388 ROUTE 22 READINGTON REALTY HOLDINGS, LLC v. TOWNSHIP OF READINGTON (L-0751-10, HUNTERDON COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2022 )


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    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
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    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-1826-18
    388 ROUTE 22 READINGTON
    REALTY HOLDINGS, LLC,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    TOWNSHIP OF READINGTON,
    TOWNSHIP COMMITTEE OF
    THE TOWNSHIP OF
    READINGTON, SEWER
    ADVISORY COMMITTEE OF
    THE TOWNSHIP OF
    READINGTON, BELLEMEAD
    DEVELOPMENT
    CORPORATION and
    MERCK SHARP & DOHME
    CORP.,
    Defendants-Respondents,
    and
    READINGTON COMMONS, LLC,
    C. DEL VECCHIO, S. CARBONE,
    A. CARBONE, ROLF ACKERMAN,
    RAMYZ TADROS, SHADIA
    SAMAAN, VALLEY NATIONAL
    BANK, RYLAND DEVELOPERS,
    LLC, LOT 3 DEVELOPMENT, LLC,
    WHITEHOUSE ATHLETIC
    ASSOCIATION, WLADYSLAW
    ZACIOS, JOANN ZACIOS,
    BETTY ANN COEBLER,
    CODDINGTON HOMES, CO.,
    INC., FALLONE PROPERTIES,
    LLC, TOM JR. PROPERTY, INC.,
    URB-FI DEVELOPMENT CORP.,
    FALLONE AT SPRING MEADOW,
    LLC, COUNTRY CLASSICS LEGACY
    READINGTON, WPS REALTY,
    LLC, WINFIELD MANAGEMENT,
    NATIONAL REALTY AND
    DEVELOPMENT CORP.,
    SOMERVILLE ASSOCIATES, and
    READINGTON HOLDINGS, L.P.,
    Defendants.
    ______________________________
    Argued January 4, 2021 – Decided February 8, 2022
    Before Judges Currier, Gooden Brown and DeAlmeida.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Hunterdon County, Docket No. L-0751-10.
    Lawrence S. Berger argued the cause for appellant
    (Berger & Bornstein, LLC, attorneys; Lawrence S.
    Berger, on the briefs).
    Richard P. Cushing argued the cause for respondents
    Township of Readington, Township Committee of the
    Township of Readington and Sewer Advisory
    Committee of the Township of Readington (Gebhardt
    & Kiefer, PC, attorneys; Richard P. Cushing and Kelly
    A. Lichtenstein, on the brief).
    A-1826-18
    2
    Glenn S. Pantel argued the cause for respondent
    Bellemead Development Corporation (Faegre Drinker
    Biddle & Reath LLP, attorneys; Glenn S. Pantel and
    Karen A. Denys, on the brief).
    Christopher John Stracco argued the cause for
    respondent Unicom Science and Technology Park Inc.
    (Day Pitney LLP, attorneys; Christopher John Stracco
    and Jennifer Gorga Capone, on the brief).
    Robert F. Renaud argued the cause for amici curiae
    New Jersey League of Municipalities and New Jersey
    Institute of Local Government Attorneys (Renaud
    DeAppolonio LLC, attorneys; Robert F. Renaud, on the
    brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    DeALMEIDA, J.A.D.
    Plaintiff 388 Route 22 Readington Realty Holdings, LLC appeals from the
    August 24, 2018 order of the Law Division vacating on reconsideration a
    February 2, 2017 order that granted summary judgment to plaintiff on its claims
    under the New Jersey Civil Rights Act (NJCRA), N.J.S.A. 10:6-1 to -2, arising
    from the denial by defendant Township of Readington (Township) of plaintiff's
    request for sewer capacity to develop its property. The August 24, 2018 order
    also granted summary judgment to the Township and the two municipal entities
    through which it acted, defendant Township Committee of the Township of
    Readington (Township Committee) and defendant Sewer Advisory Committee
    A-1826-18
    3
    of the Township of Readington (Sewer Advisory Committee), collectively the
    Township Defendants, on plaintiff's NJCRA claims.
    The February 2, 2017 order was based on the trial court's conclusion that
    the Township Defendants violated plaintiff's substantive right to develop its
    property free from an illegal development moratorium in violation of N.J.S.A.
    40:55D-90(b). After granting reconsideration, the trial court abandoned its prior
    conclusion and found that N.J.S.A. 40:55D-90(b) does not create a substantive
    right for property owners within the meaning of the NJCRA.
    We conclude that the trial court erred in its interpretation of the NJCRA
    on reconsideration and hold that N.J.S.A. 40:55D-90(b) creates a substantive
    right for property owners to develop their property free from an illegal
    development moratorium and that the denial of that right by municipal officials
    may form the basis of a claim under the NJCRA.          Because the Township
    Defendants concede they are bound by a prior judicial determination that they
    maintained an illegal de facto development moratorium, and in light of our
    conclusion that plaintiff suffered harm as a result, we reverse the August 24,
    2018 order, and reinstate the February 2, 2017 order granting summary judgment
    to plaintiff on its NJCRA claims.
    A-1826-18
    4
    Because we reinstate the February 2, 2017 order granting summary
    judgment in favor of plaintiff on its NJCRA claims, we reinstate the trial court's
    January 12, 2018 order awarding plaintiff interim attorney's fees and costs under
    the NJCRA.      The trial court entered a February 2, 2018 order directing
    immediate payment of those attorney's fees and costs to plaintiff . Plaintiff
    appealed both the trial court's March 19, 2018 order staying the February 2, 2018
    order and its October 1, 2018 order denying reconsideration of the March 19,
    2018 stay. We vacate the March 19, 2018 order and the October 1, 2018 order
    effective the latter of thirty days from the date of this opinion or resolution by
    the Supreme Court of any petition for certification filed in this matter.
    Plaintiff also appeals from two February 2, 2017 orders of the trial court
    granting summary judgment to defendants Merck Sharpe & Dohme Corporation
    (Merck)1 and Bellemead Development Corporation (Bellemead) on all claims
    asserted against them, as well as the trial court's November 16, 2018 order
    denying plaintiff's motion for attorney's fees and costs it alleges it incurred as a
    result of the Township Defendants' unreasonable delay in moving for
    1
    In 2018, Merck (improperly pled as Merck & Co. Inc.) sold its property to
    Unicom Science and Technology Park, Inc. (Unicom). Merck assigned all of its
    rights, title, and interest in this appeal, as well as its unused sewer capacity, to
    Unicom. We refer to Merck in this opinion to avoid confusion.
    A-1826-18
    5
    reconsideration of the February 2, 2017 order concerning plaintiff's NJCRA
    claims. We affirm those three orders.
    Finally, we vacate the trial court's November 16, 2018 final order, which
    provides that all of plaintiff's claims have been finally disposed. As a result of
    our conclusions with respect to the other orders on appeal, plaintiff's claims
    under the NJCRA remain partially unresolved. We remand this matter to the
    Law Division for further proceedings, including a determination of the damages
    and further attorney's fees and costs to which plaintiff is entitled on its NJCRA
    claims against the Township Defendants.
    I.
    The material facts are not in dispute. In the late 1980s, the Readington-
    Lebanon Sewerage Authority (Sewerage Authority) expanded its plant capacity
    to allow for the treatment of an additional 320,000 gallons per day (gpd) of the
    Township's wastewater. The Township financed the expansion by offering
    landowners the option to purchase portions of the expanded sewer capacity for
    future development of their property.
    In response to the offering, Merck, Bellemead, Ryland Developers, LLC
    (Ryland), and other defendants purchased future sewer capacity for the intended
    development of property they owned in the Township. Landowners purchasing
    A-1826-18
    6
    sewer capacity entered into a sewer expansion agreement with the Township that
    provided as follows:
    Should [the property owner] not begin construction on
    the aforementioned properties within two (2) years of
    the date of this agreement, then the Township shall have
    the option to terminate this agreement and all capacity
    assigned herein under shall be returned to the Township
    for reallocation at the discretion of the Township.
    This provision of the sewer expansion agreement is consistent with an
    ordinance adopted by the Township to establish a methodology for allocating
    and recapturing sewer capacity. The ordinance provides in relevant part:
    B.      Allocations for sewer capacity from Readington's
    allotted portion of sewer capacity shall be made by the
    . . . Township Committee upon written agreement to be
    entered into with the applicant, after the allocation
    request has been reviewed and a favorable
    recommendation has been made by the . . . Sewer
    Advisory Committee.
    C.    In the case of those development projects which
    have not received an approval by the appropriate
    township board having jurisdiction at the time a request
    for gallonage is made, allocation agreements shall
    provide that if the applicant does not make formal
    application to the appropriate township board within
    two years of approval of the allocation, then the
    Township Committee may, in its discretion, terminate
    the agreement. If within two years after preliminary
    approval, construction has not commenced, the
    Township Committee may, at its discretion, terminate
    the agreement. The agreement may be extended upon
    A-1826-18
    7
    application to the Township if there is a showing of
    good cause, at the option of the Township Committee.
    ....
    E.    Allocation of sewer capacity may not be
    transferred from the owner without prior approval of
    the . . . Township Committee, upon review and
    recommendation of the . . . Sewer Advisory Committee.
    [Readington Twp. Code, § 187-26 (B), (C), (E).]
    The ordinance also provides that any capacity not allocated through a sewer
    expansion agreement shall be allocated "[f]irst to those projects which will
    enable the Township to meet its future Mount Laurel affordable housing
    obligations[,]" and "[s]econdly, to remedy those properties within the sewer
    service area which constitute an 'emergency' due to failing septic systems." Id.
    at § 187-26 (A)(1)(a)-(b). The ordinance also permits the Township to reserve
    sewer capacity needed to meet Department of Environmental Protection reserve
    requirements. Id. at § 187-26 (A)(2). "[A]ll other requests for properties located
    within the sewer service area" are to be allocated sewer capacity "in the order
    received." Id. at § 187-26(A)(1)(c).
    In December 2007, plaintiff purchased property in the Township. The
    property, which has a septic tank with a capacity of 2,000 gpd of wastewater, is
    A-1826-18
    8
    in the Sewerage Authority service area. The prior owner of the property did not
    invest in future sewer capacity when the Township expanded the treatment plant.
