subjected to summary dismissal, they must be reinstated and considered on their merits. (pp. 15-18)
    2. The challenge to the Ordinance presented in this appeal is based upon conflict-of-interest principles, and
    implicates the provisions of two statutes that codified common law principles: the MLUL and the LGEL. The
    MLUL governs Mayor Fried’s participation in the zoning dispute if, as alleged, he reviewed the Ordinance as a
    member of the Planning Board. The MLUL provides that no member of a municipal planning board may “act on
    any matter in which he has, either directly or indirectly, any personal or financial interest.” The LGEL is applicable
    to Fried and Lewis as members of the Council, and to Fried if he served on the Planning Board. The LGEL
    precludes government officials and employees from acting in any manner where “he, a member of his immediate
    family, or a business organization in which he has an interest, has a direct or indirect financial or personal
    involvement that might reasonably be expected to impair his objectivity or independence of judgment.” (pp. 18-23)
    3. Against that backdrop, the Court turns to plaintiff’s conflict-of-interest allegations. If proven, plaintiff’s first
    contention -- that Fried’s alleged comment disqualified him from voting on the Ordinance -- could constitute a
    “[d]irect personal interest” benefiting “a blood relative . . . in a non-financial way, but [in] a matter of great
    importance,” as this Court set forth in Wyzykowski v. Rizas, 
    132 N.J. 509
    , 525 (1993). In order for a public official
    to be disqualified by a direct personal interest in the zoning application, the interest must be distinct from that shared
    by members of the general public. New Jersey courts have rarely recognized a conflict of interest arising from a
    public employee’s alleged direct personal interest or personal involvement in a matter when there is no prospect of
    financial advantage to the public official or his or her family or friends. On the limited record before the Court,
    Fried’s alleged remark does not appear to give rise to such a conflict. If Fried’s nexus to the proposed assisted
    living facility consists of nothing more than the possibility that the facility might someday house his mother, that
    “interest” or “involvement” is unlikely to warrant his disqualification. On remand, the trial court should either give
    the parties an opportunity to enter into a stipulation regarding the content and meaning of Fried’s alleged public
    statement, or permit limited discovery as to Fried’s statement. (pp. 23-28)
    4. Plaintiff’s second contention requires the Court to determine whether Fried’s and Lewis’s affiliations with the
    Unitarian Church gave rise to disqualifying indirect personal interests. Based solely on the fact that the Unitarian
    Church was neither an applicant nor an objector in the zoning dispute that gave rise to this appeal, the Appellate
    Division determined that neither Fried nor Lewis had a disqualifying interest in the dispute. This Court does not
    concur that this single factor resolves the question of whether the officials’ involvement with the Unitarian Church
    gives rise to conflicts of interest. For purposes of determining whether a public official is disqualified from
    participating in a zoning application because of his or her affiliation with a church or other organization, that
    organization is deemed to have an interest in the application if it owns property within 200 feet of the property that
    is the subject of the application. In this case, the Unitarian Church held an interest in the application to amend the
    Ordinance by virtue of its status as the owner of property adjacent to the Church Street Lot. (pp. 28-31)
    5. With that said, an organization’s interest must be imputed to public officials affiliated with the organization in
    order for them to be disqualified from voting on an application. The Court declines to adopt a bright-line rule under
    which the interest of a church or other organization is automatically imputed to all of its members. This appeal,
    however, does not turn on the public officials’ status as ordinary members of their church. Here, plaintiff alleges
    that Fried and Lewis had been selected to occupy positions of leadership in the Unitarian Church. If an organization
    has an interest in a zoning application, an official who holds, or who will imminently hold, a position of substantive
    leadership, has a disqualifying indirect personal interest and should refrain from deliberating and voting on the
    zoning application. On remand, the trial court should either afford to the parties the opportunity to enter into a
    stipulation regarding the Fried’s and Lewis’s leadership roles, or permit limited discovery on the issue. (pp. 31-34)
    2
    6. The longstanding conflict of interest rule reiterated in the Court’s decision should not deter public officials from
    becoming involved in private organizations. In the rare circumstance in which public responsibilities and volunteer
    commitments conflict in a land use dispute, the public official should refrain from involvement in the matter. With
    careful attention to the potential for conflicts between public responsibilities and private affiliations, officials may
    effectively assist organizations and preserve public confidence in the integrity of local government. (pp. 34-35)
    The judgment of the Appellate Division is REVERSED, and the matter is REMANDED to the trial court
    for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER; JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, ALBIN, FERNANDEZ-VINA, and
    SOLOMON; and JUDGE CUFF (temporarily assigned) join in JUSTICE PATTERSON’s opinion.
    3
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    A-53 September Term 2013
    073142
    RICHARD GRABOWSKY,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    TOWNSHIP OF MONTCLAIR,
    PLANNING BOARD OF THE
    TOWNSHIP OF MONTCLAIR,
    FOUNTAIN SQUARE DEVELOPMENT,
    LLC, and MONTCLAIR KENSINGTON
    URBAN RENEWAL, LLC,
    Defendants-Respondents.
    Argued December 3, 2014 – Decided June 15, 2015
    On certification to the Superior Court,
    Appellate Division.
    Jonathan T. Guldin argued the cause for
    appellant (Clark Guldin, attorneys).
    Thomas J. Trautner, Jr., argued the cause
    for respondents Montclair Kensington Urban
    Renewal, LLC and Fountain Square
    Development, LLC (Wolff & Samson,
    attorneys).
    Celia S. Bosco argued the cause for
    respondent Township of Montclair (Genova
    Burns, attorneys; Angelo J. Genova, of
    counsel).
    Arthur M. Neiss argued the cause for
    respondent Planning Board of the Township of
    Montclair (Beattie Padovano, attorneys).
    JUSTICE PATTERSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
    1
    In this appeal, we review a trial court’s summary dismissal
    of a complaint in lieu of prerogative writs and apply statutory
    and common law standards to determine whether two municipal
    officials had disqualifying conflicts of interest when they
    voted on an application to amend a zoning ordinance.
