MATTHEW GLENN VS. CITY OF CAPE MAY PLANNINGÂ BOARD (L-0408-15, CAPE MAY COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2017 )


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    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
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    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-5504-15T3
    MATTHEW GLENN, RICHARD
    ZEGHIBE and DEAN PARKER,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    CITY OF CAPE MAY PLANNING
    BOARD, CITY OF CAPE MAY
    ZONING BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT
    and ADIS, INC., t/a LAMER
    BEACHFRONT INN,
    Defendants-Respondents.
    ———————————————————————————————————-
    Argued August 8, 2017 – Decided September 11, 2017
    Before Judges Hoffman and Currier.
    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Law Division, Cape May County, Docket No. L-
    0408-15.
    William J. Kaufmann argued the cause for
    appellants (Cafiero & Kaufmann, PA, attorneys;
    Mr. Kaufmann, on the briefs).
    Richard M. King, Jr. argued the cause for
    respondents City of Cape May Planning Board
    and City of Cape May Zoning Board of
    Adjustment (Law Office of Richard M. King,
    Jr., LLC, attorneys; Mr. King, on the brief).
    Richard M. Hluchan argued the cause for
    respondent Adis, Inc., t/a LaMer Beachfront
    Inn (Hyland Levin LLP, attorneys; Mr. Hluchan,
    on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    In this action in lieu of prerogative writs, plaintiffs
    Matthew Glenn, Richard Zeghibe, and Dean Parker appeal from the
    Law Division's July 7, 2016 order in favor of defendants, the City
    of Cape May Planning Board (the Board) and Adis, Inc. (Adis).      The
    order affirmed the Board's approval of Adis's application for
    redevelopment of its motel and restaurant properties.        We affirm.
    I.
    Adis operates a motel known as the LaMer Beachfront Inn,
    located on the corner of Beach and Pittsburgh Avenues in Cape May.
    The motel property consists of 141 units and an adjacent 146-seat
    restaurant, which is located in a separate building on the same
    lot.    Both the motel and restaurant are permitted uses in the C-3
    zone.
    Cape May Ordinance §525-49C, "Off-street parking standards"
    (the    Ordinance),   governs   parking   at   motel   and   restaurant
    facilities.    See Cape May, N.J., Ordinances §525-49C(2) and (4).
    The Ordinance requires restaurants to provide "at least one parking
    space for each four seats provided for patrons based on maximum
    seating capacity"; it requires motels to provide "at least one
    parking space for each guest sleeping room, plus one space per
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    employee on the largest shift."             
    Ibid. According to the
    Cape May
    Master Plan Reexamination, which the city last revised in March
    2009, there is a general parking shortage on many beachfront blocks
    during the summer season.
    Since 2009, Adis has filed several applications with the
    Board   to     redevelop     its   LaMer    property,     which   have    required
    variances from the Ordinance.               First, in 2009, Adis sought to
    demolish the motel's existing "laundry and maintenance support
    building" and to construct a new laundry building with eight
    additional rooms above the structure.                    It further sought to
    demolish the existing restaurant and to construct a new 146-seat
    restaurant with twenty-one additional motel units above, for 162
    total units.          Because the terms of the Ordinance required 219
    parking spaces for this redevelopment, Adis proposed to provide
    183 parking spaces and requested a variance for the remaining
    spaces.      The Board denied the variance, rendering the rest of the
    application moot.
    Next, in early 2010, the Board considered Adis's application
    to demolish the laundry building and to construct a new four-story
    building with eight additional motel rooms, for 141 total units.
    The Board approved this application in April 2010, determining
    that    Adis    was    not   required      to   obtain   a   parking     variance.
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    Plaintiffs appealed this decision to the Law Division, which
    affirmed in April 2011.
    In the fall of 2010, Adis submitted a new proposal, now
    seeking to demolish the restaurant and laundry building and to
    construct a ninety-six seat restaurant with seventeen motel units
    above the structure and two units above the laundry addition. Adis
    sought a parking variance, which the Board denied, again rendering
    the rest of the application moot.
