Rosalie Bacon v. New Jersey State Department , 443 N.J. Super. 24 ( 2015 )


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  •                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-2452-14T1
    ROSALIE BACON, individually and on
    behalf of G.P., Z.P., J.B., M.B.,
    D.B., and Z.H.; JOSEPH BARUFFI,
    individually and on behalf of J.B.;
    ELIZABETH CULLEN, individually and
    APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    on behalf of T.C.; EDIE RILEY,
    individually and on behalf of S.R.;          November 6, 2015
    ARNETTA RIDGEWAY and CHRISTOPHER
    GLASS, individually and on behalf of        APPELLATE DIVISION
    J.G., F.G., and D.G.; COMMERCIAL,
    HAMMONTON, LITTLE EGG HARBOR, MAURICE
    RIVER, OCEAN, QUINTON, UPPER DEERFIELD,
    WALLINGTON, BUENA REGIONAL, CLAYTON,
    EGG HARBOR CITY, LAKEHURST, LAKEWOOD,
    LAWRENCE and WOODBINE SCHOOL DISTRICTS,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    NEW JERSEY STATE DEPARTMENT
    OF EDUCATION,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    ____________________________________
    Argued September 30, 2015 – Decided November 6, 2015
    Before Judges Alvarez, Haas and Manahan.
    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Law Division, Mercer County, Docket No. L-
    1989-14.
    David G.      Sciarra argued the cause for
    appellants   (Education Law Center and Jacob &
    Chiarello,    LLC, attorneys; Mr. Sciarra and
    Theresa S.   Luhm, on the briefs).
    Donna Arons, Deputy Attorney General, argued
    the cause for respondent (John J. Hoffman,
    Acting Attorney General, attorney; Michelle L.
    Miller,   Assistant   Attorney   General,   of
    counsel; Ms. Arons, on the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    HAAS, J.A.D.
    Plaintiffs,     a   group     of   fifteen   school    districts,    and
    parents and children from those districts, appeal from the Law
    Division's December 15, 2014 order dismissing their complaint.
    Plaintiffs brought the complaint as a summary action "to enforce
    agency orders" under Rule 4:67-6(a)(2).            Plaintiffs sought to
    compel defendant New Jersey State Department of Education (the
    Department) to provide "the funding and high quality preschool
    provided by the School Funding Reform Act of 2008 [SFRA], along
    with facilities improvements and other measures . . . ."
    The trial judge ruled that plaintiffs could not pursue the
    summary   action   under   Rule   4:67-6(a)(2)   because    the   district-
    specific needs assessments which they sought to enforce did not
    require the Department to fully fund the districts under the
    SFRA or otherwise provide for specific relief and, therefore,
    there were no orders capable of being enforced under the rule.
    Having carefully reviewed the record and arguments on appeal, we
    affirm.
    2                           A-2452-14T1
    I.
    In December 1997, twenty school districts, known as the
    "Bacon districts,"1 filed a complaint in the Chancery Division
    against the Department, the Commissioner of the Department (the
    Commissioner), and several State officials.                             Bacon v. N.J. State
    Dep't    of     Educ.,      398    N.J.      Super.       600,    606     (App.     Div.     2008),
    certif. denied, 
    210 N.J. 218
    (2012).                            The districts were "rural
    and property-poor" and sought a declaratory judgment that the
    Comprehensive Educational Improvement and Financing Act of 1996,
    N.J.S.A. 18A:7F-1 to -42 (CEIFA), failed to provide a thorough
    and efficient education to their students, in violation of the
    New Jersey Constitution.                
    Ibid. In their complaint,
               the        Bacon    districts         sought     State
    "funding      equivalent          to   that    provided          to    the    State's       richest
    school    districts."             
    Ibid. Essentially, the Bacon
       districts
    wanted     to    be      funded        in    the        same     manner       as    their     urban
    counterparts,         the    Abbott         districts.           
    Id. at 606-07.