    Plaintiff Richard Grabowsky filed a complaint in lieu of
    prerogative writs against the Township of Montclair.   He
    challenged the validity of an ordinance adopted by the Township
    to permit the construction of an assisted living facility on a
    site located next to the Unitarian Universalist Congregation
    Church of Montclair (Unitarian Church).   Plaintiff asserted that
    a statement made by Township Mayor Jerry Fried, a member of the
    Township Council and Planning Board, demonstrated that Fried had
    a direct personal interest in the development and that he should
    have been disqualified from voting on the zoning issue.     He also
    alleged that Fried and a second member of the Council, Nick
    Lewis, shared a disqualifying indirect personal interest in the
    development project because of their membership in the Unitarian
    Church.   The Township, its Planning Board and the developers
    seeking the opportunity to build the assisted living facility
    denied the existence of any conflict.
    Plaintiff sought a preliminary injunction barring the
    Township and Planning Board from considering or approving
    development applications for the assisted living facility.
    2
    Although no party filed a motion for any form of dispositive
    relief, the trial court sua sponte granted summary disposition,
    and dismissed plaintiff’s complaint with prejudice.   An
    appellate panel concluded that the trial court’s summary
    disposition was procedurally improper under Rule 4:67-1, but
    concurred with the court’s determination that the two Township
    officials had no conflict of interest, and affirmed the trial
    court’s dismissal of plaintiff’s claims.
    We agree with the Appellate Division that the trial court
    improperly granted summary disposition on an application for a
    preliminary injunction in which neither side sought dispositive
    relief.   We do not concur with the panel’s conclusion that, on
    the limited record developed in the trial court, plaintiff’s
    claim was properly dismissed because the Unitarian Church was
    neither an applicant nor an objector in the redevelopment
    application at issue.   Applying the statutory standards set
    forth in the Municipal Land Use Law, N.J.S.A. 40:55D-1 to -163
    (MLUL), and the Local Government Ethics Law, N.J.S.A. 40A:9-22.1
    to -22.25 (LGEL), as well as established common law authority,
    we hold that when a church or other organization owns property
    within 200 feet of a site that is the subject of a zoning
    application, public officials who currently serve in substantive
    leadership positions in the organization, or who will imminently
    3
    assume such positions, are disqualified from voting on the
    application.
    We reverse the Appellate Division’s judgment and remand
    this matter to the trial court for limited discovery on Fried’s
    alleged statement and the leadership roles assumed by Fried and
    Lewis in the Unitarian Church, and for a determination on the
    merits.
    I.
    The property at the center of this case is a 0.8 acre,
    single-parcel redevelopment area1 located at 63-65 Church Street
    in Montclair.   Formerly used as a parking lot, the parcel is
    known as the “Church Street Lot.”    The Unitarian Church, located
    at 67 Church Street, sits on a property adjacent to the western
    boundary of the Church Street Lot.
    Plaintiff alleges in his complaint that Fried and Lewis
    were members of the Unitarian Church during the relevant period.
    According to documents submitted to the trial court by
    plaintiff, Fried and Lewis have not only been members of the
    Unitarian Church, but have served in positions of leadership in
    1 “‘Redevelopment area’ means an area which has been delineated a
    ‘redevelopment area’ or ‘area in need of redevelopment’ pursuant
    to the ‘Local Redevelopment and Housing Law,’ [N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-
    1 to -73] or an area in need of redevelopment delineated by a
    resolution of a State entity in accordance with the provisions
    of the enabling statute governing that State agency.” N.J.S.A.
    40A:12A-65.
    4
    its organization.   Fried’s website identified him as an active
    member of the Church who has “delivered lay sermons . . . has
    taught Religious Education, and has chaired several committees.”
    Church records submitted by plaintiff indicate that Fried was
    elected as a Trustee at Large on May 20, 2012.   It appears, but
    is not clear from the limited record, that Fried served as a
    trustee prior to that date.   These records also reflect that
    Lewis was elected a member of the Board of Trustees on May 20,
    2012, and that he chaired the Unitarian Church’s Membership
    Committee in 2011 and 2012.   Because no answer filed by any
    defendant is part of the record, it is unclear whether
    defendants admit or deny plaintiff’s allegations concerning the
    respective roles of Fried and Lewis in the Unitarian Church.
    On March 14, 2012, defendant-intervenor Fountain Square
    Development, LLC (Fountain Square) submitted a proposal for the
    development of an eighty-eight-unit assisted living facility on
    the Church Street Lot.   Fountain Square’s proposal required
    three amendments to the Township’s redevelopment plan:    first,
    the addition of the proposed facility as a permitted use on the
    Church Street Lot; second, an increase from five to six stories
    in the maximum height permitted for a building on the property;
    and third, a parking requirement of one-half space per
    residential unit in the facility.    Six days later, Fountain
    Square presented its proposal to the Township of Montclair
    5
    Council (Council), which consisted of Fried, Lewis and five
    other members.   Pursuant to N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-7, the Council
    referred the amendments to defendant Planning Board of the
    Township of Montclair for its consideration and recommendation.
    On April 3, 2012, while Fountain Square’s three proposed
    amendments to the redevelopment plan were pending before the
    Planning Board, the Council introduced Ordinance 0-12-28
    (Ordinance), which included the amendments.    Thereafter, the
    Planning Board met to consider the proposed Ordinance.    By
    letter to the Township Manager, the Planning Board endorsed two
    of the three amendments to the Ordinance:     the addition of an
    assisted living facility as a permitted use for the Church
    Street Lot and the parking space allocation.    The Planning Board
    advised the Township Manager that it lacked sufficient
    information to address the third amendment regarding the maximum
    height allowed for a structure on the property.    It specifically
    recommended that the Council ascertain “the impact of the
    increase in height on the adjoining church” and other properties
    surrounding the Church Street Lot.   Plaintiff alleges that
    Fried, as a member of the Planning Board, voted in favor of the
    Board’s recommendation to the Council.
    According to plaintiff, at “one of the public hearings”
    Fried “made a comment . . . that an assisted living facility
    would benefit him because he could admit his mother to the
    6
    facility.”   The record does not reveal the timing of this
    alleged statement, and the parties disputed the nature and
    content of the statement at oral argument before the trial
    court.
    On May 1, 2012, at a public Council meeting presided over
    by Fried, Fountain Square presented its proposal for an assisted
    living facility.   Several residents stated concerns and
    objections to the proposal.   Lewis suggested an amendment to the
    Ordinance limiting any assisted living facility to a height of
    five stories, rather than the six stories proposed by Fountain
    Square.   A motion by another Council member to postpone adoption
    of the Ordinance was defeated by a margin of four to three.