    In connection with its fall 2010 application, Adis raised the
    concept of "shared parking,"1 which is "the use of parking spaces
    to serve two or more individual land uses without conflict or
    encroachment."         Recognizing that changes to parking rules should
    be made by ordinance, the Board established a committee to review
    the issue. In its 2013 report, the committee declined to recommend
    that    Cape     May    adopt   a   shared   parking    ordinance,   instead
    recommending the Board consider the issue "on a case by case basis
    as   part   of    the    application   for   variance    procedure   already
    established."      It further recommended that any applicant seeking
    a variance be required to provide an expert study.               The Board
    unanimously endorsed this report in October 2013.
    1
    Adis also submitted the "shared parking" concept in connection
    with its 2009 application.
    4                             A-5504-15T3
    Following   the    committee   report,    Adis   submitted    a   new
    application in early 2014, proposing to construct twenty-one motel
    units above the existing restaurant.          Adis did not apply for a
    parking variance, taking the position that one was not required
    for this redevelopment.      The Board disagreed, finding Adis was
    required to apply for a variance, and thus it did not consider the
    merits.
    Thereafter, in February 2015, Adis submitted the application
    at issue on appeal.     Similar to its 2009 proposal, Adis sought to
    demolish the existing restaurant and to construct a new 146-seat
    restaurant with twenty-one motel units above, for 162 total units
    on the property.       Adis determined that under the terms of the
    Ordinance, its proposed redevelopment would require 227 parking
    spaces: 162 for the motel units; thirty-seven for the restaurant;
    eighteen for motel employees; and ten for restaurant employees.
    Because the existing property only contained 173 spaces, Adis
    proposed to create nine additional spaces and to seek a variance,
    contending that 182 spaces total would be sufficient under a shared
    parking arrangement.
    The Board conducted hearings on this proposal on April 28,
    2015, and May 26, 2015.       Adis presented the expert report and
    testimony of traffic engineer David Shropshire.           According to
    Shropshire, the Ordinance treats Adis's motel and restaurant as
    5                                   A-5504-15T3
    separate entities for parking purposes.          Citing data from the
    Institute of Transportation Engineers (ITE), which recognizes that
    restaurants "can be an amenity or an auxiliary use to a motel or
    hotel," Shropshire stated, "I believe the ordinance requirements
    are   very   conservatively   defined,   and   the   shared   parking    is
    certainly an idea that can be incorporated into these two uses
    being together."
    Shropshire then described the parking analysis he conducted
    on the property by observing the motel and restaurant at various
    times from August 1, 2014 through August 3, 2014.        Based upon his
    observations, Shropshire calculated a "peak parking rate" of 1.05
    spaces per occupied unit, for the "blended use" of the motel and
    restaurant. Assuming that all 162 proposed units would be occupied
    during peak conditions, he concluded that the parking demand would
    be 171 spaces, meaning the proposal for 182 spaces was sufficient
    to handle the demand.    He further explained that according to ITE
    data, the industry standard demand for a motel and restaurant was
    lower, at 0.85 spaces per occupied unit.
    Adis further presented the testimony of Vincent Orlando, a
    professional engineer and land use planner, who discussed the
    statutory positive and negative criteria required for the granting
    of a "(c)(2)" variance under the Municipal Land Use Law (MLUL),
    N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70(c)(2).      Regarding the positive criteria, he
    6                                  A-5504-15T3
    found the proposal met two of the purposes outlined in N.J.S.A.
    40:55D-2.    First, applying N.J.S.A. 40:55D-2(m), Orlando stated:
    We have an existing hotel, we have an
    existing restaurant. There's a need for hotel
    rooms obviously in the City of Cape May.
    Utilizing this space and this parking
    would lessen the cost of development, instead
    of putting a hotel somewhere else. But more
    importantly, it would be a more efficient use
    of the land.
    Second,    Orlando     testified     the   plan   would     meet   the
    environment requirements of N.J.S.A. 40:55D-2(g), by obviating the
    need for additional impervious blacktop coverage that could affect
    drainage management.
    With respect to the negative criteria, Orlando noted the
    proposal provided adequate parking, and it complied with the
    Board's   "directive"   to    consider    shared   parking   in    variance
    applications. He added, "And I believe that there's no substantial
    detriment to the zone plan, again, because of the parking study
    that was done by Mr. Shropshire."        Orlando further concluded there
    was no detriment to the public good, although street parking fills
    up during the daytime, because street parking is "plentiful" at
    nighttime during high restaurant demand.
    Plaintiffs presented the expert testimony of Brian Murphy, a
    licensed professional engineer and land planner.        Murphy testified
    that based upon his math, "the number of employees and the parking
    7                                    A-5504-15T3
    associated     with   [the     motel]    may     be    slightly      understated."