    Plaintiff planned to develop the property with a restaurant and other
    businesses permitted by the zoning ordinance. The proposed project required
    wastewater capacity beyond that which can be handled by the existing septic
    system.
    In March 2010, plaintiff applied to the Township Committee and the
    Sewerage Authority to connect its property to the sewer system and to be
    allocated 10,000 gpd of sewer capacity. As of that time, Merck held 146,900
    gpd of unused sewer capacity it purchased to construct an approved, multi-phase
    office and headquarters project of nearly one million square feet, Bellemead
    held 66,060 gpd of unused sewer capacity it purchased for an approved multi-
    phase office development, and Ryland held 30,125 gpd of unused sewer capacity
    it purchased for the intended residential development of its property. Other
    defendants held smaller amounts of unused sewer capacity purchased during the
    expansion. The total unused sewer capacity held by property owner defendants
    constituted one third of the entire capacity assigned to the Township by the
    Sewerage Authority.    In addition, the Township held 46,950 gpd of sewer
    A-1826-18
    9
    capacity in reserve for emergencies and 24,400 gpd of sewer capacity to meet
    its future affordable housing obligations.
    None of the defendants holding unused sewer capacity had commenced
    development of their property to an extent requiring the use of all the capacity
    they purchased during the expansion.         The Township, however, had not
    terminated any of the sewer expansion agreements.2
    In its March 2010 application, plaintiff expressed its belief that the
    Township had sufficient unused sewer capacity to accommodate its request and,
    alternatively, suggested the Township Committee terminate sewer expansion
    agreements and buy back unused capacity from property owners who had not
    developed their property within the time permitted by the township ordinance
    and the agreements. The Township Committee denied plaintiff's request and
    stated that it did "not wish to terminate any of its existing sewer agreements."
    Plaintiff subsequently appeared before the Sewer Advisory Committee,
    described the proposed development of its property, requested permission to
    connect the property to the sewer system, and requested allocation of 11,260
    2
    For example, in 1988, Merck obtained preliminary site plan approvals for the
    project to be constructed on its property. The approvals were set to expire in
    twenty years. In 2008, the Township granted Merck a ten-year extension of its
    preliminary site approvals, and agreed that it would not seek to recapture
    Merck's unused sewer capacity until 2018.
    A-1826-18
    10
    gpd of sewer capacity. The Sewer Advisory Committee chairman replied that
    as "we have told many other people who have come before us," all sewer
    capacity was either used or held by property owners and that the Township was
    bound by its sewer expansion agreements.           He stated that "although the
    ordinance would allow for [it] if someone voluntarily wanted to     . . . give up
    their capacity, the policy of this board and the policy of the Township
    Committee has been not to take any capacity back." He concluded that "there
    isn't a gallon literally that we have to give if we wanted to."
    In September 2010, plaintiff appeared before the Township Committee
    requesting allocation of 11,260 gpd of sewer capacity. Although the Township
    Committee reiterated that the Township had a policy of not recapturing unused
    sewer capacity, during the meeting, the mayor said, "[w]hat I am thinking is why
    don't we like cut that off at the pass for the time being, have them explore it
    further, and maybe there will be a proposal for a development that the township
    would want to see on that site." This comment suggests that unused sewer
    capacity was available and the Township Committee was amenable to
    recapturing that capacity for a development project more to its liking than the
    one proposed by plaintiff.
    A-1826-18
    11
    On or about October 15, 2010, plaintiff received a letter from the
    Township Committee stating that there was no unused sewer capacity available
    for plaintiff's proposed development. Neither the Sewer Advisory Committee
    nor the Township Committee made any inquiry, investigation, or analysis of
    whether any of the approximately 300,000 gpd of unused sewer capacity could
    be recaptured to satisfy plaintiff's request for 11,260 gpd of capacity.
    On November 17, 2010, plaintiff filed a complaint in lieu of prerogative
    writs in the Law Division seeking an order compelling the Township Committee
    to recapture 11,260 gpd of unused sewer capacity for allocation to plaintiff.
    Plaintiff alleged a number of claims that, in effect, constitute facial and as -
    applied challenges to the Township's sewer capacity allocation ordinance, its
    policy of not recapturing unused sewer capacity, and its denial of plaintiff's
    request for sewer capacity.
    After the parties cross-moved for summary judgment, the trial court
    remanded the matter to the Township Committee to "review the reasoning set
    forth in its prior rejection" of plaintiff's request for sewer capacity and to
    "provide a statement of reasons as a supplement to its decision."
    On remand, after a hearing, the Township Committee again denied
    plaintiff's request, listing the reasons for its decision as: (1) the holders of
    A-1826-18
    12
    unused sewer capacity objected to the transfer of that unused capacity; (2) all
    excess capacity held by the Township was reserved for emergencies and
    affordable housing obligations; (3) the ordinance allowed the Township
    Committee to extend sewer expansion agreements for "good cause;" (4) several
    defendants have development approvals that fall under the protection of the
    Permit Extension Act (PEA), N.J.S.A. 40:55D-136.1 to -136.6, constituting
    good cause for an extension of their sewer expansion agreements; (5) the
    previous owner of plaintiff's property expressed no interest in purchasing sewer
    capacity at the time of the expansion; (6) the Township Committee did not
    believe it was "in the public interest to force the termination of . . . existing
    sewer agreements;" and (7) plaintiff had not determined whether the holder of
    any unused capacity had an "interest in voluntarily selling their capacity back to
    the Township."
    After the remand, the trial court decided the parties' cross-motions for
    summary judgment. The court concluded the ordinance complied on its face
    with the holding in First Peoples Bank v. Twp. of Medford, 
    126 N.J. 413
    , 420-
    21 (1991), that a municipality must have an adequate recapture mechanism such
    that it does not delegate the exercise of its land-use authority to private parties
    by allowing them to purchase and hoard sewer capacity. The trial court reasoned
    A-1826-18
    13
    that the Township's ordinance provided sufficient mechanisms for the Township
    Defendants to recapture unused sewer capacity to permit development in the
    municipality.
    On the other hand, the trial court held that the Township's application of
    the ordinance through a "'flat policy' of refusing to assert its right to recapture
    unused capacity . . . functioned as a de facto moratorium on any development
    which requires sewerage." The court found that such a moratorium is prohibited
    by N.J.S.A. 40:55D-90(b), a provision of the Municipal Land Use Law (MLUL),
    N.J.S.A. 40:55D-1 to -163, except in circumstances not germane here. The court
    also found the reasons given by the Township Committee for rejecting plaintiff's
    application were a "brushoff" of the remand order and held that the Township's
    obligation to administer sewer capacity was not dependent on whether a
    potential property developer like plaintiff could "beg, borrow or cadge capacity
    from others" who hold unused sewer capacity.
    The trial court concluded the Township acted arbitrarily when it denied
    plaintiff's request because it did not provide a reasoned explanation, based on a
    development-by-development analysis, of why it decided not to exercise its
    discretion to recapture unused capacity from property owners subject to sewer
    expansion agreements who had not developed their properties. In addition, the
    A-1826-18
    14
    trial court determined the Township Committee did not apply the PEA to each
    development approval on parcels with unused sewer capacity to determine if an
    extension of the time period for use of sewer capacity was warranted. The court
    issued a writ of mandamus directing the Township Committee to review unused
    sewer capacity and provide a reasoned basis for not recapturing the capacity
    needed to develop plaintiff's property.
    We subsequently affirmed the trial court's decision with respect to the
    facial validity of the ordinance, but reversed its conclusion with respect to the
    Township Committee's application of the ordinance. 388 Route 22 Readington
    Realty Holdings, LLC v. Twp. of Readington, No. A-0351-11 (App. Div. Sep.
    4, 2013). Having concluded that the Township Committee did not abuse its
    discretion when it denied plaintiff's application for sewer capacity, we vacated
    the writ and dismissed plaintiff's complaint. 
    Id.
     slip op. at 13.
    On appeal, the Supreme Court agreed that the Township's ordinance was
    facially constitutional. 388 Route 22 Readington Realty Holdings, LLC v. Twp.
    of Readington, 
    221 N.J. 318
     (2015). With respect to the Township's application
    of the ordinance, however, the Court concluded that "Readington maintains a
    blanket policy of not repurchasing unused sewer capacity allocated to
    developers." 
    Id. at 344
    . This policy, the Court held, "rendered the ordinance
    A-1826-18
    15
    toothless, and . . . functioned as a de facto moratorium on any development
    which requires sewerage." 
    Id. at 346
     (internal quotations omitted).
    In addition, the Court concluded the Township Committee's failure to
    analyze which developments, if any, fall under the PEA and its failure to give a
    reasoned explanation for its denial of plaintiff's request rendered its decision
    arbitrary. 
    Id. at 346-47
    . The Court agreed with the trial court's finding that
    when denying plaintiff's application "the Township in its resolution incorporated
    by reference, wholesale and uncritically, the arguments of the developer
    defendants. That approach suggests that the Township had effectively delegated
    its land-use authority to private entities." 
    Id. at 346
    .
    As a result of these conclusions, the Court affirmed the trial court's grant
    of summary judgment to plaintiff with respect to the Township Committee's
    arbitrary application of its ordinance.      
    Id. at 348
    .   The Court ordered the
    Township Committee "within ninety days, to undertake a critical review of the
    unused capacity identified by plaintiff and to determine whether any such
    capacity can be recaptured . . . to satisfy plaintiff's development needs." 
    Id. at 347
    . To guide the Township Committee in applying the ordinance, the Court
    identified six factors to be considered when determining whether to recapture
    unused sewer capacity:
    A-1826-18
    16
    (1) the length of time a landowner has possessed unused
    sewer capacity, (2) the development plans of the
    landowner to tap some or all of the unused capacity and
    the imminence of that happening, (3) the complexity of
    the development project and the importance of the
    project to the community, (4) whether the economy has
    retarded economic development, (5) proposed
    development projects by others that cannot proceed
    because of unavailability of sewer capacity and the
    importance of those projects to the community, and (6)
    any other relevant factors.
    [Id. at 343.]
    The Court noted that
    if a property owner, presently holding a substantial
    amount of unused capacity, has moved its business
    operations to another municipality and there is no
    realistic prospect that approvals previously acquired
    will result in a project coming to fruition, that factor
    must be given significant weight in deciding whether to
    recall capacity.