    Lewis’s amendment limiting the building height to five stories
    was adopted by a vote of six to one, and the Ordinance was
    revised in accordance with that amendment.   Fried then moved to
    adopt the amended Ordinance, and his motion passed, four to
    three.    Fried, Lewis and two other Council members voted in
    support of the amended Ordinance, and the remaining three
    Council members opposed it.
    Following the passage of the Ordinance, defendant-
    intervenor Montclair Kensington Urban Renewal, LLC (Montclair
    Kensington), an affiliate of Fountain Square, purchased the
    Church Street Lot from its previous owner.   On May 22, 2012,
    Montclair Kensington was formally designated as the redeveloper
    7
    of the Church Street Lot.   One month later, Montclair Kensington
    submitted to the Planning Board an application for site plan
    approval to construct the proposed assisted living facility.
    II.
    This action commenced with the filing of a complaint in
    lieu of prerogative writs by plaintiff, described in the
    complaint as “a citizen of Montclair and an owner and developer
    of numerous commercial properties” in its downtown area.
    Plaintiff initially sued only the Township, but later amended
    his complaint to name the Planning Board as a defendant.
    Plaintiff challenged the validity of the Ordinance on two
    grounds.   First, he claimed that the Ordinance was invalid
    because it was inconsistent with the Township’s Master Plan for
    redevelopment, and the procedures followed by the Council in
    adopting the amendments to that plan had therefore violated
    N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-7 and N.J.S.A. 40:49-2.   Second, plaintiff
    claimed that Fried had a direct personal interest because of his
    alleged statement about his mother, and that Fried and Lewis had
    an indirect personal interest in the approval of the Ordinance
    due to their membership in the adjacent Unitarian Church.     He
    suggested that Fried and Lewis were motivated to vote for the
    Ordinance because assisted living residents could be added to
    the Unitarian Church’s membership rolls, thus improving its
    financial condition.   He also claimed that Fried and Lewis hoped
    8
    to arrange free parking for church members in the assisted
    living lot.
    Before the trial court, plaintiff sought a declaration that
    the Ordinance was invalid and void.    He also asked the trial
    court to enjoin the Planning Board from considering or approving
    Montclair Kensington’s application for preliminary and final
    site plan approval, and the Township and Planning Board from
    considering or approving any further applications by Montclair
    Kensington, or any other person or entity, for the redevelopment
    of the Church Street Lot.
    After the parties agreed to delay any consideration or
    approval of the site plan application pending the trial court’s
    decision on plaintiff’s application for a preliminary
    injunction, the trial court entered an order to show cause with
    temporary restraints.   No party moved for dismissal of the
    complaint, for summary judgment, or for summary disposition.
    The trial court then held a hearing.      It initially
    considered and granted the application of Montclair Kensington
    and Fountain Square for leave to intervene pursuant to Rule
    4:33-1.   The court then turned to plaintiff’s application for a
    preliminary injunction.     As plaintiff’s counsel addressed the
    “reasonable probability of success on the merits” prong of the
    preliminary injunction standard set forth in Crowe v. De Gioia,
    9
    
    90 N.J. 126
    , 132-34 (1982), he referred to the showing necessary
    for summary judgment:
    [W]e have definitely shown a reasonable
    probability of success on merits.     And I
    submit showing –- entitling us to summary
    judgment.   And I believe, moving forward,
    regardless of the [c]ourt’s ruling today,
    there’s really minimal discovery, based upon
    the law that we’ve cited with respect to
    conflict of interest.
    Plaintiff did not, however, seek any relief other than a
    preliminary injunction, or represent to the trial court that the
    entire case could be decided in a summary proceeding.   Instead,
    he argued that because Fried and Lewis were not only members but
    also officials of the Unitarian Church, and Fried had publicly
    suggested that his mother might move into the proposed facility,
    the record supported a finding that both officials had a
    conflict of interest.   Plaintiff argued that he had shown not
    only a reasonable likelihood of success on the merits, but had
    made a showing on all of the preliminary injunction factors set
    forth in 
    Crowe, supra
    , 90 N.J. at 132-34.   Defendants and
    intervenors argued that no such showing had been made and urged
    the trial court to reject a rule that public officials are
    disqualified from participation in a zoning board or planning
    board matter simply because they are members of a church that is
    located close to the disputed property.
    10
    The trial court ruled that “[c]ontrary to the assertions of
    all the parties here,” the case could be resolved in a summary
    manner and that plaintiff’s complaint should be dismissed.2     The
    court rejected plaintiff’s contention that the amendments
    contravened the Township’s redevelopment plan and that the
    Township had violated N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-7 and N.J.S.A. 40:49-2.
    With respect to the alleged conflicts of interest, the trial
    court observed that Fried’s alleged remark about his mother’s
    potential residence in the assisted living facility did not give
    rise to any interest different from the interest of other
    members of the community.    It held that the membership of Fried
    and Lewis in the Unitarian Church, “no matter how involved it
    may be,” did not warrant disqualification.    The trial court
    noted that while there may be circumstances in which a council
    member’s involvement in a church with an interest in a zoning
    application compels disqualification, the facts of this case did
    not support such a remedy.    It denied plaintiff’s application
    for a preliminary injunction and entered an order dismissing
    plaintiff’s complaint with prejudice.
    Plaintiff appealed the trial court’s judgment.    An
    appellate panel concluded that the trial court had improperly
    2 The trial court did not cite Rule 4:67-1 in either its oral
    opinion or its subsequent memorandum decision, but its reference
    to “deal[ing] with [the case] in a summary manner” suggests that
    it dismissed plaintiff’s complaint pursuant to that rule.
    11
    invoked the summary disposition procedure, noting that Rule
    4:67-1 applies only when a party files a motion for summary
    disposition or when the parties consent to a determination under
    that rule.
    The panel held, however, that the trial court’s procedural
    error did not generate an unjust result.     It agreed with the
    trial court that the Ordinance was not invalid as a deviation
    from the Township’s Master Plan.     The panel also concluded that
    the participation of Fried and Lewis in the Council’s vote on
    the Ordinance did not give rise to a conflict of interest.        The
    panel held that no disqualifying interest in the zoning
    application was raised by Fried’s comment about his mother’s
    possible residence in the assisted living facility.     It viewed
    the fact that the Unitarian Church was neither an applicant nor
    an objector to be fatal to plaintiff’s claim that the council
    members’ church involvement raised a conflict of interest.        The
    panel was unpersuaded by plaintiff’s argument that Fried and
    Lewis had an indirect interest because the Unitarian Church
    might financially benefit from the opening of an assisted living
    facility next door.   Accordingly, it affirmed the trial court’s
    dismissal of plaintiff’s complaint.