            Under
    CEIFA,     all     districts           with        concentrations             of    impoverished
    students received State aid to address the unique educational
    difficulties       that      face       such       students.            
    Id. at 605.
           All
    districts classified as Abbott districts received an additional
    1
    The number of districts                      involved         in     this    litigation        has
    continuously varied.
    3                                       A-2452-14T1
    type of aid, known as parity aid, which was "intended to support
    the per pupil expenditure level of the Abbott [d]istricts at the
    level    of"    New     Jersey's      wealthiest    districts.         
    Ibid. (citing Abbott v.
    Burke, 
    153 N.J. 480
    , 567 (1998) (Abbott V)).
    In February 1998, the parties entered into a consent order
    and     jurisdiction          was    transferred    to     the     Commissioner,      who
    transmitted the matters to the Office of Administrative Law.2
    
    Id. at 607.
          A     bifurcated       hearing     was    held     before    an
    Administrative Law Judge (ALJ).                   
    Ibid. At the first
    phase of
    the hearings, the ALJ determined that the districts had been
    using their "CEIFA funding appropriately."                    
    Id. at 608.
    During      the    second      phase   of    the    hearings,    the    districts
    needed to show "that educational deficiencies existed and the
    deficiencies          could    not    be   remedied,       under    current    law    and
    funding levels, by different programmatic and fiscal choices."
    
    Ibid. The ALJ determined
    that five districts needed additional
    funding; however, the Commissioner subsequently found that only
    one district needed additional funding and that CEIFA funding
    was sufficient with respect to the other districts.                        
    Ibid. 2 After the
    Commissioner and the Department filed motions to
    dismiss the petition for lack of standing, "the petition was
    amended to add several students attending some of the school
    districts and their parents." 
    Id. at 607.
    4                                 A-2452-14T1
    Eight       districts    ultimately           appealed    the   Commissioner's
    decision to the State Board of Education (the Board).                           
    Id. at 608-09.
         The Board issued its final decision on January 4, 2006.
    
    Id. at 609.
         Overall,      the   Board      found     that   Bacon   district
    students     were    "not     being    afforded       a   thorough     and    efficient
    education."        
    Ibid. Additionally, the Board
    determined that "the
    children in [the Bacon districts] had 'special needs arising
    from the socioeconomic conditions in the districts[,]'" which
    were not being addressed by the available programming.                            
    Ibid. The Board "recognize[d]
    that CEIFA has provided these districts
    with more fiscal resources than ha[d] been available to them
    previously" and that "progress ha[d] been made under CEIFA to
    improve the quality of the education" in the Bacon districts.
    In spite of those gains, the Board still concluded that the
    students      were    being    deprived        of     a   thorough    and     efficient
    education.        The Board also determined that CEIFA had created a
    fragmented funding system that failed students statewide, not
    just in the Abbott and Bacon districts.
    After determining that there were constitutional violations
    in the Bacon districts, the Board examined the remedies that
    would      best    address    the     specific       needs     of   those    districts.
    Significantly, the Board rejected the idea
    that merely providing the [Bacon] districts
    with the same fiscal resources that are
    5                                   A-2452-14T1
    provided to the Abbott [d]istricts will
    ensure that the students of these districts
    are   in   fact  afforded  the   educational
    opportunity to which they are entitled.
    While poor, the districts involved here are
    not identical to the districts that have
    been classified as Abbott [d]istricts.   The
    very fact that they are not urban means that
    they face a unique set of circumstances that
    are different from those confronting the
    poor urban districts.
    As an alternative to providing the Bacon districts with the same
    funding as Abbott districts, the Board directed the Commissioner
    to supervise the Department in "develop[ing] a design for a
    needs assessment to be performed in" the Bacon districts that
    would     focus   on    the   unique   problems    that   confronted    the
    individual districts.
    In      response,     the   Commissioner      "recommended   awaiting
    executive and legislative action on a new funding formula" then
    being considered by the Governor and the Legislature.               