    [Id. at 347.]
    In January 2015, while this matter was pending in the Supreme Court, the
    Township Committee allocated 15,000 gpd of unused sewer capacity to
    defendants National Realty and Development Corp., Somerville Associates, and
    Readington Holdings, L.P. (collectively National Realty) for use at an existing
    Walmart shopping center in the Township. Of that amount, 12,000 gpd were
    intended to address an alleged potential failure of the septic system at the
    A-1826-18
    17
    shopping center and 3,000 gpd were designated for the future expansion of the
    Walmart.    The allocation was not predicated on a pending or approved
    development application. When making this allocation, the Township gave
    itself the right to recapture the capacity transferred to National Realty should
    there be a change in the tenant of the shopping center, strongly suggesting that
    the existing tenant was favored by the Township Committee. 3
    On remand from the Supreme Court, the trial court ordered the Township
    Committee to consider plaintiff's application by undertaking a critical review of
    unused sewer capacity in conformity with the factors identified by the Court.
    The court ordered the Township to provide a detailed list of all other parties who
    applied for sewer capacity prior to plaintiff's application and were denied, given
    that they were, under the ordinance, "in line" for sewer capacity when it becomes
    available. The court ordered the Township to provide written notice to those
    parties of the remand proceedings.
    The Sewer Advisory Committee, after holding public hearings, made
    separate recommendations to the Township Committee for each private holder
    of unused sewer capacity, suggesting the recapture of approximately 9,000 gpd
    3
    As of February 2, 2017, more than two years after the allocation, the Walmart
    property had not been connected to the sewer system and the "failing" septic
    system remained in use.
    A-1826-18
    18
    from property owners who could not use capacity they held for a variety of
    reasons, such as the property in question was not in the sewer service area, was
    built to capacity, or was associated with a development proposal not permitted
    by the zoning ordinance. Those property owners consented to the recapture of
    their unused sewer capacity.        The Sewer Advisory Committee did not
    recommend the recapture of any capacity from Merck, Bellemead, Ryland, or
    National Realty.
    Notably, the recommendations did not include the recapture of capacity
    from Merck, even though the Sewer Advisory Committee determined Merck,
    which had constructed only a portion of its approved office development project,
    had moved its corporate headquarters from the Township to Union County and
    had no then-present intention of using the sewer capacity it held for the
    undeveloped phases of its project. The Supreme Court had previously held that
    such circumstances "must be given significant weight in deciding whether to
    recall capacity." 388 Route 22 Readington Realty, 221 N.J. at 347.
    The Readington Township Planner testified that although Merck had
    moved its headquarters, maintaining the potential for continuation and
    expansion of its existing research and office facilities was critical to protecting
    jobs, future employment opportunities, and the Township's tax base. The Sewer
    A-1826-18
    19
    Advisory Committee noted that while Merck had abandoned its plans to build
    the second phase of its office development, it had executed a contract for the
    sale of its property and the purchaser intended to use sewer capacity to create
    inclusionary housing on the property, which was not then permitted by the
    zoning ordinance, and for which no proposal had been presented to the
    municipality.
    After holding public hearings, the Township Committee adopted the
    recommendations of the Sewer Advisory Committee and recaptured and offered
    for sale to plaintiff 9,236 gpd of sewer capacity, none of which was from Merck,
    Bellemead, Ryland, or National Realty. The Township Committee adopted the
    Sewer Advisory Committee's rationale regarding Merck and noted that it would
    not recapture sewer capacity from Bellemead because plaintiff had "not
    provided any information to refute the conclusion that" the development of its
    property is not "of greater importance to the community than Bellemead's
    approved office development." The Township Committee determined that the
    proposed development of plaintiff's property would generate significantly less
    local property tax and create fewer jobs than the proposed development of
    Bellemead's property. Bellemead, however, had not built the second phase of
    its proposed office project "due to [the] complexity of the project and several
    A-1826-18
    20
    outside factors beyond its control, including the economy (a severely depressed
    market for office space)" and an intervening lawsuit. At the time the Township
    Committee made its decision, Bellemead was actively marketing its property
    because "trying to build a development to this scale on a speculative basis is not
    viable in this economy."
    No property owner that had requested and been denied sewer capacity
    prior to plaintiff's application appeared at the public hearings. In addition,
    except for plaintiff's development proposal, the Sewer Advisory Committee and
    Township Committee did not consider whether there were proposed projects that
    could not proceed because of a lack of sewer capacity or the importance of any
    such proposed projects to the community.        Plaintiff rejected the Township
    Committee's offer to purchase 9,236 gpd of capacity because it was insufficient
    for plaintiff's proposed development.
    In October 2014, plaintiff filed an amended complaint, abandoning its
    facial challenge to the ordinance and alleging several new claims. Plaintiff
    alleged the Township Committee's refusal to recapture sewer capacity from
    Merck and Bellemead was arbitrary, capricious, unreasonable and in violation
    of the Supreme Court's remand order. In addition, plaintiff alleged that the
    Township Committee's allocation of 15,000 gpd to National Realty during the
    A-1826-18
    21
    pendency of the Supreme Court appeal was arbitrary, capricious, unreasonable,
    and without authority.
    Plaintiff also alleged that the Township Committee's failure to recapture
    capacity from Merck and Bellemead and its allocation of capacity to National
    Realty violated plaintiff's equal protection, substantive due process, and civil
    rights in violation of the United States Constitution, New Jersey Constitution,
    
    42 U.S.C.A. § 1983
    ,4 and the NJCRA, as well as constituted a taking of its
    property without just compensation or, alternatively, an inverse condemnation. 5
    Plaintiff requested the court: (1) order the Township Committee to
    recapture all of Merck's, Bellemead's, and National Realty's unused sewer
    capacities; (2) allocate 11,260 gpd of the recaptured sewer capacity to plaintiff;
    and (3) award plaintiff compensatory damages, punitive damages, attorney's
    fees, and costs under the NJCRA.
    The parties cross-moved for summary judgment. On February 10, 2016,
    the trial court issued an oral opinion denying the motions. The court found that
    the Township Committee had not complied with the Supreme Court's directives
    4
    The amended complaint alleges violations of 
    42 U.S.C.A. § 1981
    , which
    concerns racial discrimination. It appears the citation is a typographical error.
    5
    Plaintiff alleged many of its claims on behalf of itself and all Township
    property owners who had previously requested and were denied sewer capacity.
    A-1826-18
    22
    on remand and that its recapture of sewer capacity was insufficient because no
    capacity was reclaimed from the largest holders, even though it was unlikely
    they would use the capacity they held in the near future. The court also found
    that Merck's retention of a "huge" amount of unused sewer capacity, despite its
    abandonment of its plans to construct the second phase of its office complex and
    its transfer of business operations to Union County, contributed to the
    continuation of a de facto moratorium on development in the Township.
    The court also found, however, that plaintiff had not submitted a sufficient
    description of its development needs and noted that the "thrust" of the Supreme
    Court's decision was that the Township Committee must adequately determine
    whether to exercise its discretion to recapture sewer capacity to consider
    plaintiff's application, and not necessarily to award any recaptured sewer
    capacity to plaintiff.
    In a March 9, 2016 order, the trial court again remanded the matter to the
    Township Committee to, among other things, recapture "at least a portion of
    unused sewer capacity" from Merck and Ryland within sixty days, to determine
    whether to recapture unused capacity from Bellemead, and to justify the grant
    of capacity to National Realty. The trial court also appointed a Special Master
    to assist the Township Committee with its review of unused sewer capacity.
    A-1826-18
    23
    On May 26, 2016, the Sewer Advisory Committee recommended
    recapturing 77,900 gpd of unused sewer capacity from Merck and 18,425 gpd
    of unused sewer capacity from Ryland. The Township Committee subsequently
    adopted the recommendation and recaptured a total of 96,325 gpd of unused
    sewer capacity from Merck and Ryland.
    On October 31, 2016, Bellemead voluntarily tendered 11,260 gpd of its
    unused sewer capacity back to the Township, contingent on the court granting
    Bellemead's future motions "for final, unappealable summary judgment and
    severance" based on its tender of capacity. The Township agreed to reimburse
    Bellemead with interest for the capital contribution it previously paid for the
    sewer plant expansion that created 11,260 gpd in capacity. 6
    The parties cross-moved for summary judgment. On February 2, 2017,
    the court entered three orders. In the first, the court granted summary judgment
    in favor of plaintiff and against the Township Defendants on plaintiff's NJCRA
    claims. The court issued a written statement of reasons in which, after applying
    6
    Bellemead disputes that plaintiff needed 11,260 gpd for the development of
    its property, based on concept plans produced by plaintiff during discovery to
    construct a fast-food restaurant, convenience store/gas station, and bank on the
    property. Bellemead alleges the proposed development would require no more
    than 3,059 gpd. Nevertheless, Bellemead tendered the full amount alleged by
    plaintiff, taking its allegations as true.
    A-1826-18
    24
    the three-part test established in Tumpson v. Farina, 
    218 N.J. 450
    , 473 (2014),
    it concluded plaintiff had a substantive right to develop its property in
    accordance with legal zoning, as well as a concomitant right to be free from an
    illegal development moratorium, the deprivation of which could form the basis
    of a claim under the NJCRA. The Court found that N.J.S.A. 40:55D-90(b)
    provided a "clear and unambiguous" conferral of a "substantive benefit" on
    property owners, which could readily be enforced by the judiciary.
    In addition, the court concluded the Township Defendants, while acting
    under the color of State law, deprived plaintiff of these substantive rights by
    maintaining a de facto moratorium on development as a result of the Township
    Committee's refusal to comply with its ordinance and undertake an appropriate
    inquiry and reasoned consideration of the relevant factors identified by the
    Supreme Court to determine whether to recapture unused sewer capacity. The
    trial court rejected the Township's argument that plaintiff could not prove its
    rights had been deprived in the absence of proof that its development plans had
    been approved but were thwarted by the development moratorium.