    12
    We granted plaintiff’s petition for certification.     
    217 N.J. 52
    (2014).3
    III.
    Plaintiff challenges the appellate panel’s conclusion that
    the trial court’s summary disposition did not create an unjust
    result.   He contends that the Appellate Division misread the
    record when it concluded that there were no factual disputes
    barring summary disposition.   Plaintiff argues that he was
    entitled to discovery regarding the alleged conflicts of
    interest raised by the participation of Fried and Lewis in the
    Council’s vote on the Ordinance.     He contends that the Appellate
    Division improperly recognized a bright-line rule that a public
    official’s affiliation with a church or other organization can
    never give rise to a conflict of interest with respect to zoning
    issues unless the organization is itself an applicant or
    objector.   Plaintiff further asserts that Fried and Lewis had a
    “direct or indirect financial or personal involvement”
    3 In his petition, plaintiff raised two issues: whether the
    Appellate Division erred in finding the trial court’s procedural
    error in summarily dismissing the case to be harmless; and
    whether the Appellate Division erred in applying the conflict of
    law principles of the MLUL and LGEL. Plaintiff did not
    challenge the Appellate Division’s rejection of his claim that
    the Ordinance deviated from the Township’s Master Plan and that
    the Township’s procedures in adopting the Ordinance violated
    N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-7 and N.J.S.A. 40:49-2. Accordingly, those
    issues are not before the Court.
    13
    recognized as disqualifying by the LGEL, N.J.S.A. 40A:9-22.5(d),
    and that the Ordinance is therefore invalid.
    The Township urges the Court to affirm the judgment of the
    Appellate Division.    It contends that plaintiff conceded the
    absence of genuine factual disputes in his argument to the trial
    court and that the trial court properly resolved the case by
    summary disposition.   The Township asserts that a public
    official’s membership in a church or organization generates a
    conflict of interest only when the church or organization is an
    applicant or objector in a dispute over a proposed development.
    It dismisses as speculative plaintiff’s allegation that Fried’s
    comments concerning his mother revealed a disqualifying personal
    interest and that the Unitarian Church anticipated financial
    benefits from the proposed assisted living facility.
    The Planning Board argues that Fried’s involvement in its
    review of the Ordinance was immaterial because the Planning
    Board’s role in the adoption of the Ordinance was only advisory
    to the Township.   It contends that the Township’s action, not
    that of the Planning Board, should be the focus of the Court’s
    inquiry because the Township has the exclusive authority to
    enact a zoning ordinance.
    Montclair Kensington and Fountain Square characterize
    plaintiff’s claim as a rival real estate developer’s tactic to
    delay and disrupt construction of an essential assisted living
    14
    facility.   They argue that plaintiff invited the trial court to
    summarily decide the case and that the court properly dismissed
    plaintiff’s claims.   Montclair Kensington and Fountain Square
    assert that plaintiff’s position contravenes case law holding
    that conflict-of-interest determinations are fact-specific, and
    that plaintiff seeks an impractical rule that would
    automatically disqualify public officials who are members of
    organizations from participating in many land-use applications.
    They argue that the prospect of the proposed assisted living
    facility enhancing the Unitarian Church’s membership or finances
    was too speculative to support the disqualification of Fried and
    Lewis from the Township’s review of the Ordinance.
    IV.
    A.
    We concur with the Appellate Division that the trial court
    improperly dismissed this action pursuant to Rule 4:67-1.
    Rule 4:67-1 is designed “to accomplish the salutary purpose
    of swiftly and effectively disposing of matters which lend
    themselves to summary treatment while at the same time giving
    the defendant an opportunity to be heard at the time plaintiff
    makes his application on the question of whether or not summary
    disposition is appropriate.”   Pressler & Verniero, Current N.J.
    Court Rules, comment 1 on R. 4:67-1 (2015).   In such summary
    actions, “findings of fact must be made, and a party is not
    15
    entitled to favorable inferences such as are afforded to the
    respondent on a summary judgment motion for purposes of
    defeating the motion.”   
    Ibid. (citing O’Connell v.
    New Jersey
    Mfrs. Ins. Co., 
    306 N.J. Super. 166
    , 172 (App. Div. 1997),
    appeal dismissed, 
    157 N.J. 537
    (1998)).
    A court may grant summary disposition in only two settings,
    neither of which is presented by this case.   First, Rule 4:67-1
    governs “all actions in which the court is permitted by rule or
    by statute to proceed in a summary manner, other than actions
    for the recovery of penalties which shall be brought pursuant to
    R. 4:70[.]”   See, e.g., N.J.S.A. 47:1A-6 (actions instituted
    under the New Jersey Open Public Records Act); State Farm Indem.
    Co. v. Nat’l Liab. & Fire Ins. Co., 
    439 N.J. Super. 532
    , 538-39
    (App. Div. 2015) (holding Legislature intended to permit summary
    action to compel arbitration under N.J.S.A. 39:6A-11).    Second,
    in all other Superior Court actions “other than matrimonial
    actions and actions in which unliquidated monetary damages are
    sought,” Rule 4:67-1 applies “provided it appears to the court,
    on motion made pursuant to R. 1:6-3 and on notice to the other
    parties to the action not in default, that it is likely that the
    matter may be completely disposed of in a summary manner.”      R.
    4:67-1.   Summary disposition is permitted by agreement of the
    court and the parties, evinced by “a clear and unambiguous
    statement from the judge and the unequivocal consent of the
    16
    parties to a final resolution . . . .”    Waste Mgmt. of N.J.,
    Inc. v. Union Cnty. Utils. Auth., 
    399 N.J. Super. 508
    , 518-19
    (App. Div. 2008).    Those procedural requirements serve important
    objectives:    to permit the presentation of a factual record and
    legal arguments to the court, and to ensure that the parties
    anticipate and address the standard for summary disposition
    before the court decides whether to grant that relief.
    In this case, the trial court erred when it sua sponte
    dismissed the complaint with prejudice.    Because no party sought
    summary disposition, there was no “notice to the other parties
    to the action not in default,” as the Rule requires.    R. 4:67-1.
    The only motions before the trial court were defendants’ motions
    to intervene and plaintiff’s motion for a preliminary
    injunction, governed by the Crowe standard.    Consequently, the
    parties had no opportunity to prepare a factual record to
    support or oppose summary disposition or argue the standard of
    Rule 4:67-1.    Indeed, the trial court acknowledged that its
    decision to summarily dismiss the case was contrary to the
    assertions of all parties.