    Bacon, supra
    , 398 N.J. Super. at 613.             The new funding formula was
    enacted in 2008 as the SFRA, N.J.S.A. 18A:7F-43 to -63.                
    Ibid. Whereas CEIFA created
    a fragmented funding system, SFRA removed
    references to Abbott districts, 
    id. at 613,
    n.10, and applied
    one uniform funding formula to all 618 school districts in New
    Jersey.    
    Id. at 615.
       Under SFRA:
    [T]he Department [would] calculate how much
    it costs to meet the constitutional mandate
    of affording every student in this [s]tate a
    thorough and efficient education. The State
    6                          A-2452-14T1
    then [would] base[] its share of the
    requirement by the wealth of a district;
    poorer   districts [would]   get  a  higher
    percentage of their educational budget from
    the State.
    [Ibid.]
    Before SFRA was enacted, the Bacon districts appealed the
    Board's 2006 decision to this court.                 
    Id. at 612.
              Plaintiffs
    requested that the court "grant them status comparable to Abbott
    districts      and    award[ing]   them       the   same    financial       resources
    provided to their urban counterparts . . . ."                   
    Id. at 615.
                We
    declined to provide such relief.                Instead, we deferred to the
    Board's approach of individualized needs assessments, referring
    to interim judicial funding as "a last resort."                     
    Id. at 616-17.
    We   felt   it    particularly     appropriate       to     avoid   a     judicially-
    compelled funding remedy given the recent enactment of SFRA.
    
    Id. at 617.
             As a result, we "direct[ed] the Commissioner to
    comply with the Board's final decision and proceed forthwith to
    design   and     perform   a   needs   assessment      of    each    of    the     Bacon
    districts . . . and . . . to further determine whether . . .
    [SFRA's]    remedial       measures    afford       students        in    the      Bacon
    districts" a thorough and efficient education.                 
    Id. at 618.
    In compliance with our directive, the Department designed
    and implemented a comprehensive, multi-phased needs assessment
    in 2008.    The needs assessments culminated in a report issued by
    7                                     A-2452-14T1
    the Commissioner on September 14, 2009.         The report consisted of
    sixteen     individualized   assessments   of     each     of    the      Bacon
    districts that summarized the results of site visits, evaluated
    the adequacy of the facilities, evaluated the effect of SFRA on
    the     district's   funding,    and   provided          conclusions         and
    recommendations for each district.
    As directed by the Board, the needs assessments focused on
    the unique issues that affected each individual district at that
    time.     With respect to SFRA, the assessments detailed the amount
    of aid that each district actually received for                 fiscal year
    (FY)08-09, the anticipated level of funding for FY09-10, and how
    the districts intended to use the funding.          Notably, the needs
    assessment lacked a global statement about all of the Bacon
    districts or whether fully funding SFRA would provide the Bacon
    district students with a thorough and efficient education.
    Pursuant to Rule 2:4-1(b) and 
    Bacon, supra
    , 398 N.J. Super.
    at 619, plaintiffs could have appealed the needs assessments.
    However, no appeal was filed.
    The State reduced SFRA funding for the 2011 fiscal year.