    In the second February 2, 2017 order, the trial court granted Bellemead's
    motion for summary judgment. The court issued a written statement of reasons
    in which it concluded Bellemead's voluntary tender of 11,260 gpd of its sewer
    A-1826-18
    25
    capacity to the Township Committee effectively mooted plaintiff's claims
    against Bellemead, as the tender is the maximum relief plaintiff could obtain
    from that party. To ensure plaintiff had the opportunity to obtain the relief it
    sought, the court directed the Township Committee to hold the capacity tendered
    by Bellemead for plaintiff for two years commencing on February 1, 2017,
    conditioned on plaintiff "diligently pursuing approval for its development
    proposal" by filing a complete development application within two years and
    obtaining approvals within an additional year. 7
    The court rejected plaintiff's argument that summary judgment in favor of
    Bellemead was not appropriate because the amended complaint sought to
    recapture all unused sewer capacity held by all defendants. Relying on the
    limited scope of the remand ordered by the Supreme Court, which directed the
    Township Committee to determine "whether any capacity can be recaptured to
    satisfy plaintiff's development needs[,]" 388 Route 22 Readington Realty, 221
    N.J. at 348, the trial court concluded that the law of the case precluded plaintiff's
    demand for the recapture of all unused sewer capacity held by the defendants.
    7
    At a subsequent case management conference the trial court indicated that it
    would entertain motions by plaintiff for an extension of those time periods.
    Plaintiff never made such a motion.
    A-1826-18
    26
    The court also rejected plaintiff's argument that the court and its Special Master
    should continue to oversee the allocation of sewer capacity in the Township.
    Also on February 2, 2017, the trial court entered an order granting
    summary judgment in favor of Merck. The court issued a written statement of
    reasons in which it concluded that plaintiff's claims against Merck were rendered
    moot by Bellemead's voluntary tender of 11,260 gpd of sewer capacity. The
    court determined that the tender of capacity "broke[] the logjam" of sewer
    availability in the Township and provided sufficient capacity for the
    development of plaintiff's property.8
    Plaintiff and the Township Defendants agreed to bifurcate the
    determination of plaintiff's damages under the NJCRA from the award of
    attorney's fees and costs under that statute. On January 12, 2018, the trial court
    8
    Through entry of the orders concerning Bellemead and Merck, the trial court
    effectively granted summary judgment in favor of the Township Defendants on
    the allegations in the amended complaint concerning property owners other than
    plaintiff who were denied sewer capacity for proposed developments. The court
    concluded that the total 105,561 gpd of sewer capacity recaptured by the
    Township was nearly ten times the amount requested by plaintiff and more than
    sufficient for numerous other projects in the Township. The court speculated
    that because of the recaptured capacity there are few, if any, projects in the
    Township that cannot proceed because of a lack of available sewer capacity.
    The trial court also determined that any future applications for sewer capacity
    will be addressed on their own merits by the Township Committee and the
    services of the Special Master were no longer required.
    A-1826-18
    27
    entered an order awarding plaintiff $989,076.63 in attorney's fees and costs
    incurred prior to March 31, 2017. The order did not set a date on which the
    Township Defendants were to pay the award. On February 2, 2018, the trial
    court ordered the Township Defendants to pay the attorney's fees and costs
    award immediately. The order also allowed plaintiff to apply for attorney's fees
    and costs incurred after March 31, 2017. On March 19, 2018, the court issued
    an order staying enforcement of the February 2, 2018 order.
    Plaintiff subsequently moved for reconsideration of the March 19, 2018
    order. While that motion was pending, the Township Defendants, after a change
    of counsel, on May 10, 2018, moved for reconsideration of the February 2, 2017
    order granting summary judgment in favor of plaintiff on its NJCRA claims.
    Their moving papers raised arguments not made in opposition to plaintiff's
    original summary judgment motion.
    On August 24, 2018, the trial court granted the Township Defendants'
    motion for reconsideration, vacated its February 2, 2017 order granting
    summary judgment in favor of plaintiff on its NJCRA claims, and granted
    summary judgment to the Township Defendants on those claims. Relying on
    what it described as a change in New Jersey law announced in Harz v. Borough
    of Spring Lake, 
    234 N.J. 317
     (2018), the trial court concluded that N.J.S.A.
    A-1826-18
    28
    40:55D-90(b) did not contain the "rights creating language" necessary to support
    a cause of action under the NJCRA. The court found that the statute was
    intended only to regulate municipal conduct and did not confer substantive
    rights on any property owner. According to the trial court, while plaintiff may
    fall within the "zone of interest" of N.J.S.A. 40:55D-90(b), it was not given
    enforceable rights in the statute.
    The court also rejected plaintiff's argument that, when read as a whole,
    the MLUL and its provision defining "interested party," N.J.S.A. 40:55D-4, vest
    property owners with the enforceable right to develop their property subject only
    to the limitations in the statute. Thus, the court concluded, plaintiff did not have
    a cause of action for damages under the NJCRA, as a result of the Township
    Defendants' maintenance of a de facto development moratorium.
    The trial court also rejected plaintiff's argument that it had a cause of
    action under the NJCRA because the Township Defendants violated its
    substantive rights under the State Constitution to "acquire, possess and protect"
    its property, subject to the limitations in the MLUL. The court found that the
    arbitrary actions of the Township Defendants, while violative of N.J.S.A.
    40:55D-90(b), did not "shock the judicial conscience" and did not, therefore,
    constitute a substantive due process violation under the State Constitution.
    A-1826-18
    29
    On October 1, 2018, the court denied plaintiff's motion for reconsideration
    of the March 19, 2018 order staying enforcement of the attorney's fee award.
    Plaintiff subsequently filed a motion for attorney's fees and costs it
    incurred during the fifteen-month delay between issuance of the February 2,
    2017 order granting summary judgment to plaintiff on its NJCRA claims and
    the filing of the Township Defendants' motion for reconsideration. Plaintiff
    alleged that it incurred significant attorney's fees and costs preparing its
    application for attorney's fees and costs after entry of summary judgment in its
    favor and preparing for the damages phase of the trial. It argued that these
    attorney's fees and costs would not have been incurred had the Township
    Defendants not engaged in an unreasonable delay in moving for reconsideration.
    Plaintiff alleged that the arguments raised in the Township Defendants' motion
    for reconsideration could have been raised at the time of the original motion for
    summary judgment or immediately after entry of the February 2, 2017 order.
    On November 16, 2018, the court entered an order denying plaintiff's
    motion. While acknowledging that it had the inherent authority to require a
    party to reimburse another litigant for attorney's fees and costs in appropriate
    circumstances, the trial court concluded that such a sanction was not warranted
    here. Finding no evidence of bad faith or negligence on the part of the Township
    A-1826-18
    30
    Defendants, the court noted the change in counsel and the immediacy of the need
    to respond to plaintiff's motion for attorney's fees and costs, as reasonable
    explanations for the delay in moving for reconsideration.
    Also on November 16, 2018, the court entered an order of final disposition
    concluding that all issues raised between the parties have been resolved.
    This appeal follows. Plaintiff appeals: (1) the two February 2, 2017 orders
    granting summary judgment to Merck and Bellemead; (2) the March 19, 2018
    order staying enforcement of the February 2, 2018 order directing immediate
    payment of the attorney's fees and costs awarded to plaintiff on its NJCRA
    claims; (3) the August 24, 2018 order granting the Township Defendants' motion
    for reconsideration, vacating the February 2, 2017 order granting summary
    judgment in favor of plaintiff on its NJCRA claims, and granting summary
    judgment to the Township Defendants on those claims; (4) the October 1, 2018
    order denying plaintiff's motion for reconsideration of the March 19, 2018 order;
    (5) the November 16, 2018 order denying plaintiff's motion for an award of
    attorney's fees and costs arising from the Township Defendants' delay in moving
    for reconsideration; and (6) the November 16, 2018 final disposition order.9
    9
    In October 2018, plaintiff filed for bankruptcy protection. The bankruptcy
    court appointed special counsel for the debtor estate to pursue this appeal.
    A-1826-18
    31
    We granted leave to the New Jersey State League of Municipalities and
    the Institute of Local Government Attorneys to participate as amici curiae.10
    II.
    We review the trial court's decision granting summary judgment de novo,
    using "the same standard that governs trial courts in reviewing summary
    judgment orders." Prudential Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co. v. Boylan, 
    307 N.J. Super. 162
    , 167 (App. Div. 1998). Rule 4:46-2(c) provides that a court should grant
    summary judgment when "the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories
    and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no
    genuine issue as to any material fact challenged and that the moving party is
    entitled to a judgment or order as a matter of law." "Thus, the movant must
    show that there does not exist a 'genuine issue' as to a material fact and not
    simply one 'of an insubstantial nature'; a non-movant will be unsuccessful
    'merely by pointing to any fact in dispute.'" Prudential, 307 N.J. Super. at 167.
    Our review is "based on our consideration of the evidence in the light most
    favorable to the parties opposing summary judgment." Brill v. Guardian Life
    Ins. Co., 
    142 N.J. 520
    , 523-24 (1995). We review legal issues, including the
    interpretation of statutes, de novo. In re Liquidation of Integrity Ins. Co., 193
    10
    The Attorney General declined our invitation to participate in this appeal.
    A-1826-18
    
    32 N.J. 86
    , 94 (2007) (quoting Toll Bros., Inc. v. Twp. of W. Windsor, 
    173 N.J. 502
    , 549 (2002)).
    There are no genuine issues of material fact. We are presented, instead,
    with the legal question of whether the Township Defendants deprived plaintiff
    of a substantive right in violation of the NJCRA. We conclude that they did.
    The NJCRA provides in relevant part:
    Any person who has been deprived of any substantive
    due process or equal protection rights, privileges or
    immunities secured by the Constitution or laws of the
    United States, or any substantive rights, privileges or
    immunities secured by the Constitution or laws of this
    State, or whose exercise or enjoyment of those
    substantive rights, privileges or immunities has been
    interfered with or attempted to be interfered with . . . by
    a person acting under color of law, may bring a civil
    action for damages and for injunctive or other
    appropriate relief.
    [N.J.S.A. 10:6-2(c).]
    In addition to damages, the prevailing party may be awarded reasonable
    attorney's fees and costs. N.J.S.A. 10:6-2(f).