    Notwithstanding his counsel’s reference to the factual
    record in the context of his argument on the “reasonable
    likelihood of success on the merits” prong of 
    Crowe, supra
    , 90
    N.J. at 132-34, plaintiff did not consent to the resolution
    under Rule 4:67-1.    The trial court’s summary disposition in
    17
    defendants’ favor denied plaintiff a fair opportunity to pursue
    his claims.
    The Appellate Division acknowledged plaintiff’s argument
    that he was entitled to further discovery and a hearing on the
    merits and agreed that summary disposition under Rule 4:67-1 was
    improper.   Rather than remedy the trial court’s error, the panel
    granted the same procedurally improper relief on different
    grounds.    Because they were improvidently subjected to summary
    dismissal, plaintiff’s conflict-of-interest claims must be
    reinstated and considered on their merits.
    B.
    As a general principle, a municipal ordinance is afforded a
    presumption of validity, and the action of a board will not be
    overturned unless it is found to be arbitrary and capricious or
    unreasonable, with the burden of proof placed on the plaintiff
    challenging the action.    Price v. Himeji, LLC, 
    214 N.J. 263
    , 284
    (2013) (citing Kramer v. Bd. of Adjustment, 
    45 N.J. 268
    , 296
    (1965)); Toll Bros., Inc. v. Burlington Cnty. Bd. of Chosen
    Freeholders, 
    194 N.J. 223
    , 256 (2008).    The action of a planning
    board, affirmed by a governing body such as the Council in this
    case, is subject to judicial review.     N.J.S.A. 40:55D-17(h);
    Wyzykowski v. Rizas, 
    132 N.J. 509
    , 512-17, 522 (1993).
    The challenge to the municipal ordinance here is based upon
    conflict–of-interest principles, which derive from one of the
    18
    guarantees afforded by the common law:    “the entitlement to a
    fair and impartial tribunal.”   
    Wyzykowski, supra
    , 132 N.J. at
    522.    Under our common law, “[a] public official is disqualified
    from participating in judicial or quasi-judicial proceedings in
    which the official has a conflicting interest that may interfere
    with the impartial performance of his duties as a member of the
    public body.’”   
    Id. at 523
    (alteration in original) (quoting
    Scotch Plains-Fanwood Bd. of Educ. v. Syvertsen, 
    251 N.J. Super. 566
    , 568 (App. Div. 1991)).
    Plaintiff’s challenge to the Ordinance on conflict-of-
    interest grounds implicates the provisions of two statutes that
    codified common law principles.    The MLUL, which addresses,
    among other subjects, the composition and deliberations of
    planning boards, governs Fried’s participation in the zoning
    dispute if, as alleged, he reviewed the Ordinance as a member of
    the Township Planning Board.4   That statute provides that no
    member of a municipal planning board may “act on any matter in
    which he has, either directly or indirectly, any personal or
    financial interest.”    N.J.S.A. 40:55D-23(b).
    4 Although the record with respect to Fried’s service on the
    Planning Board is limited to plaintiff’s allegation, he may have
    served on that Board by virtue of his office as Mayor. The MLUL
    provides that the first of four classes of planning board
    members consists of “the mayor or the mayor’s designee.”
    N.J.S.A. 40:55D-23(a). “The term of the member composing Class
    I shall correspond to the mayor’s . . . official tenure . . . .”
    N.J.S.A. 40:55D-23(b).
    19
    The second pertinent statute, the LGEL, is applicable to
    Fried and Lewis as members of the Council, and to Fried if he
    served on the Planning Board.   See N.J.S.A. 40A:9-22.3(e)-(h), -
    22.5(d).   In enacting the LGEL, the Legislature declared:
    a.   Public office and employment are a public
    trust;
    b.   The    vitality   and     stability    of
    representative democracy depend upon the
    public’s confidence in the integrity of
    its      elected      and       appointed
    representatives;
    c.   Whenever the public perceives a conflict
    between the private interests and the
    public duties of a government officer or
    employee, that confidence is imperiled;
    d.   Governments have the duty both to provide
    their citizens with standards by which
    they may determine whether public duties
    are being faithfully performed, and to
    apprise their officers and employees of
    the behavior which is expected of them
    while conducting their public duties[.]
    [N.J.S.A. 40A:9-22.2.]
    The LGEL’s objective is to make ethical standards in state
    and local government “‘clear, consistent, uniform in their
    application, and enforceable on a statewide basis.’”
    
    Wyzykowski, supra
    , 132 N.J. at 531 (emphasis omitted) (quoting
    N.J.S.A. 40A:9-22.2).   Noting that “[w]henever the public
    perceives a conflict between the private interests and the
    public duties of a government officer or employee,” the public’s
    confidence in the integrity of government is “imperiled,” the
    20
    Legislature recognized the need for standards by which it may be
    determined “whether public duties are being faithfully
    performed.”   N.J.S.A. 40A:9-22.2(c)-(d).
    To that end, the Legislature provided:
    No local government officer or employee shall
    act in his official capacity in any matter
    where he, a member of his immediate family, or
    a business organization in which he has an
    interest, has a direct or indirect financial
    or personal involvement that might reasonably
    be expected to impair his objectivity or
    independence of judgment.
    [N.J.S.A. 40A:9-22.5(d).]5
    In 
    Wyzykowski, supra
    , this Court identified four settings
    in which the case law mandates disqualification:
    (1) “Direct pecuniary interests,” when an
    official votes on a matter benefitting the
    official’s own property or affording a direct
    financial gain; (2)      “Indirect pecuniary
    interests,” where an official votes on a
    matter that financially benefits one closely
    tied to the official, such as an employer, or
    family member; (3) “Direct personal interest,”
    when an official votes on a matter that
    benefits a blood relative or close friend in
    5 The Legislature did not indicate whether the term “involvement”
    in the LGEL is intended to have a broader reach than the term
    “interest” used in the MLUL. See ibid.; see also Cox & Koenig,
    New Jersey Zoning & Land Use Administration 88 (2015) (noting
    that “it is unclear whether the use of the word ‘involvement’
    instead of ‘interest’ bears significance”). We need not reach
    the issue of whether there is a distinction between the terms
    used in the two statutes because the public officials’ personal
    “interest” that plaintiff alleges would, if proven, also
    constitute their “personal involvement” in the matter.