    Abbott v. Burke, 
    206 N.J. 332
    , 344-46 (2011) (Abbott XXI).                     On
    September 2, 2011, the districts that had appealed the Board's
    decision to this court filed a motion to enforce litigants'
    rights pursuant to Rule 1:10-3, seeking an order directing that
    8                                   A-2452-14T1
    the   Bacon    districts    receive   full   funding   under   SFRA.      In    a
    January 12, 2012 order, we denied the motion because "[t]he
    specific relief requested on this motion to enforce litigant's
    rights . . . [was] neither encompassed nor contemplated in our
    [previous] decision . . . ."          We further stated:
    To the extent movants' instant application
    seeks redress from the September 14, 2009
    final   administrative    decisions    of  the
    Commissioner . . . as inconsistent with, or
    violative of, the Bacon holding, their
    recourse was a direct appeal therefrom
    . . . .     To the extent movants seek[] to
    enforce, or compel compliance with, any
    aspect    of   the    September     14,   2009
    administrative agency determinations, their
    recourse is by way of summary proceeding
    pursuant to Rule 4:67-6.[3]
    Plaintiffs     took    no   further    action    until   approximately
    September 8, 2014 when fifteen of the original twenty Bacon
    districts filed a verified complaint and order to show cause
    under Rule 4:67-6 in the Law Division.                Plaintiffs framed the
    complaint as:
    an action to enforce final determinations by
    [the Department] . . . that the funding and
    high quality preschool provided by [SFRA],
    along with facilities improvements and other
    measures, will afford students in [Bacon]
    districts a thorough and efficient education
    .   .   .  remediating   the  constitutional
    violation found by [the Board] and upheld by
    3
    On May 7, 2012, the Supreme Court denied plaintiffs' petition
    for certification from this order. Bacon v. N.J. State Dep't of
    Educ., 
    210 N.J. 218
    (2012).
    9                               A-2452-14T1
    the Superior          Court,          Appellate        Division
    . . . .
    The   relief         sought    by   plaintiffs          was    broad.        Plaintiffs
    requested an order directing the Department to (1) calculate the
    aid that would be provided to the Bacon districts under SFRA for
    the     2014-15       school        year   and        subsequent      years,     send      those
    calculations           to     the     Legislature,            "and     seek     supplemental
    appropriations as may be necessary to ensure the provision of
    necessary funding"; (2) calculate the preschool aid that the
    Bacon    districts          would    receive       under      SFRA    to    allow    them   "to
    implement high quality preschool for all three- and four-year
    olds    .    .    .    no    later     than      the     2019-20       school    year";      (3)
    "[d]evelop and implement district-specific plans for facilities
    improvements and financing as may be necessary and consistent
    with the Educational Facilities Construction and Financing Act
    (EFCFA), N.J.S.A. 18A:7G-1 et seq., commencing in the 2015-16
    school      year";      (4)    "[u]ndertake            such    other       district-specific
    remedial measures as identified in the 2009 assessments or as
    otherwise necessary to ensure the effective and efficient use of
    funds in the districts' budgets;" (5) "[a]ward attorneys' fees
    to [plaintiffs] pursuant to N.J.S.A. 10:6-2[(f)]"; and (6) grant
    plaintiffs         "[s]uch      other      relief        as    the     [c]ourt      may     deem
    appropriate           and     necessary       to       ensure        remediation      of    the
    constitutional violation found in this litigation."
    10                                   A-2452-14T1
    On   November     7,    2014,    the    Department    filed    a    motion      to
    dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim.                            The trial
    judge granted the Department's motion on December 15, 2014.
    In   her   oral        decision,    the    judge     focused       on     whether
    plaintiffs could use a Rule 4:67-6 summary proceeding to obtain
    their requested relief.              She characterized plaintiffs' requested
    relief as "sweeping," and expressed concern about the limited
    record in this case compared to the records before the Supreme
    Court in the Abbott cases, specifically Abbott XXI.
    With respect to the procedural issue, the judge noted that
    Rule 4:67-6 is a "very narrow rule" that was "never intended to
    supplant other jurisdictional exercises by [S]tate agencies."
    Specifically, the judge highlighted that "there was never any
    finding as to what level of funding under SFRA was essential to
    provide     a   [thorough      and    efficient   education]     in   [the        Bacon]
    districts" in the 2009 needs assessments.                     The judge further
    noted that the needs assessments lacked "directory language," an
    "omnibus order," or a global conclusion "that full funding of
    SFRA is necessary for a thorough and efficient education in each
    one of the Bacon districts."              As a result, the judge determined
    that    a   summary      proceeding       under    Rule     4:67-6    was       not    an
    appropriate vehicle to obtain plaintiffs' requested relief and
    11                                    A-2452-14T1
    granted     the    Department's           motion       to    dismiss.          This     appeal
    followed.