    The Legislature modeled the NJCRA on the Federal Civil Rights Act, 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    , which establishes civil actions for the deprivation of federal
    constitutional and statutory rights. Tumpson, 218 N.J. at 474. That statute
    provides:
    A-1826-18
    33
    Every person who, under color of any statute,
    ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State or
    Territory or the District of Columbia, subjects, or
    causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States
    or other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the
    deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities
    secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to
    the party injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or
    other proper proceeding for redress . . . .
    [
    42 U.S.C.A. § 1983
    .]
    The NJCRA "is intended to provide what Section 1983 does not: a remedy
    for the violation of substantive rights found in our State Constitution and laws."
    Harz, 234 N.J. at 330 (quoting Tumpson, 218 N.J. at 474). See also Perez v.
    Zagami, LLC, 
    218 N.J. 202
    , 212 (2014) (holding that the NJCRA "was intended
    to address potential gaps in remedies available under New Jersey law but not
    cognizable under the federal civil rights law."). The NJCRA's "broad purpose"
    is to "assur[e] a state law cause of action for violations of state and federal
    constitutional rights and to fill any gaps in state statutory anti-discrimination
    protection." Owens v. Feigin, 
    194 N.J. 607
    , 611 (2008).
    Unlike § 1983, however, the NJCRA does not apply to violations of
    procedural rights. Harz, 234 N.J. at 330 n.4. As the Court explained in Harz,
    "a substantive right is '[a] right that can be protected or enforced by law; a right
    of substance rather than form,'" whereas a procedural right is "[a] right that
    A-1826-18
    34
    derives from legal or administrative procedure; a right that helps in the
    protection or enforcement of a substantive right." Id. at 332 (quoting Black's
    Law Dictionary 1437, 1438 (9th ed. 2009)). Given the similarities between the
    statutes, federal precedents interpreting § 1983 are instructive when construing
    corresponding provisions of the NJCRA. Tumpson, 218 N.J. at 474.
    Plaintiff has the burden of identifying both the substantive right of which
    it has been deprived and the State actor that caused the deprivation. Filgueiras
    v. Newark Pub. Schs., 
    426 N.J. Super. 449
    , 468 (App. Div. 2012). Both NJCRA
    and § 1983 provide a "means of vindicating substantive rights" created by State
    or federal Constitutions or laws, but they are "not a source of rights themselves."
    Gormley v. Wood-El, 
    218 N.J. 72
    , 97-98 (2014). They are not intended to create
    substantive rights, but rather to ensure a remedy for violations of existing rights.
    Tumpson, 218 N.J. at 474-75; Perez, 218 N.J. at 212. Thus, the NJCRA does
    not list the substantive rights, the deprivation of which may form the basis of a
    cause of action under the statute. Harz, 234 N.J. at 330. The Court has,
    however, recognized that the term "substantive right[s]" in the NJCRA "is broad
    in its conception." Tumpson, 218 N.J. at 474.
    In Harz, the Court listed examples of "familiar" substantive rights that fall
    under the NJCRA, including: (1) "the 'unalienable rights' of '. . . acquiring,
    A-1826-18
    35
    possessing, and protecting property,' N.J. Const. art. I, ¶ 1; see also U.S. Const.
    amend. XIV; [and] . . . the right to not have private property taken for public use
    without just compensation, U.S. Const. amend. V"; (2) "[o]ther substantive
    rights . . . identified in our constitutional jurisprudence, such as: the right to
    privacy . . ." ; and (3) "other rights . . . conferred by statute." 234 N.J. at 332.
    In order to establish a cause of action under the NJCRA for the denial of
    a substantive right created by statute, a plaintiff must satisfy the three-part test
    established in Tumpson, 218 N.J. at 475, and "recalibrate[d]" in Harz, 234 N.J.
    at 331. Under Tumpson, a court must examine: (1) whether the statute on which
    an NJCRA claim is based was "intended to confer a 'benefit'" on the plaintiff;
    (2) whether "the statutory right . . . is not 'so vague [or] amorphous' that its
    enforcement would strain judicial competence; and (3)" whether the statute
    "unambiguously impose[s] a binding obligation" on the government actors. 218
    N.J. at 475, 477 (alterations in original).
    The Supreme Court refined the first prong of the Tumpson test in Harz.
    There, the Court explained: "Because our description of substantive rights in
    Tumpson may not be sufficiently precise, we use this occasion to provide
    additional guidance." 234 N.J. at 332. The Court, applying the holding in
    Gonzaga Univ. v. Doe, 
    536 U.S. 273
    , 283-84 (2002), held that "it is rights, not
    A-1826-18
    36
    the broader or vaguer 'benefits' or 'interests,' that may be enforced under" the
    NJCRA, so the test is whether the Legislature intended to create a State right
    "enforceable by the person directly benefitted" by the statute on which an
    NJCRA claim is based. 
    Id. at 331
    .
    In Gonzaga, the Court clarified its precedents because some courts were
    "allowing plaintiffs to enforce a statute under § 1983 so long as the plaintiff falls
    within the general zone of interest that the statute is intended to protect . . . ."
    
    536 U.S. at 283
    . The Gonzaga Court rejected this approach, emphasizing that a
    statutory violation was not an automatic civil rights violation under § 1983.
    Ibid. Instead, "whether a statutory violation may be enforced through § 1983 'is
    a different inquiry than that involved in determining whether a private right of
    action can be implied from a particular statute.''' Id. at 283 (quoting Wilder v.
    Va. Hosp. Ass'n, 
    496 U.S. 498
    , 508 n.9 (1990)).
    The Gonzaga Court held that to confer a civil right enforceable under §
    1983, a statute must use "'rights-creating' language critical to showing the
    requisite congressional intent to create new rights" or to impart an "'individual
    entitlement' that is enforceable under § 1983," plus the statute's text must
    unmistakably focus on the "persons benefitted" rather than the entity regulated.
    Id. at 284, 287. "But even where a statute is phrased in such explicit rights-
    A-1826-18
    37
    creating terms, a plaintiff suing under an implied right of action still must show
    that the statute manifests an intent 'to create not just a private right but also a
    private remedy.'" Id. at 284 (quoting Alexander v. Sandoval, 
    532 U.S. 275
    , 286
    (2001)).
    As a result of the refinement announced in Harz, the test for establishing
    whether a statutory right may form the basis of a cause of action under the
    NJCRA requires the court to determine:
    (1) whether, by enacting the statute, the Legislature
    intended to confer a right on an individual; (2) whether
    the right "is not so 'vague and amorphous' that its
    enforcement would strain judicial competence," and (3)
    whether the statute "unambiguously impose[s] a
    binding obligation on the [governmental entity]."
    In addition to satisfying those three "factors," for
    purposes of our Civil Rights Act, plaintiffs must also
    "show that the right is substantive, not procedural."
    [Harz, 234 N.J. at 331-32 (alterations in original)
    (citing Gonzaga, 
    536 U.S. at 283-84
    , and quoting
    Tumpson, 218 N.J. at 475, 478).]
    We turn, then, to N.J.S.A. 40:55D-90(b) to determine whether it creates a
    substantive right, within the meaning of the NJCRA. The statute provides in
    relevant part:
    b.    No moratoria on applications for development or
    interim zoning ordinances shall be permitted except in
    cases where the municipality demonstrates on the basis
    A-1826-18
    38
    of a written opinion by a qualified health professional
    that a clear imminent danger to the health of the
    inhabitants of the municipality exists, and in no case
    shall the moratorium or interim ordinance exceed a six-
    month term.
    [N.J.S.A. 40:55D-90(b).]
    This statute is a component of the legislative delegation to municipal
    officials of the State's authority to regulate the development of land. "The
    Legislature has the constitutional authority to delegate to municipalities the
    'police power' to enact ordinances governing 'the nature and extent of the uses
    of land," N.J. Const. art IV, § 6, ¶ 2, and the Legislature has done so through the
    passage of the" MLUL. 388 Route 22 Readington Realty, 221 N.J. at 339. The
    power delegated to municipalities is not unlimited. It instead ''must be exercised
    for the general welfare[,]" id. at 339 (quoting S. Burlington Cnty. NAACP v.
    Twp. of Mt. Laurel, 
    67 N.J. 151
    , 175 (1975)), and is subject to the limitations
    imposed by the Legislature.
    "Plans for the treatment of wastewater is a critical component of any
    development project, for without sewer approval no development project can go
    forward." 388 Route 22 Readington Realty, 221 N.J. at 343 (citing Field v.
    Mayor and Council of the Twp. of Franklin, 
    190 N.J. Super. 326
    , 328-35 (App.
    Div. 1983)). Here, the Supreme Court found the Township Defendants violated
    A-1826-18
    39
    N.J.S.A. 40:55D-90(b) by imposing a de facto moratorium on development by
    delegating to Merck, Bellemead, and other property owners effective control of
    the allocation of sewer capacity in the Township. 388 Route 22 Readington
    Realty, 221 N.J. at 346. The Court held that because the Township Committee
    refused to exercise its discretion to recapture unused sewer capacity without the
    consent of those property owners, it had, in effect, halted development in the
    Township, contrary to N.J.S.A. 40:55D-90(b). Ibid. The Township Defendants
    concede that the Supreme Court's finding on this point is the law of the case.
    When considering whether the Township Defendants' violation of
    N.J.S.A. 40:55D-90(b) deprived plaintiff of a substantive right created by that
    statute within the meaning of the NJCRA, we are guided by two recent decisions
    concerning violations of statutory provisions regulating municipal authority
    over land use.
    In Harz, a property owner asserted a claim under the NJCRA, alleging
    municipal officials deprived her of the substantive right found in N.J.S.A.
    40:55D-72, a provision of the MLUL, to a hearing on her appeals of zoning
    permits issued to the owner of adjoining property. 234 N.J. at 327. The statute
    on which she relied provides:
    Appeals to the board of adjustment may be taken by any
    interested party affected by any decision of an
    A-1826-18
    40
    administrative officer of the municipality based on or
    made in the enforcement of the zoning ordinance or
    official map. Such appeal shall be taken within 20 days
    by filing a notice of appeal with the officer from whom
    the appeal is taken specifying the grounds for such
    appeal. The officer from whom the appeal is taken shall
    immediately transmit to the board all the papers
    constituting the record upon which the action appealed
    from was taken.