    However, he did not provide testimony to contradict Shropshire's
    expert report and conclusions.            With regard to the positive and
    negative criteria, Murphy testified Adis's proposal would result
    in substantial detriment and was contrary to the purposes of the
    Cape May zoning ordinance.              Specifically, he opined that the
    proposal     would    negatively       affect    the     adjacent      residential
    neighborhood by creating competition for parking.
    Craig    Hurless,     the   Board's       engineer,      gave    his     opinion
    regarding    plaintiff's      claim     that    res   judicata       barred    Adis's
    application.     He found res judicata did not apply because Adis's
    previous applications were not "substantially similar" to the
    present application.         Hurless noted the 2009 application was the
    "closest" but concluded "the variance circumstances with regard
    to setbacks" were different, and the construction of the structure
    "requires    different   variances."           The    Board   adopted    Hurless's
    recommendation.
    The Board further voted 7-2 to approve Adis's application,
    which it formalized in a resolution dated January 12, 2016.                        The
    Board noted in the resolution that it reviewed Shropshire's expert
    report and testimony, "with no contrary expert testimony having
    been presented."      It accepted that the restaurant and motel had
    different peak parking demands, and that the overlap of restaurant
    8                                          A-5504-15T3
    and   motel    patrons   supported     utilizing   "the    'shared   parking'
    concept." The Board found the plan advanced the purposes of zoning
    because it "encourages efficient use of the land, satisfies a need
    for hotel rooms, encourages capital improvement for the betterment
    of the community, provides sufficient space for commercial uses,
    and helps reduce[] the need to increase impervious coverage for
    parking on the site."          It found no substantial detriment, citing
    Shropshire's report, "as well as the existing use of the property
    as a restaurant and hotel, and to some extent the available parking
    on the street nearby."
    On August 17, 2015, plaintiffs filed a complaint in lieu of
    prerogative writs, arguing the Board's decision was arbitrary,
    capricious, and unreasonable because Adis had not proved the
    requisite positive and negative criteria.                 Plaintiffs further
    contended the Board erred by finding the doctrine of res judicata
    did not bar Adis's application.           Following a hearing, on July 7,
    2016, the Law Division judge issued an order and written memorandum
    decision, affirming the Board.
    This appeal followed.        Plaintiffs raise two main issues for
    our consideration, asserting (1) the Board's granting of the
    variance      was   improper    because   Adis   failed   to   establish   the
    statutory positive and negative criteria, and (2) the Board should
    9                                  A-5504-15T3
    have barred Adis's application on res judicata grounds. We address
    these arguments in turn.
    II.
    "Our standard of review for the grant or denial of a variance
    is the same as that applied by the Law Division."                    Advance at
    Branchburg II, LLC v. Twp. of Branchburg Bd. of Adjustment, 
    433 N.J. Super. 247
    , 252 (App. Div. 2013).                Specifically, "when a
    party challenges a zoning board's decision through an action in
    lieu of prerogative writs, the zoning board's decision is entitled
    to deference."    Kane Props., LLC v. City of Hoboken, 
    214 N.J. 199
    ,
    229 (2013).    We grant zoning boards "wide latitude in the exercise
    of delegated discretion" due to "their peculiar knowledge of local
    conditions."     Price v. Himeji, LLC, 
    214 N.J. 263
    , 284 (2013)
    (quoting Kramer v. Bd. of Adjustment, 
    45 N.J. 268
    , 296 (1965)).
    When reviewing a board's decision, we presume its "factual
    determinations . . . to be valid," and we will only reverse if the
    decision "is arbitrary, capricious or unreasonable."                Kane 
    Props., supra
    , 214 N.J. at 229.      We will "not disturb the discretionary
    decisions   of   local   boards    that      are   supported   by   substantial
    evidence in the record and reflect a correct application of the
    relevant principles of land use law."                Lang v. Zoning Bd. of
    Adjustment, 
    160 N.J. 41
    , 58-59 (1999).