    II.
    We employ a plenary standard of review over a trial court's
    decision to grant a Rule 4:6-2(e) motion to dismiss for failure
    to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.                             Rezem Family
    Associates, L.P. v. Borough of Millstone, 
    423 N.J. Super. 103
    ,
    114    (App.    Div.),     certif.      denied,        
    208 N.J. 366
      (2011).        The
    narrow    issue     presented        in    this       case    is     whether      plaintiffs
    properly brought this action under Rule 4:67-6(a)(2).                                  For the
    following reasons, we conclude they did not and that therefore
    the trial judge properly dismissed plaintiffs' complaint.
    Under Rule 4:67-6, an administrative agency or a non-agency
    party can institute a summary proceeding in Superior Court to
    enforce    an     agency    order.         If    the    plaintiff        is   a   non-agency
    party, then the rule applies to "all such enforcement actions
    brought by a party to the administrative proceeding in whose
    favor a written order or determination was entered affording
    that party specific relief."                R. 4:67-6(a)(2). (emphasis added).
    Rule    4:67-6     exists      "to   provide         judicial      remedies       in   aid    of
    agency    orders       where   necessary."             In    re    A-1   Jersey    Moving       &
    Storage,       Inc.,     309     N.J.     Super.       33,    40    (App.      Div.     1998).
    Additionally,          parties    cannot        challenge         the    validity       of    an
    12                                     A-2452-14T1
    administrative order collaterally in a Rule 4:67-6 proceeding.
    State Dep't of Envtl. Prot. v. Mazza & Sons, Inc., 406 N.J.
    Super. 13, 23 (App. Div. 2009).
    We have observed that Rule 4:67-6 enforcement actions are
    analogous      to   "a    motion       for   enforcement         of     litigant's        rights
    under Rule 1:10-3 in a judicial proceeding."                            
    Mazza, supra
    , 406
    N.J. Super. at 29 (citing State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v.
    State    of    N.J.,     Dep't     of    Pub.       Advocate,      
    118 N.J. 336
    ,      344
    (1990)).       "The scope of relief in a motion in aid of litigants'
    rights is limited to remediation of the violation of a court
    order."       Abbott 
    XXI, supra
    , 206 N.J. at 371.                     Because Rule 4:67-
    6 is the administrative counterpart to Rule 1:10-3, the scope of
    relief that can be afforded to a party instituting a summary
    enforcement action is similarly limited.
    To be successful in pursuing a summary action under Rule
    6:67-6,    a    litigant        must    show   that    there       is    a    "specific        and
    unequivocal" order in place.                 Abbott v. Burke, 
    170 N.J. 537
    , 565
    (2002)    (Abbott        VII)    (LaVecchia,         J.,    concurring         in    part      and
    dissenting in part).             The order must afford the enforcing party
    "specific relief."              R. 4:67-6(a)(2).                The litigant must also
    show that the State agency "has failed to comply with the order
    and     that    the      court's       assistance          is    necessary          to    secure
    compliance."        
    Mazza, supra
    , 406 N.J. Super. at 29.
    13                                        A-2452-14T1
    Applying        these   principles,      we   conclude    that     plaintiffs'
    complaint failed to state a claim upon which relief could be
    granted in a summary proceeding under Rule 4:67-6(a)(2).                           No
    "written order or determination" was entered in their favor that
    afforded     them    the    "specific    relief"       they   sought    in    their
    complaint.
    In     their    complaint,    plaintiffs       described    the     individual
    September 14, 2009 needs assessments as "final determinations"
    by the Department
    that the funding and high quality preschool
    provided by [SFRA], along with facilities
    improvements and other measures, will afford
    students in [the Bacon] districts a thorough
    and efficient education . . . thereby
    remediating   the  constitutional   violation
    found by [the Board] and upheld by the
    Superior Court, Appellate Division . . . .