    [N.J.S.A. 40:55D-72.]
    An "interested party" is defined as "any person, whether residing within or
    without the municipality, whose right to use, acquire, or enjoy property is or
    may be affected by any action taken under" the MLUL. N.J.S.A. 40:55D-4.
    The plaintiff in Harz wrote to the municipal zoning officer expressing her
    belief that a permit he issued to an adjoining property owner authorized the
    construction of a home that did not comply with the zoning ordinance. 234 N.J.
    at 324. She requested the zoning officer transmit the papers constituting the
    record relating to the permit to the Planning Board, the body acting as the Board
    of Adjustment for her municipality. Ibid. Instead of transmitting the letter to
    the Planning Board, the zoning officer requested the adjoining property owner
    revise his construction plans to comport with the zoning ordinance. The zoning
    officer subsequently issued a second permit based on the revised construction
    plans. Ibid.
    A-1826-18
    41
    Harz forwarded a second letter to the zoning officer appealing the second
    permit. Ibid. The zoning officer transmitted the letter along with the record to
    the Planning Board. Id. at 325. Although the Planning Board scheduled a
    hearing, it was canceled when the municipal engineer determined that the
    revised construction plans did not comply with the zoning ordinance. The
    zoning officer thereafter rescinded the second permit and issued a third permit
    once construction plans were again revised. Ibid.
    Harz filed an appeal of the third permit pursuant to N.J.S.A. 40:55D-72.
    After a three-day hearing, the Planning Board passed a resolution granting in
    part and denying in part the appeal. Ibid. The Planning Board rescinded the
    third permit until certain conditions were met. Ultimately the conditions were
    satisfied, and the zoning officer issued a fourth building permit. Harz did not
    appeal the fourth permit. Id. at 326. In the interim, Harz filed an action in lieu
    of prerogative writs seeking an order requiring the Planning Board to hold a
    hearing on her objections to the zoning permits.
    After issuance of the fourth permit, Harz filed suit in the Law Division
    alleging the municipal officials deprived her of her substantive rights under the
    NJCRA. She alleged N.J.S.A. 40:55D-72 and N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70(a) conferred
    A-1826-18
    42
    on her the substantive right to a hearing on each of her appeals challenging the
    issuance of permits by the zoning officer. Id. at 328.
    The Supreme Court agreed. The Court found that "[t]he MLUL clearly
    conferred on Harz a right to be heard before the Planning Board on her appeal
    from the issuance of the zoning permit to her neighbor . . . ." Id. at 334. As the
    Court explained,
    [f]irst, Harz is an "interested party" under the MLUL
    because she resides within the Borough and the zoning
    officer's issuance of the permit to the neighbor
    "affected" her right to use or enjoy her property. . . .
    Second, N.J.S.A. 40:55D-72(a) provides an "interested
    party," such as Harz the right to appeal a zoning
    officer's decision to the Planning Board, acting as a
    board of adjustment. Third, on the filing of the appeal,
    the zoning officer was required to "immediately
    transmit to the [Planning Board] all the papers
    constituting the record." Ibid. Fourth, N.J.S.A.
    40:55D-70(a) empowers a board of adjustment to
    "[h]ear and decide appeals" taken from an
    administrative officer, such as a zoning officer. Last,
    the Planning Board was required to render a decision
    on Harz's appeal within 120 days. N.J.S.A. 40:55D-72.
    [Id. at 334-35 (alterations in original).]
    In addition, the Court found that the MLUL "'unambiguously impose[s] a
    binding obligation on the [Board]' to provide Harz with the opportunity to be
    heard." Id. at 335 (alterations in original) (quoting Tumpson, 218 N.J. at 475).
    "Last, because an interested party's right to be heard is inextricably tied to a
    A-1826-18
    43
    party's property rights, we find that the MLUL right to be heard is substantive,
    not procedural." Id. at 335.
    Here, the nature of the substantive right at issue – a
    property right – is clearly identifiable. The right of an
    interested party to appeal the issuance of a zoning
    permit – to have her concerns "heard" – is rooted in
    principles of property rights, specifically the right to
    not be deprived of an interest in one's property without
    process.
    [Id. at 333.]
    After recognizing the existence of the substantive right established in
    N.J.S.A. 40:55D-72 and N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70(a), the Court concluded that "the
    Borough did not violate a substantive right as envisaged under the" NJCRA. Id.
    at 335. The Court noted that Harz had not been denied her right to file appeals
    from the permits, that construction on her neighbor's property ceased when her
    appeals were pending, and the three permits Harz appealed were rescinded. Id.
    at 335-36. As a result, even though the municipal officials had not strictly
    complied with the hearing requirement, Harz "suffered no adverseness to any
    property right she possessed." Id. at 336.
    More recently, in Susko v. Borough of Belmar, 
    458 N.J. Super. 583
     (App.
    Div. 2019), we affirmed a trial court decision that municipal officials violated
    the substantive rights of several plaintiffs within the meaning of the NJCRA
    A-1826-18
    44
    when they enacted an ordinance charging unreasonable beach fees contrary to
    N.J.S.A. 40:61-22.20. That statute provides in relevant part:
    a.    The governing body of any municipality
    bordering on the Atlantic Ocean . . . which owns . . .
    lands bordering on the ocean . . . or easement rights
    therein, for a place of resort for public health and
    recreation and for other public purposes . . . may, in
    order to provide funds to improve, maintain and police
    the same and to protect the same from erosion,
    encroachment and damage by sea or otherwise, and to
    provide facilities and safeguards for public bathing and
    recreation . . . by ordinance . . . provide for the charging
    and collecting of reasonable fees for the registration of
    persons using said lands and bathing facilities, for
    access to the beach and bathing and recreation grounds
    so provided and for the use of the bathing and
    recreation facilities . . . .
    [N.J.S.A. 40:61-22.20(a).]
    The statute was enacted to implement the public trust doctrine. "The
    public trust doctrine refers to the common-law principle that a state holds, in
    trust for the people, ownership, dominion and sovereignty over tidally flowed
    lands extending to the mean high water mark." Susko, 458 N.J. Super. at 590
    (quotation omitted). Under the doctrine, the public has the right to reasonable
    access to the trust lands. Raleigh Ave. Beach Ass'n v. Atlantis Beach Club, Inc.,
    
    185 N.J. 40
    , 51-55 (2005). The right of public access extends to "recreational
    uses, including bathing, swimming, and other shore activities." Borough of
    A-1826-18
    45
    Neptune City v. Borough of Avon-By-The-Sea, 
    61 N.J. 296
    , 309 (1972). "[O]ur
    courts have enforced the public trust doctrine by overturning actions favorin g
    residents over non-residents with regard to access to and fees for using beaches
    and related facilities." Susko, 458 N.J. Super. at 591. For example, in Avon,
    the Court overturned an ordinance that restricted the sale of seasonal beach
    passes to residents, which resulted in non-residents paying disproportionally
    higher fees for daily and monthly passes. Id. at 592 (citing Avon, 
    61 N.J. at 310
    ).
    N.J.S.A. 40:61-22.20(a) "amounts to a delegation to a municipality having
    a dedicated beach . . . of the state's police power over that area [that] indicates
    an affirmation of the state's paramount interest and inherent obligation in
    insuring that such . . . land be equally available for the use of all citizens." Avon,
    
    61 N.J. at 301-02
    .
    Belmar Borough, the defendant in Susko, had previously been found by
    the Law Division to have violated the public trust doctrine by discriminating
    against non-residents through its beach fee schedule and by raising beach
    admission fees, rather than local property taxes, to pay for non-beach related
    expenses. Id. at 592. In 1989, the Law Division ordered Belmar to maintain a
    strict division of its revenue and expenses associated with beach access and
    A-1826-18
    46
    maintenance from its revenue and expenses associated with its general
    municipal operations. Id. at 593.
    After Super Storm Sandy caused extensive damage to Belmar's
    beachfront, the municipality "to avoid raising taxes on its residents . . . doubled
    the parking fees along the street adjacent to the beach, and paid certain non-
    beach-related litigation expenses using money from its beach fund instead of
    from its general fund."   Id. at 594. Several plaintiffs filed suit alleging these
    measures violated the 1989 court order, the public trust doctrine, N.J.S.A. 40:61 -
    22.20(a), and the NJCRA. Ibid.
    The record established that Belmar maintained no parking lot for people
    using the beach, requiring them to park on nearby streets, and did not charge for
    street parking anywhere in the municipality except for the street adjacent to the
    beach.   Id. at 599.   In light of these circumstances, we concluded it was
    reasonable for the trial court to find the beachfront parking fees were, in effect,
    beach access fees. Id. at 600-01. We affirmed the trial court's finding that the
    one-hundred percent rise in parking fees, the revenue from which the borough
    allocated to its general fund, was not imposed to pay for beach-related expenses,
    but intentionally and improperly to increase the borough's general revenues to
    avoid taxes on property owners. Id. at 600. We also concluded this practice
    A-1826-18
    47
    constituted the imposition of unreasonable beach fees in violation of N.J.S.A.
    40:61-22.20. Id. at 601.
    With respect to the plaintiffs' NJCRA claims, we found that N.J.S.A.
    40:61-22.20's "statutory mandate that municipalities charge 'reasonable' beach
    fees states a substantive right of members of the public." Susko, 458 N.J. Super.
    at 608 (footnote omitted). We reasoned that "[i]t is a 'clearly identifiable" right,
    rooted in the historic and fundamental principle of public access to the beach."
    Id. at 608. Because the plaintiffs had paid the unreasonable parking fee, we
    found they had suffered a deprivation of a substantive right within the meaning
    of the NJCRA and were entitled to the award of attorney's fees and costs. Id. at
    609.11
    Applying the principles announced in these precedents, we conclude that
    N.J.S.A. 40:55D-90(b) creates a substantive right within the meaning of the
    NJCRA of property owners to develop their property free from an illegal
    development moratorium. As established in Harz, the MLUL, of which N.J.S.A.