    Accordingly, for purposes of this opinion, the term “personal
    interest” as used in the MLUL also denotes a “personal
    involvement” under the LGEL.
    21
    a non-financial way, but in a matter of great
    importance, as in the case of a councilman’s
    mother being in the nursing home subject to
    the zoning issue; and (4) “Indirect [p]ersonal
    [i]nterest,” when an official votes on a
    matter in which an individual’s judgment may
    be affected because of membership in some
    organization and a desire to help that
    organization further its policies.
    [132 N.J. at 525 (quoting Michael A. Pane,
    “Conflict of Interest: Sometimes a Confusing
    Maze, Part II,” New Jersey Municipalities,
    March 1980, at 8, 9).]
    A court’s determination “whether a particular interest is
    sufficient to disqualify is necessarily a factual one and
    depends upon the circumstances of the particular case.”     Van
    Itallie v. Borough of Franklin Lakes, 
    28 N.J. 258
    , 268 (1958)
    (citing Aldom v. Borough of Roseland, 
    42 N.J. Super. 495
    , 503
    (App. Div. 1956)).   To determine whether there is a
    disqualifying interest, a court need not ascertain whether a
    public official has acted dishonestly or has sought to further a
    personal or financial interest; the decisive factor is “whether
    there is a potential for conflict.”   
    Wyzykowski, supra
    , 132 N.J.
    at 524 (citing Griggs v. Borough of Princeton, 
    33 N.J. 207
    , 219
    (1960)).   If there is a disqualifying conflict, an inquiry into
    an official’s motive is unnecessary; “[i]f there is ‘interest,’
    there is disqualification automatically, entirely without regard
    to actual motive, as the purpose of the rule is prophylactic[.]”
    22
    McNamara v. Borough of Saddle River, 
    64 N.J. Super. 426
    , 429
    (App. Div. 1960).
    The ethics rules must be applied with caution, as “‘[l]ocal
    governments would be seriously handicapped if every possible
    interest, no matter how remote and speculative, would serve as a
    disqualification of an official.’”    
    Wyzykowski, supra
    , 132 N.J.
    at 523 (quoting Van 
    Itallie, supra
    , 28 N.J. at 269).    It is
    essential that municipal offices be filled by individuals who
    are thoroughly familiar with local communities and concerns.      It
    is also imperative that local officials comply with the
    Legislature’s direction and refrain from participating in a
    determination that raises a conflict.    Thus, the nature of an
    official’s interest must be carefully evaluated based on the
    circumstances of the specific case.     Van 
    Itallie, supra
    , 28 N.J.
    at 268.
    C.
    With those principles in mind, we consider the first of
    plaintiff’s two conflict-of-interest allegations:    that Fried’s
    alleged comment about the prospect of admitting his mother to
    the planned assisted living facility disqualified him from
    voting on the Ordinance.   If proven, the conflict alleged could
    fall within the third category recognized by the Court in
    Wyzykowski:   a “[d]irect personal interest” benefiting “a blood
    relative . . . in a non-financial way, but [in] a matter of
    23
    great importance[.]”    
    Wyzykowski, supra
    , 132 N.J. at 525; see
    also N.J.S.A. 40A:9-22.5(d) (LGEL conflict provision); N.J.S.A.
    40:55D-23(b) (MLUL conflict provision).
    In order for a public official to be disqualified by a
    direct personal interest in the zoning application, the interest
    must be distinct from that shared by members of the general
    public.    See 
    Wyzykowski, supra
    , 132 N.J. at 524 (citing 
    Griggs, supra
    , 33 N.J. at 207, 220-21).    Our courts have rarely
    recognized a conflict of interest arising from a public
    employee’s alleged direct personal interest or personal
    involvement in a matter when there is no prospect of financial
    advantage to the public official or his or her family or
    friends.   For example, in Van 
    Itallie, supra
    , this Court
    dismissed as tenuous and speculative a conflict of interest
    claim asserted against a councilman who stated, “in the charged
    atmosphere of a public council meeting,” that he shared with his
    colleagues “some purely selfish reasons” for voting in favor of
    a proposed zoning 
    ordinance. 28 N.J. at 271-72
    .   The Court held
    that the alleged source of the councilman’s conflict -- a
    combination of personal and financial benefits that relatives of
    the councilman could have gained by virtue of the revised zoning
    -- were “entirely too remote to be considered as tending
    improperly to influence the councilman’s official judgment.”
    
    Id. at 269.
    24
    The Appellate Division found a disqualifying personal
    interest in Barrett v. Union Township Committee, 
    230 N.J. Super. 195
    , 204 (App. Div. 1989).   There, a councilman cast the
    deciding vote in favor of an amendment to a zoning ordinance
    that authorized construction of a continuing care facility on a
    lot adjacent to, and owned by the operators of, the nursing home
    in which his mother lived.   
    Id. at 196-97.
      Discovery revealed
    that the councilman was not responsible for the cost of his
    mother’s care and that he therefore had no financial interest in
    the application.   
    Id. at 199-200.
      Relying on the language of
    the predecessor statute to the MLUL, N.J.S.A. 40:55-1.4 (1974),
    repealed by L. 1975, c. 291, the panel noted that no financial
    stake was necessary in order for a conflict to arise if the
    public official had a personal interest in the matter:
    The statutory disqualification is markedly
    broadly couched, extending to personal as well
    as    financial   interest,    “directly    or
    indirectly.”    There is thus evidenced an
    intent that the bar is not confined to
    instances of possible material gain but that
    it extends to any situation in which the
    personal interest of a board member in the
    “matter” before it, direct or indirect, may
    have the capacity to exert an influence on his
    action in the matter.
    [Id. at 202 (emphasis omitted) (quoting Zell
    v. Borough of Roseland, 
    42 N.J. Super. 75
    , 81
    (App. Div. 1956)).]
    The panel concluded that “[i]t would strain credulity to
    conclude that [the councilman] did not have an interest in
    25
    seeing that his invalid mother was properly cared for in the
    facility that was owned and operated by [the owners of his
    mother’s nursing home].”     
    Id. at 204.
       Because of the
    councilman’s present, tangible interest in the proposed facility
    that was important to his mother’s medical care, the panel held
    that he should not have been involved in the matter, and
    invalidated the ordinance.    
    Id. at 200,
    204-05.