    However, the structure of the needs assessments themselves belie
    plaintiffs' arguments.         The needs assessments consist of sixteen
    distinct   reports     that    focus    on   sixteen    individual      districts.
    There is no overall report that draws conclusions about the
    state of the Bacon districts as a group.                  To the contrary, as
    the Board directed, the needs assessments attempt to identify
    the unique issues that each district faced back in 2009.
    The     following       examples    illustrate      the   point.         In   the
    Lawrence     School    District    Needs      Assessment,      the      Department
    focused on the issues presented by that district's small size
    14                                A-2452-14T1
    and recommended that the district pursue regionalization.                                     On
    the other hand, the Lakewood School District Needs Assessment
    addressed     the     effect   that    the        district's          policy    of    courtesy
    busing      non-public    school      students             had   on    its     finances      and
    recommended     that     the   policy       be     reconsidered.              In   the      Buena
    Regional      Needs    Assessment,      the           Department        stated       that     the
    district "must address the high personnel costs and loss of
    productivity that results from teachers spending so little time
    on instructional activities . . . ."                        The needs assessments for
    the     remaining      districts      set        forth       other      district-specific
    recommendations.
    In spite of the fact that the sixteen needs assessments
    sought      individualized      solutions             to     each      district's        unique
    issues, plaintiffs requested sweeping, identical relief for all
    of    the   Bacon     districts.        It       is    undisputed        that      the      needs
    assessments evaluated the effect of SFRA.                             However, plaintiffs
    mischaracterize the import of those recommendations.                               In some of
    the   assessments,       the   Department          identified          that    SFRA    funding
    would have a positive effect on the district.                            For example, in
    the Lawrence School District Assessment, the Department noted
    that:
    although    the    SFRA    and   complementary
    legislation . . . provide the tools that
    will   permit   [the   district]  to   improve
    educational opportunities for its students
    15                                       A-2452-14T1
    and   address   its identified  needs,  the
    extremely small size of the school district
    poses significant challenges . . . .
    Regionalization . . . will be critical to
    addressing    those  challenges   in   this
    district.
    On appeal, plaintiffs attempt to extrapolate this statement
    to apply to all the Bacon districts.                         However, the Department
    did   not     reach       similar      conclusions          for    all   of    the     Bacon
    districts.      Thus, there was no "specific order" that could be
    enforced for all of the Bacon districts.
    In      the     needs       assessments,          the        Department's        final
    conclusions         can    be     roughly          grouped        into   three       general
    categories:         (1)    SFRA     funding          will     continue        to     improve
    educational     opportunities;          (2)    SFRA    funding       will     continue     to
    improve     educational         opportunities        but     regionalization         may   be
    necessary; or (3) the district needs to better utilize available
    funds.      The recommendations of the needs assessments follow the
    Board's     original       conclusion         that    the     Bacon      districts        have
    different needs and will ultimately require different solutions
    than the Abbott districts.
    Significantly, none of the needs assessments concluded that
    fully funding the SFRA is necessary to ensure that students in
    the Bacon districts receive a thorough and efficient education.
    The   needs    assessments        do    not    require       the    Department       or    the
    Legislature to fully fund the districts under SFRA, or institute
    16                                   A-2452-14T1
    specific     pre-school       programs      or      building         projects          in     the
    districts.
    Plaintiffs argue that the needs assessments are enforceable
    because in 
    Bacon, supra
    , 398 N.J. Super. at 618, we instructed
    the Department "to further determine whether, in light of the
    proven   educational        deficits    already        found        by    the    Board,       the
    [SFRA's]     remedial        measures     afford        students           in    the        Bacon
    districts the thorough and efficient education to which they are
    constitutionally entitled."              According to plaintiffs, because
    the   Department      was     instructed       on   remand          to     use   the        needs
    assessments    to     determine      whether        SFRA          would    remediate          the
    constitutional violation, the conclusions and recommendations in
    the needs assessments are enforceable as an agency order.