    11
    In light of our conclusion that Belmar's violation of N.J.S.A. 40:61-22.20
    deprived plaintiffs of a substantive right within the meaning of NJCRA, we did
    not reach a decision with respect to whether the public trust doctrine creates
    substantive rights protected by the NJCRA. Id. at 590. We rejected, for lack of
    sufficient proof, plaintiffs' claims that the borough charged unreasonable beach-
    badge fees and that N.J.S.A. 40:61-22.20 creates a substantive right to municipal
    compliance with certain accounting practices. Id. at 609.
    A-1826-18
    48
    40:55D-90(b) is a part, can be the source of substantive rights within the
    meaning of the NJCRA. We discern in N.J.S.A. 40:55D-90(b) a legislative
    intent to confer a substantive right to property owners. We recognize that the
    express terms of the statute regulate only municipal actions. However, it is
    evident that the purpose of the probation on development moratoria is intended
    to protect the rights of the property owners who have a fundamental right to
    develop their property consistent with zoning regulations.
    N.J.S.A. 40:55D-90(b), like the provision at issue in Susko, represents a
    delegation of the State's police power to municipalities with respect to the
    regulation of land. That delegated power must be exercised by municipal
    officials consistent with the underlying public right it is designed to protect and
    the express limitations imposed by the legislature.       The Legislature, in the
    delegation of its authority, prohibited development moratoria. Property owners
    are more than merely within the zone of those who benefit from the statute. The
    purpose of N.J.S.A. 40:55D-90(b) is to protect the rights of property owners to
    use their land by prohibiting municipal officials from abandoning their authority
    to allocate sewer capacity – an essential element of land development – by
    putting that authority in the hands of private parties. Because the right to be free
    A-1826-18
    49
    from illegal development moratoria is "inextricably tied" to a property right, it
    is substantive, not procedural. See Harz, 234 N.J. at 335.
    The substantive right protected by N.J.S.A. 40:55D-90(b) is neither vague
    nor amorphous. The statute imposes an unambiguous binding obligation on
    municipal officials that is readily enforceable by the judiciary. Each of the
    factors established in Harz is satisfied here.
    The Township Defendants recognize that they are bound by the Supreme
    Court's conclusion that they violated N.J.S.A. 40:55D-90(b) and maintained an
    illegal de facto development moratorium when they denied plaintiff's
    application for sewer capacity without properly exercising their discretion as
    required by the Township's sewer allocation ordinance. In addition, we find
    ample support in the record for the trial court's conclusion that after the Supreme
    Court's remand, the Township Defendants effectively continued their de facto
    development moratorium by failing to comply with the Supreme Court's remand
    order.
    As explained in detail above, on remand the Township Defendants
    initially failed to recall any unused sewer capacity from Merck, Bellemead, or
    other holders of large amounts of unused capacity, despite undisputed evidence
    that they had not carried out the proposed development of their properties and
    A-1826-18
    50
    had no then-present intention of doing so. In addition, although it is undisputed
    that Merck had relocated its headquarters from the Township to Union County
    and did not intend to complete the approved second-phase of the development
    of its property, the Township Committee failed to give these circumstances
    "significant weight," as directed by the Supreme Court.           388 Route 22
    Readington Realty, 221 N.J. at 347. The Township Committee also failed to
    consider any proposed development by a property owner, other than plaintiff,
    whose application for the allocation of sewer capacity was denied by the
    Township Defendants under their prior "policy" of refusing to consider the
    recapture of sewer capacity in violation of N.J.S.A. 40:55D-90(b).
    The Township Defendants failed to recapture the capacity they allocated
    to National Realty while this matter was pending in the Supreme Court.
    Although the Township Defendants had told plaintiff that not a single gallon of
    capacity was available for the development of its property, the allocation to
    National Realty including 3,000 gpd for the expansion of an existing Walmart,
    exposed the falsity of that statement. Had the Township Defendants recaptured
    the 3,000 gpd they allocated to National Realty, that amount, when combined
    with the 9,236 gpd previously offered to plaintiff, would have been sufficient to
    satisfy plaintiff's request for 11,260 gpd for the development of its property.
    A-1826-18
    51
    We recognize that plaintiff ultimately succeeded in freeing sufficient
    sewer capacity to develop its property when Bellemead tendered 11,260 gpd of
    capacity to the Township for use by plaintiff. We do not find this development
    to be the equivalent of the circumstances in Harz, where the Court found that
    the plaintiff did not suffer a deprivation of her substantive right within the
    meaning of the NJCRA.
    Harz's appeals to municipal officials were promptly addressed – perhaps,
    in Harz's view, too promptly because relief was granted to her without a hearing
    in several instances. Harz, 234 N.J. at 335-36. Here, municipal officials did not
    promptly address plaintiff's request for sewer capacity. To the contrary, they
    initially refused to exercise their discretion to determine whether to recapture
    unused sewer capacity consistent with their illegal policy of requiring the
    consent of the holders of capacity to any recapture. After plaintiff filed suit to
    compel the Township Defendants to consider its request for sewer capacity as
    required by the ordinance, they continued to maintain their de facto development
    moratorium by refusing to undertake a meaningful analysis of whether capacity
    should be recaptured from the property owners holding large amounts of unused
    capacity.   Even after a remand from the Supreme Court, the Township
    Defendants did not meaningfully apply the factors the Court directed them to
    A-1826-18
    52
    consider when deciding whether to recapture unused sewer capacity, including
    the fact that Merck had abandoned its headquarters in the Township and no
    longer intended to develop its property. The record supports the trial court's
    conclusion that the Township Defendants repeatedly failed to comply with
    remand orders, frustrating plaintiff's right to pursue the sewer capacity it needed
    to develop its property as permitted by the zoning ordinance.
    Unlike the property owner in Harz, plaintiff was compelled to spend years
    in litigation with the Township Defendants, expending significant time and
    resources to secure the substantive right granted to it by N.J.S.A. 40:55D-90(b).
    Although Harz also filed suit to compel municipal officials to hold a hearing,
    "[n]othing in the record suggests that had Harz not filed her action . . . the
    Planning Board would have denied her a hearing or that the . . . action was the
    catalyst for the hearing" that was ultimately held on Harz's appeal of the zoning
    permit. Id. at 337. There can be no doubt from the record that in the absence
    of plaintiff's long and costly suit, the Township Defendants would not have
    abandoned the de facto development moratorium they had maintained for
    decades and Bellemead would not have tendered sufficient sewer capacity to
    address plaintiff's development plans.
    A-1826-18
    53
    We reject the Township Defendants' argument that plaintiff cannot prove
    a deprivation of its substantive rights absent proof that it obtained approval of
    its development plans and was prevented from undertaking the development
    because of the Township's de facto development moratorium.             The record
    establishes that plaintiff's attempt to obtain sewer capacity was frustrated for
    years by the actions of municipal officials – in maintaining a de facto
    development moratorium, in refusing to comply with court orders, and in failing
    to meaningfully exercise their discretion with respect to plaintiff's application
    for sewer capacity. There is sufficient evidence in this record to support the
    conclusion that plaintiff was harmed by the existence, maintenance, and
    prolongation of the Township's de facto development moratorium, even in the
    absence of fully approved, but unrealized, development plans for its property.
    Amici argue that the Legislature did not intend the NJCRA to be a
    substitute for an action in lieu of prerogative writs, as the avenue for challenging
    municipal action or inaction under the MLUL. We do not agree with the
    proposition that the Legislature intended to preclude relief under the NJCRA for
    the deprivation of a substantive right by municipal officials where, as is the case
    here, a property owner may also obtain relief in a prerogative writs action based
    on the same misdeeds of the municipal officials.
    A-1826-18
    54
    A prerogative writs action is intended to correct inaction or improper
    actions of municipal officials. R. 4:69-1 to -7. The NJCRA, on the other hand,
    is intended to compensate parties for a past or ongoing deprivation of a
    substantive right by municipal officials under the MLUL. The NJCRA provides
    relief beyond that available in a prerogative writs action – damages and
    attorney's fees and costs – where the actions of municipal officials result in a
    deprivation of a substantive right created by a provision of the MLUL. We note
    that in Harz and Susko, the plaintiffs filed both a prerogative writs action and
    claims under the NJCRA. See Harz, 234 N.J. at 325; Susko, 458 N.J. Super. at
    594.12 In neither instance did the court find that the plaintiffs' ability to seek
    relief under the NJCRA was precluded by their filing of a prerogative writs
    action.
    As is evident in the record, plaintiff's ultimate success at having 11,260
    gpd of sewer capacity released for the potential development of its property does
    not compensate plaintiff for the damages it suffered during the prolonged period
    12
    Although the opinion in Susko refers only to plaintiffs' having filed a
    complaint, we examined the record in the Susko matter and confirmed that the
    complaint was styled as an action in lieu of prerogative writs.
    A-1826-18
    55
    it was deprived of the opportunity to have its application for sewer capacity
    meaningfully considered by the Township Defendants.
    We do not intend to hold that every violation by municipal officials of a
    provision of the MLUL supports an award of damages and attorney's fees under
    the NJCRA. Nor do we intend to suggest that the reversal on appeal of every
    decision of a zoning officer, board of adjustment, planning board, or other
    municipal official or body constitutes the deprivation of a substantive right
    within the meaning of the NJCRA. The determination of whether a provision of
    the MLUL creates a substantive right, the deprivation of which constitutes a
    violation of the NJCRA, requires a careful examination of the relevant provision
    of the MLUL, the intent of the Legislature when enacting that provision, and
    consideration of whether the actions of the municipal officials constituted a
    deprivation of that right and harmed the person asserting the right. 13
    The August 24, 2018 order is, therefore, reversed. The February 2, 2017
    order granting summary judgment to plaintiff on its NJCRA claims against the
    Township Defendants is reinstated.
    13
    In light of our holding, we do not reach the question of whether plaintiff
    established under the NJCRA a denial of its substantive due process rights under
    the State and federal Constitutions. Rezem Family Assocs., L.P. v. Borough of
    Millstone, 
    423 N.J. Super. 103
    , 114-15 (App. Div. 2011).
    A-1826-18
    56
    The Township Defendants did not cross-appeal from the January 12, 2018
    order granting plaintiff attorney's fees and costs on its NJCRA claims for the
    period up to March 31, 2017. In light of our reversal of the August 24, 2018
    order, the January 12, 2018 order is reinstated, as is the February 2, 2018 order
    requiring immediate payment of the amounts awarded in the January 12, 2018
    order.