    10                                     A-5504-15T3
    N.J.S.A.   40:55D-70   authorizes        local   zoning     and    planning
    boards to grant variances from zoning ordinances.           Here, the Board
    granted Adis a "(c)(2)" variance, pursuant to N.J.S.A. 40:55D-
    70(c)(2).   Applicants seeking to establish a (c)(2) variance must
    show "that the purposes of the MLUL would be advanced, the variance
    can be granted without substantial detriment to the public good,
    the benefits of the variance will outweigh any detriment, and that
    the variance will not substantially impair the intent and purpose
    of the zoning plan and ordinance."              Jacoby v. Zoning Bd. of
    Adjustment, 
    442 N.J. Super. 450
    , 471 (App. Div. 2015).
    Our courts refer to the balancing of benefit and detriment
    as proving "the positive and negative criteria."                 Ten Stary Dom
    P'ship v. Mauro, 
    216 N.J. 16
    , 30 (2013).              Satisfaction of the
    positive criteria "requires a showing that 'the purposes of [the
    MLUL] would be advanced by a deviation from the zoning ordinance
    requirements and the benefits of the deviation would substantially
    outweigh any detriment.'"     Chicalese v. Monroe Twp. Planning Bd.,
    
    334 N.J. Super. 413
    , 427-28 (App. Div. 2000) (quoting N.J.S.A.
    40:55D-70(c)(2)).    The    purposes     of    zoning    include       providing
    "sufficient space in appropriate locations . . . according to
    their respective environmental requirements in order to meet the
    needs of all New Jersey citizens," N.J.S.A. 40:55D-2(g), and
    encouraging   "coordination   of   the    various       public    and    private
    11                                         A-5504-15T3
    procedures and activities shaping land development with a view of
    lessening the cost . . . and to the more efficient use of land."
    N.J.S.A. 40:55D-2(m).     The "Interpretation and purpose" section
    of the Cape May zoning ordinance contains provisions that mirror
    these MLUL purposes.    See Cape May, N.J., Ordinances §525-2B(7)
    and (13).
    As to the negative criteria, the applicant must prove "that
    the variance would not result in substantial detriment to the
    public good or substantially impair the purpose of the zone plan"
    and zoning ordinance.     Ten Stary Dom 
    P'ship, supra
    , 216 N.J. at
    30; N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70.
    Importantly, our Supreme Court explained that when assessing
    whether to grant a (c)(2) variance:
    no [(c)(2)] variance should be granted when
    merely the purposes of the owner will be
    advanced. The grant of approval must actually
    benefit the community in that it represents a
    better zoning alternative for the property.
    The focus of a [(c)(2)] case, then, will be
    not on the characteristics of the land that,
    in light of current zoning requirements,
    create a "hardship" on the owner warranting a
    relaxation   of   standards,   but   on   the
    characteristics of the land that present an
    opportunity for improved zoning and planning
    that will benefit the community.
    [Kaufmann v. Planning Bd., 
    110 N.J. 551
    , 563
    (1988) (emphasis omitted).]
    In short, the granting of a "(c)(2) variance will stand if,
    after adequate proofs are presented, the Board concludes that the
    12                            A-5504-15T3
    'harms, if any, are substantially outweighed by the benefits.'"
    
    Jacoby, supra
    , 442 N.J. Super. at 471 (quoting 
    Kaufmann, supra
    ,
    110 N.J. at 565).
    With    these   standards    in   mind,   we   turn   to    plaintiffs'
    arguments.   Plaintiffs contend Shropshire and Orlando's testimony
    on the negative criteria was inadequate, noting that neither expert
    referenced how the proposal would comply with the Master Plan.
    Plaintiffs further assert the Board inappropriately disregarded
    Murphy's testimony without explanation, and it erroneously stated
    that plaintiffs provided "no contrary expert testimony."              Further,
    plaintiffs   claim   Orlando's    conclusion    regarding       the   negative
    criteria was net opinion.        With regard to the positive criteria,
    plaintiffs argue Adis failed to show how the variance would advance
    the purposes of zoning and the MLUL, N.J.S.A. 40:55D-2.
    We reject these arguments, finding the Board's decision to
    grant the variance was not arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable
    and was supported by substantial evidence in the record. Regarding
    the negative criteria, Shropshire established that a worst-case
    scenario of peak demand would require 171 parking spaces.                Since
    Adis's proposal provided for 182 spaces, Orlando appropriately
    relied on this report to conclude that the plan would not cause
    substantial detriment.      Moreover, because the Board previously
    decided to consider shared parking on a case-by-case basis when
    13                                    A-5504-15T3
    evaluating variance applications, Orlando correctly noted the
    proposal did not impair the purposes of Cape May's zoning plan;
    the lack of explicit reference to the Master Plan does not alter
    this result.    See Ten Stary Dom 
    P'ship, supra
    , 216 N.J. at 30.