    However, as noted above, the needs assessments lack clear
    findings     about    the      remedial     effect           of     the     SFRA       on     the
    constitutional violations that the Board originally identified.
    If the Department failed to comply with our directive in 
    Bacon, supra
    , that the Commissioner determine whether SFRA provided the
    Bacon    districts      with     a   thorough          and    efficient          education,
    plaintiffs'    appropriate       recourse        was    an        appeal    of    the       needs
    assessments.         While     plaintiffs      assert        that        "[i]n   plain        and
    unequivocal language, [the Department] determined that the SFRA
    provides adequate funding . . . to ensure the Bacon students
    17                                           A-2452-14T1
    [receive] a thorough and efficient education," that language is
    not found in the needs assessments.              The plain language of the
    needs assessments cannot be construed as an administrative order
    in plaintiffs' favor entitling them to full SFRA funding or any
    of the broad relief sought in their complaint.
    Furthermore, the needs assessments contain no directives.
    As   noted   by   the   trial   judge,    the   needs   assessments     lack    an
    "omnibus order."        In a Rule 4:67-6 proceeding, the trial court's
    powers are strictly limited to enforcement of an order.                        See
    
    Mazza, supra
    406 N.J. Super. at 23 (trial court cannot rule on
    the validity of an agency order in a Rule 4:67-6 proceeding).
    Without any directives or an omnibus order, there was nothing
    for the trial court to enforce and plaintiffs' complaint was
    therefore properly dismissed.
    Plaintiffs    make    two   additional     arguments.      First,     they
    assert   their    complaint     was   properly   filed   under   Rule    4:67-6
    because, in our January 12, 2012 order, we "instuct[ed]" them to
    proceed in this fashion.          We disagree.     Contrary to plaintiffs'
    assertion, the January 12, 2012 order was not an "instruction"
    by this court to file a summary action under Rule 4:67-6, nor a
    guarantee that any such action, if pursued, would be successful.
    Instead, we simply made clear that plaintiffs' motion for an
    order in aid of litigants' rights lacked merit.
    18                             A-2452-14T1
    Plaintiffs also argue for the first time in their reply
    brief that we should exercise our original jurisdiction in this
    matter pursuant to Rule 2:10-5; declare that the Department has
    violated New Jersey's Constitution by failing to ensure that
    plaintiffs all receive full SFRA funding; and implement specific
    remedies concerning future funding.           We again disagree.
    We generally decline to consider arguments raised for the
    first time in a reply brief.          L.J. Zucca, Inc. v. Allen Bros.
    Wholesale Distribs. Inc., 
    434 N.J. Super. 60
    , 87 (App. Div.
    2014) (citing Borough of Berlin v. Remington & Vernick Eng'gs,
    
    337 N.J. Super. 590
    , 596 (App. Div.), certif. denied, 
    168 N.J. 294
    (2001)), certif. denied, 
    218 N.J. 273
    (2014).             By failing to
    raise   their     original   jurisdiction     argument   in   their   initial
    brief, plaintiffs have waived this contention.
    Moreover, we exercise our original factfinding authority
    under Rule 2:10-5 only "with great frugality and in none but a
    case free of doubt."         Tomaino v. Burman, 
    364 N.J. Super. 224
    ,
    234-35 (App. Div. 2003) (quoting In re Boardwalk Regency Corp.
    Casino License Application, 
    180 N.J. Super. 324
    , 334 (App. Div.
    1981), modified on other grounds, 
    90 N.J. 361
    (1982)), (internal
    quotation marks omitted), certif. denied, 
    179 N.J. 310
    (2004).
    This is not such a case.           The record is wholly inadequate to
    allow   us   to   exercise   our   original    fact-finding    authority     to
    19                               A-2452-14T1
    review   plaintiffs'   claim   that    they   are   entitled   to   specific
    levels of funding under SFRA.
    Affirmed.
    20                            A-2452-14T1