    Similarly, a Law Division judge recognized a disqualifying
    personal interest arising from a councilman’s longstanding
    opposition to the construction of a school.       McNamara v. Borough
    of Saddle River, 
    60 N.J. Super. 367
    , 369-74 (Law Div.), 
    aff’d, supra
    , 64 N.J. Super. at 431.    Prior to taking office, the
    councilman had brought a legal action to enjoin the operation of
    the school, claiming that it reduced the value of his property
    and diminished his enjoyment of his home.       
    Id. at 371-73.
      After
    taking office, the councilman voted in favor of the zoning
    ordinance amendment that would have barred the same school from
    expanding.   
    Id. at 370-71.
      The court’s decision was not
    premised on the councilman’s alleged financial interest in
    limiting the growth of the school, but on his “adversary
    interest in the school at the time he voted for [the amended
    ordinance],” and on his “well developed and intense private
    concern” that “could have impaired his capacity to act in the
    interest of the citizens at large.”        
    Id. at 376,
    378.
    26
    On the limited record before the Court, Fried’s alleged
    remark that his mother might benefit from the proposed assisted
    living facility does not appear to give rise to a conflict of
    interest comparable to those identified in Barrett and McNamara.
    In contrast to the setting of Barrett, in which the official’s
    mother was already a resident of the nursing home, there is no
    evidence that Fried’s mother depended on the proposed developers
    of the assisted living facility for her medical care.   The
    statement attributed to Fried -- a suggestion that his mother
    might enter the assisted living facility in the future -- does
    not distinguish him from any other member of the community who
    is responsible for an elderly family member and would welcome a
    local facility for that relative’s care.   If Fried’s nexus to
    the proposed assisted living facility consists of nothing more
    than the possibility that the proposed facility might someday
    house his mother, that “interest” or “involvement” is unlikely
    to warrant his disqualification under the standards of the MLUL,
    the LGEL or the common law.   Such an interest is likely to be
    found “entirely too remote” to influence the official’s conduct.
    See Van 
    Itallie, supra
    , 28 N.J. at 269.
    The trial court, however, did not permit the development of
    a record regarding plaintiff’s allegation that Fried’s comment
    reveals a personal interest in the assisted living facility.
    Accordingly, on remand, the trial court should give the parties
    27
    an opportunity to enter into a stipulation regarding the content
    and meaning of Fried’s alleged public statement.      If the parties
    are unable to stipulate to the facts, the trial court should
    permit limited discovery as to Fried’s statement about his
    mother’s potential residence in the assisted living facility and
    the background to that statement.      With a record on this issue,
    the court can then determine the merits of plaintiff’s claim.
    D.
    We also review a second conflict-of-interest issue raised
    by plaintiff:   whether Fried’s and Lewis’s affiliations with the
    Unitarian Church gave rise to disqualifying indirect personal
    interests.   The Appellate Division’s dismissal of plaintiff’s
    claim was premised solely on the fact that the Unitarian Church
    was neither an applicant nor an objector in the zoning dispute
    that gave rise to this appeal.    Accordingly, the panel
    determined that neither Fried nor Lewis had a disqualifying
    interest in the zoning dispute.
    Guided by longstanding conflict of interest case law and
    statutory authority, we do not concur with the panel that this
    single factor resolves the question of whether the officials’
    involvement with the Unitarian Church gives rise to conflicts of
    interest.    An organization that is an applicant or objector in a
    proceeding before a local board clearly has an interest in the
    outcome of that proceeding.    See, e.g., Sugarman v. Twp. of
    28
    Teaneck, 
    272 N.J. Super. 162
    , 166, 171-72 (App. Div.), certif.
    denied, 
    137 N.J. 310
    (1994); McVoy v. Bd. of Adjustment of
    Montclair Twp., 
    213 N.J. Super. 109
    , 111, 113-16 (App. Div.
    1986); Marlboro Manor, Inc. v. Bd. of Comm’rs, 
    187 N.J. Super. 359
    , 360-62 (App. Div. 1982); 
    Zell, supra
    , 42 N.J. Super. at 81-
    82.   An organization’s direct participation in a zoning
    application, however, is not the only measure of its interest in
    the issue.   Whether or not an organization chooses to actively
    participate in a zoning application, it may have an interest in
    the application by virtue of its proximity to the property in
    dispute.
    Recognizing that an application for the development of a
    given parcel can affect the owners of nearby properties, the
    Legislature included two notice provisions in the MLUL.     See
    N.J.S.A. 40:55D-12, -62.1; see also Twp. of Stafford v. Stafford
    Twp. Zoning Bd. of Adjustment, 
    154 N.J. 62
    , 70 (1998) (noting
    purpose of notice provisions “that the public has a chance to be
    heard”).   Accordingly, when a municipality proposes a
    classification or boundary change to a district, N.J.S.A.
    40:55D-62.1 mandates notice, at least ten days prior to the
    hearing, to the owners of real property “within the district and
    within the State within 200 feet in all directions of the
    boundaries of the district” subject to the proposed
    classification change or the proposed new boundaries of the
    29
    involved district.   Similarly, N.J.S.A. 40:55D-12(b) requires
    “notice of a hearing requiring public notice pursuant to
    [N.J.S.A. 40:55D-12(a)]” to be “given to the owners of all real
    property as shown on the current tax duplicates, located in the
    State and within 200 feet in all directions of the property
    which is the subject of such hearing[.]”    The Legislature’s
    notice requirement “is tantamount to a declaration of interest
    in the zoning treatment of a particular property on the part of
    those owning other property within 200 feet.”    
    McNamara, supra
    ,
    64 N.J. Super. at 430.
    The Legislature’s choice to 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.
    That clear standard is unaffected by political, financial or
    strategic considerations that may prompt a church or other
    organization interested in a zoning application to refrain from
    active participation.    If an official with a direct or indirect
    interest in a property within the Legislature’s 200-foot radius
    participates in a zoning decision, his or her participation may
    determine the outcome of the dispute, obviating the need for the
    property owner to formally take a position for or against the
    application.   We consider the 200-foot radius defined by the
    MLUL to provide a reliable measure of an organization’s interest
    30
    in a zoning application, whether or not the organization is the
    applicant or chooses to appear as an objector or a supporter.
    Consistent with the statutory notice provisions, for
    purposes of determining whether a public official is
    disqualified from participating in a zoning application because
    of his or her affiliation with a church or other organization,
    that organization is deemed to have an interest in the
    application if it owns property within 200 feet of the property
    that is the subject of the application.   In this case, by virtue
    of the Unitarian Church’s status as the owner of property
    adjacent to the Church Street Lot, it clearly held an interest
    in the Fountain Square application to amend the Ordinance.