    Because the evidence supported Orlando's conclusions, plaintiffs'
    assertion that Orlando rendered a "net opinion" also lacks merit.
    See Buckelew v. Grossbard, 
    87 N.J. 512
    , 524 (1981).
    As to the positive criteria, Orlando testified the plan
    promoted efficient use of the land and lessened costs because it
    added to an already existing motel, rather than creating a new
    structure.    See N.J.S.A. 40:55D-2(m).    He also noted the variance
    would serve environmental requirements by obviating the need to
    increase the impervious coverage on the property.         See N.J.S.A.
    40:55D-2(g). Based upon this evidence, we find no basis to disturb
    the Board's conclusion that Adis's proposal advanced the purposes
    of zoning and substantially outweighed any detriment.
    We   further   conclude   the   Board's   decision   to   disregard
    Murphy's testimony was not arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable.
    We have held that zoning boards "may choose which witnesses . . .
    to believe," but the "choice must be reasonably made."           Bd. of
    Educ. v. Zoning Bd. of Adjustment, 
    409 N.J. Super. 389
    , 434 (App.
    Div. 2009).    "[T]he choice must be explained, particularly where
    the board rejects the testimony of facially reasonable witnesses."
    14                                A-5504-15T3
    
    Id. at 434-35.
      Here, we find the Board's decision to credit the
    testimony of Shropshire and Orlando was reasonable.   Although the
    Board should have better explained why it did not credit Murphy's
    testimony, given that Adis satisfied the positive and negative
    criteria, we decline to disturb the Board's decision on this basis.
    We also note the Board's statement that plaintiffs presented "no
    contrary expert testimony" was only in reference to Shropshire's
    report, which Murphy did not refute.
    We now turn to plaintiffs' res judicata argument.          "The
    principle of res judicata has evolved principally in the judicial
    system to prevent the same claims involving the same parties from
    being filed and brought before a court repeatedly."   Ten Stary Dom
    
    P'ship, supra
    , 216 N.J. at 39.     Res judicata is applicable to
    actions before a zoning board.   See Russell v. Bd. of Adjustment,
    
    31 N.J. 58
    , 65 (1959).   Our Supreme Court has explained:
    If an applicant files an application similar
    or   substantially    similar   to   a   prior
    application, the application involves the same
    parties or parties in privity with them, there
    are no substantial changes in the current
    application or conditions affecting the
    property from the prior application, there was
    a prior adjudication on the merits of the
    application, and both applications seek the
    same relief, the later application may be
    barred. It is for the Board to make that
    determination in the first instance.
    [Ten Stary Dom 
    P'ship, supra
    , 216 N.J. at 39.]
    15                              A-5504-15T3
    However, even where an application is "closely similar" to a
    prior    application,    if    the   applicant   demonstrates   changed
    circumstances, "it is within the discretion of the board whether
    to reject the application on the ground of res judicata, and the
    exercise of that discretion may not be overturned on appeal in the
    absence of a showing of unreasonableness."            Mazza v. Bd. of
    Adjustment, 
    83 N.J. Super. 494
    , 496 (App. Div. 1964), appeal
    dismissed, 
    47 N.J. 161
    (1966); see also 
    Russell, supra
    , 31 N.J.
    at 67 (noting courts should not disturb a board's finding unless
    it is arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable).
    Plaintiffs argue the Board should have barred Adis's 2015
    application on res judicata grounds because it was substantially
    similar to Adis's 2009 application and sought greater relief than
    its fall 2010 application.           However, contrary to plaintiffs'
    assertion, the Board did not reach the full merits of either
    application.    See Ten Stary Dom 
    P'ship, supra
    , 216 N.J. at 39.
    The Board's engineer further opined that the applications were not
    substantially similar.    Finally, the Board's decision to consider
    shared   parking   in   2013   constitutes   a   sufficient   change    in
    conditions to warrant consideration of the current application and
    variance.   See 
    Russell, supra
    , 31 N.J. at 66.        We are therefore
    satisfied the Board's decision was not arbitrary, capricious, or
    unreasonable.
    16                               A-5504-15T3
    Affirmed.
    17   A-5504-15T3