    Plaintiff appealed both the March 19, 2018 order staying the February 2,
    2018 order and the October 1, 2018 order denying reconsideration of the March
    19, 2018 stay. We vacate the March 19, 2018 order and the October 1, 2018
    order effective the latter of thirty days from the date of this opinion or resolution
    by the Supreme Court of any petition for certification filed in this matter.
    We are mindful of the concerns raised by amici regarding the practical
    effect on municipal finances of large awards of attorney's fees and costs for
    violations of the NJCRA. They argue that application of the NJCRA to claims
    under the MLUL is bad public policy because municipal officials will be curbed
    in the exercise of their discretion by the threat of the potential monetary
    consequences of any misstep. It is the prerogative of the Legislature, not the
    courts, to balance the interests in compensating parties for the violation of their
    A-1826-18
    57
    substantive rights with the fiscal integrity of municipalities.     The NJCRA
    represents the legislative determination of how that balance is to be struck.
    In light of our reinstatement of the February 2, 2017 order granting
    summary judgment to plaintiff on its NJCRA claims, we remand this matter for
    a determination of plaintiff's damages and consideration of any application made
    by plaintiff for attorney's fees and costs for the period after March 31, 2017.
    III.
    We are not persuaded by plaintiff's arguments that the February 2, 2017
    orders granting summary judgment to Bellemead and Merck should be reversed.
    We agree with the trial court's conclusion that Bellemead's tender of 11,260 gpd
    of sewer capacity conditioned on its transfer to plaintiff represents all of the
    relief plaintiff can obtain from Bellemead.      The trial court took adequate
    measures to ensure plaintiff had a fair opportunity to use the 11,260 gpd of sewer
    capacity for the development of its property by insulating plaintiff from
    recapture for a two-year period to permit the submission of a complete
    development application, and an additional year to have the application
    approved. Plaintiff has secured the relief the Supreme Court contemplated when
    it remanded this matter to the Township Committee to determine "whether any
    capacity can be recaptured to satisfy plaintiff's development needs." 388 Route
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    58
    22 Readington Realty, 221 N.J. at 347. Summary judgment was, therefore,
    appropriately granted to Bellemead. In addition, given Bellemead's tender of
    sewer capacity to plaintiff sufficient to satisfy its development needs, plaintiff
    is entitled to no further relief from Merck. 14
    While plaintiff seeks the court-ordered recapture of all unused sewer
    capacity held by all defendants, followed by ongoing judicial oversight of the
    Township's sewer capacity allotment practices, it cannot demonstrate an
    entitlement to such expansive relief.        As discussed above, the Legislature
    delegated to municipal officials the discretion to recapture and allocate sewer
    capacity. We, like the trial court, see nothing in the record that would warrant
    the expansive court-ordered recapture of unused sewer capacity or the ongoing
    judicial supervision of municipal affairs sought by plaintiff.
    As the trial court noted, in light of the Township having recaptured 77,900
    gpd of unused sewer capacity from Merck, 18,425 gpd from Ryland, and 9,236
    14
    There is no support in law for plaintiff's demand that Bellemead or Merck
    transfer sewer capacity directly to plaintiff. The ordinance unequivocally
    provides that holders of sewer capacity may not transfer capacity to other
    property owners. Allocation of sewer capacity rests in the discretion of the
    Township Committee, subject to the restraints established in legal precedents
    and the township ordinance. In addition, the record contains no evidence that
    plaintiff submitted a formal application for the development of its property or
    that it secured approval for the development. Transfer of sewer capacity to
    plaintiff would be premature in these circumstances.
    A-1826-18
    59
    gpd from other property owners, along with the capacity reserved by the
    Township to meet affordable housing obligations, there is an ample supply of
    unused sewer capacity to support development in the Township. We trust
    Township officials have conformed their policies and practices to the controlling
    legal principles governing the exercise of their discretion with respect to the
    recapture and allocation of sewer capacity. Of course, any property owner
    aggrieved by a decision of the Township Defendants with respect to the
    allocation of sewer capacity in the future may seek judicial relief as the need
    arises.
    IV.
    Our careful review of the record revealed no grounds on which to reverse
    the trial court's November 16, 2018 order denying plaintiff's motion for
    attorney's fees and costs associated with the Township Defendants' delay in
    moving for reconsideration of the February 2, 2017 summary judgment order.
    We have recognized that, in some circumstances, a trial court has the
    inherent authority, independent of its authority granted under Rule 1:4-8, to
    award attorney's fees for unreasonable litigation conduct. See e.g., Triffin v.
    Automatic Data Processing, Inc., 
    394 N.J. Super. 237
    , 251 (App. Div. 2007)
    ("Separate and distinct from court rules and statutes, courts possess an inherent
    A-1826-18
    60
    power to sanction an individual for committing a fraud on the court.").
    However, "[e]ven assuming the existence of such an inherent power, it must be
    exercised with restraint and discretion because of its potency." Dziubek v.
    Schumann, 
    275 N.J. Super. 428
    , 439 (App. Div. 1994). "[T]he imposition of
    such a sanction is generally not imposed under this power without a finding
    generally that the attorney's conduct constituted or was tantamount to bad faith."
    
    Id. at 440
    .
    We see no error in the trial court's conclusion that sanctions were not
    warranted because the delay in the Township Defendants' moving for
    reconsideration was attributable to a change of counsel and the necessity to
    address plaintiff's demand for immediate payment of the interim award of
    attorney's fees. The trial court acted well within its discretion when finding, in
    effect, that the Township Defendants did not engage in bad faith.
    We also note that the February 2, 2017 order granting summary judgment
    to plaintiff on its NJCRA claims was interlocutory. "By definition, an order that
    'does not finally determine a cause of action but only decides some intervening
    matter pertaining to the cause[,] and which requires further steps . . . to enable
    the court to adjudicate the cause on the merits[,]' is interlocutory." Moon v.
    Warren Haven Nursing Home, 
    182 N.J. 507
    , 512 (2005) (alterations in original)
    A-1826-18
    61
    (quoting Black’s Law Dictionary 815 (6th ed. 1990)); see also Wein v. Morris,
    
    194 N.J. 364
     (2008). Plaintiff's claims for damages, attorney's fees, and costs
    were unresolved at the time that the trial court entered the February 2, 2017
    order granting summary judgment on plaintiff's NJCRA claims.
    A trial court "has the inherent power, to be exercised in its sound
    discretion, to review, revise, reconsider and modify its interlocutory orders at
    any time prior to the entry of final judgment." Johnson v. Cyklop Strapping
    Corp., 
    220 N.J. Super. 250
    , 257 (App. Div. 1987). It was entirely appropriate
    for the Township Defendants to move for reconsideration of the February 2,
    2017 order prior to entry of a final judgment by the trial court.
    V.
    After the parties filed their briefs, we granted Bellemead's motion to
    supplement the record with information establishing that on February 28, 2020,
    plaintiff's property was sold by order of the bankruptcy trustee. SB Building
    Associates Limited Partnership (SB), the sole member and equity interest holder
    of plaintiff, challenged the validity of the sale, arguing that it was not sold "for
    value," as required by federal law. On October 15, 2021, the Third Circuit
    affirmed the District Court's dismissal of SB's challenge as moot. In re 388
    A-1826-18
    62
    Route 22 Readington Realty Holdings, LLC, No. 20-2629 (3d Cir. Oct. 15,
    2021). The court subsequently denied a petition for en banc review.
    After the sale of the property, Bellemead and Merck moved to dismiss as
    moot plaintiff's appeal of the trial court orders granting summary judgment in
    their favor. They argue plaintiff no longer has standing to assert its claims
    because it no longer holds title to the property. The Township Defendants joins
    the motion for the reasons argued by Bellemead and Merck, and also argues
    plaintiff, as a bankrupt corporation, does not have standing to conti nue this
    appeal.
    Standing requires a plaintiff to have: (1) "a sufficient stake in the outcome
    of the litigation;" (2) "a real adverseness with respect to the subject matter;" and
    (3) "a substantial likelihood [of] suffer[ing] harm in the event of an unfavorable
    decision." In re Camden Cty., 
    170 N.J. 439
    , 449 (2002). Our courts "have
    traditionally taken a generous view of standing in most contexts." In re: State
    Contract A71188, 
    422 N.J. Super. 275
    , 289 (App. Div. 2011). "A financial
    interest in the outcome is sufficient to confer standing." EnviroFinance Grp.,
    LLC v. Evt'l Barrier Co., LLC, 
    440 N.J. Super. 325
    , 340 (App. Div. 2015).
    As explained above, Bellemead's tender of 11,260 gpd of sewer capacity
    for use by plaintiff mooted any further claims for relief from Bellemead and
    A-1826-18
    63
    Merck. On that ground, we affirmed the February 2, 2017 orders granting
    summary judgment in favor of Bellemead and Merck on all claims asserted
    against them. Their motion to dismiss the appeal is, therefore, dismissed as
    moot.
    In addition, although plaintiff filed for bankruptcy protection, the
    bankruptcy court authorized it to pursue this appeal. Reinstatement of the
    February 2, 2017 order granting summary judgment to plaintiff on its NJCRA
    claims allows it to pursue damages, attorney's fees, and costs on remand. Any
    award plaintiff might achieve on remand will, presumably, inure to the benefit
    of its bankruptcy estate for distribution as directed by the bankruptcy court, as
    will the nearly one million dollars awarded to plaintiff in the January 12, 2018
    order we reinstated.
    While plaintiff's pursuit of sewer capacity may have been mooted by its
    loss of title to the property, the Township Defendants' violations of the NJCRA
    occurred while plaintiff held title to the property. Its subsequent loss of the
    property does not moot plaintiff's right to seek damages it suffered when the
    Township Defendants thwarted its intended development of the property. We,
    therefore, deny the Township Defendants' motion to dismiss this appeal for want
    of standing.
    A-1826-18
    64
    VI.
    To the extent we have not specifically addressed any of plaintiff's
    remaining contentions, we conclude they lack sufficient merit to warrant
    discussion in a written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E). Because our decisions leave
    some of plaintiff's claims unresolved, the November 16, 2018 final disposition
    order is vacated.
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part, vacated in part, and remanded for
    further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.
    A-1826-18
    65