    Our conclusion that the Unitarian Church held an interest
    in Fountain Square’s zoning application, however, is only the
    first step in the inquiry.   In order for public officials
    affiliated with a church or other organization to be
    disqualified from voting on such an application, the
    organization’s interest in that issue must be imputed to those
    officials.
    When the organization is directly involved in a land use
    dispute as an applicant or objector, several courts have imputed
    the organization’s interest to all of its members.     See 
    McVoy, supra
    , 213 N.J. Super. at 111, 115-16 (holding that two planning
    board members who were members of church seeking variance were
    31
    disqualified due to conflict of interest despite plaintiff’s
    consent to their participation); Marlboro 
    Manor, supra
    , 187 N.J.
    Super. at 362-63 (holding that township councilmen who were
    members of church opposing transfer of liquor license were
    disqualified from voting on transfer application); 
    Zell, supra
    ,
    42 N.J. Super. at 81-82 (holding that planning board member who
    was member of church seeking zoning change was disqualified from
    voting on church’s application).6
    Consistent with the fact-specific analysis used in
    conflict-of-interest questions, we decline to adopt a bright-
    line rule under which the interest of a church or other
    organization is automatically imputed to all of its members.
    Although the interests of a church or similar organization in a
    particular community will ordinarily be imputed to its members
    who are public officials, there may be circumstances in which
    automatic imputation of an organization’s interests to its
    6 Such an imputed interest may not exist if the public official
    is not currently a member of the organization or the potential
    benefit to the organization is too attenuated. See 
    Sugarman, supra
    , 272 N.J. Super. at 167-71 (holding that affiliate member
    of applicant congregation, who resigned from congregation to
    avoid conflict of interest, was not disqualified from
    participation as member of municipal board of adjustment in use-
    variance application); Landau v. Twp. of Teaneck, 231 N.J.
    Super. 586, 595-96 (Law Div. 1989) (declining to find conflict
    of interest where councilman and congregation member voted to
    approve sale of municipal lands to another congregation, despite
    contention that sale would alleviate overcrowding in
    councilman’s congregation).
    32
    members may be unwarranted and unjust.     An individual’s
    “membership” in an organization does not necessarily denote
    active involvement in the group or awareness of the positions it
    takes in a legal dispute.   The question of whether an
    organization’s interest extends to all of its members should be
    determined on a case-by–case basis.
    This appeal, however, does not turn on the public
    officials’ status as ordinary members of their church.
    Plaintiff alleges that when they voted on the Ordinance, Fried
    and Lewis had been selected to occupy positions of leadership in
    the Unitarian Church -- Fried as a past committee chair, Lewis
    as a current committee chair, and both about to begin terms as
    trustees.   By virtue of his or her responsibility for the
    organization’s governance, an official who holds, or who will
    imminently hold, a position of substantive leadership in an
    organization reasonably is understood to share its interest in
    the outcome of a zoning dispute.     If the organization has an
    interest in a zoning application, such an official has a
    disqualifying indirect personal interest and should refrain from
    deliberating and voting on the zoning application.
    On remand, the trial court should afford to the parties the
    opportunity to enter into a stipulation regarding the nature and
    timing of any leadership roles that were assumed, or were
    expected imminently to be assumed, by Fried and Lewis at the
    33
    relevant time.   If no such stipulation can be agreed upon, the
    parties should be permitted limited discovery regarding the
    responsibilities involved in any leadership roles assumed by
    Fried and Lewis in the Unitarian Church and the timing of their
    respective roles.7   On the basis of a fuller record, the trial
    court may then determine whether either official occupied or was
    about to occupy a leadership role that gave rise to a
    disqualifying conflict under the MLUL, N.J.S.A. 40:55D-23(b),
    the LGEL, N.J.S.A. 40A:9-22.5(d), or the common law.
    V.
    The longstanding conflict of interest rule reiterated in
    this decision should not deter public officials from becoming
    involved in private organizations.   It applies only when a
    public official serves in a substantive leadership role in an
    organization that brings or opposes a zoning application, or
    that is the owner of property within 200 feet of the property in
    dispute.   The rule should not discourage public officials from
    working for religious institutions, community groups or other
    organizations, many of which cannot provide critical services to
    their communities without the time and talents of their
    7 In a case involving an alleged conflict of interest between an
    official’s public duties and his or her commitment to an
    organization, a trial court should carefully limit discovery to
    the precise issue to be decided, to avoid fishing expeditions
    that may deter community volunteers from entering public
    service.
    34
    volunteers.   In the rare circumstance in which public
    responsibilities and volunteer commitments conflict in a land
    use dispute, there is a simple solution:   the public official
    should refrain from involvement in the matter.   With careful
    attention to the potential for conflicts between public
    responsibilities and private affiliations, officials may
    effectively assist organizations and preserve public confidence
    in the integrity of local government.
    VI.
    The judgment of the Appellate Division is reversed, and the
    matter is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings in
    accordance with this opinion.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER; JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, ALBIN, FERNANDEZ-
    VINA, and SOLOMON; and JUDGE CUFF (temporarily assigned) join in
    JUSTICE PATTERSON’s opinion.
    35
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    NO.       A-53                                  SEPTEMBER TERM 2013
    ON CERTIFICATION TO               Appellate Division, Superior Court
    RICHARD GRABOWSKY,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    TOWNSHIP OF MONTCLAIR,
    PLANNING BOARD OF THE
    TOWNSHIP OF MONTCLAIR,
    FOUNTAIN SQUARE DEVELOPMENT,
    LLC, and MONTCLAIR KENSINGTON
    URBAN RENEWAL, LLC,
    Defendants-Respondents.
    DECIDED                  June 15, 2015
    Chief Justice Rabner                        PRESIDING
    OPINION BY            Justice Patterson
    CONCURRING/DISSENTING OPINIONS BY
    DISSENTING OPINION BY
    REVERSE AND
    CHECKLIST
    REMAND
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER                      X
    JUSTICE LaVECCHIA                         X
    JUSTICE ALBIN                             X
    JUSTICE PATTERSON                         X
    JUSTICE FERNANDEZ-VINA                    X
    JUSTICE SOLOMON                           X
    JUDGE CUFF (t/a)                          X
    TOTALS                                    7