JOY DESANCTIS VS. BOROUGH OF BELMAR (L-3550-15, MONMOUTH COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2018 )


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  •                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-1074-16T3
    JOY DESANCTIS;1 MICHAEL SEEBECK;
    PATRICIA COREA; NOREEN DEAN and
    APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    JAMES BEAN,
    July 9, 2018
    Plaintiffs-Respondents,
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    v.
    BOROUGH OF BELMAR; MAYOR &
    COUNCIL OF THE BOROUGH OF
    BELMAR; COLLEEN CONNELLY,
    Borough Administrator of the
    Borough of Belmar; APRIL CLAUDIO,
    Municipal Clerk of the Borough
    of Belmar; and CHRISTINE
    GIORDANO HANLON, Monmouth
    County Clerk,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    _______________________________
    Argued March 20, 2018 – Decided July 9, 2018
    Before    Judges     Fasciale,    Sumners     and
    Moynihan.
    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Law Division, Monmouth County, Docket No.
    L-3550-15.
    William W. Northgrave argued the cause for
    appellants (McManimon, Scotland & Baumann,
    LLC, attorneys; William W. Northgrave, Ted
    1
    Plaintiff/respondent Joy DeSanctis passed away on January 16,
    2017.
    Del Guercio, III, and Frances E. Barto, on
    the brief).
    Kenneth E. Pringle argued the cause for
    respondents  (Pringle  Quinn  Anzano,  PC,
    attorneys; Kenneth E. Pringle, of counsel
    and on the brief; Denise M. O'Hara, on the
    brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    MOYNIHAN, J.S.C. (temporarily assigned).
    The Borough of Belmar, Mayor and Council of the Borough of
    Belmar, Borough Administrator Colleen Connolly, and Municipal
    Clerk April Claudio (collectively defendants)2 appeal from the
    Law Division judgments entered against them.
    The Mayor and Council of Belmar adopted Ordinance 2015-25
    on July 7, 2015, appropriating $4.1 million for the construction
    of the Fifth Avenue/Taylor Pavilion3 and authorizing the issuance
    of bonds and notes totaling $3,895,000 to finance part of the
    construction.      After    Belmar   voters   filed     a   protest   petition
    pursuant    to   N.J.S.A.   40:49-274     seeking   a   referendum     on   the
    2
    The Monmouth County Clerk advised the court she would not be
    participating in this appeal.
    3
    Superstorm Sandy significantly damaged the original                    Fifth
    Avenue/Taylor Pavilion, requiring its demolition.
    4
    N.J.S.A. 40:49-27 reads in part as follows:
    Any ordinance authorizing the incurring
    of any indebtedness, except for current
    expenses, shall become operative 20 days
    (continued)
    2                               A-1074-16T3
    ordinance, the Mayor and Council approved Resolution 2015-159 on
    August 18, 2015, authorizing the placement of the referendum on
    the November 3, 2015 ballot.   The resolution provided in part:
    Section 3. [The General] election shall
    have a referendum on the Ordinance.       In
    accordance   with  N.J.S.A.   40:49-10,  the
    question shall be put to the voters as
    follows:
    "To vote upon the public question printed
    below if in favor thereof mark a cross (x)
    or plus (+) in the square at the left of the
    word YES, and if opposed thereto mark a
    cross (x) or plus (+) in the square at the
    left of the word NO.
    [ ] YES   Shall an ordinance of the Mayor
    and Borough Council of the Borough
    of   Belmar   entitled  'Ordinance
    2015-25,      []Bond     Ordinance
    Providing for the
    (continued)
    after the publication thereof after its
    final passage, unless within those 20 days a
    protest   against  the  incurring   of  such
    indebtedness shall be filed in the office of
    the municipal clerk, by a petition signed by
    registered voters of the municipality equal
    in number to at least 15% of the number of
    votes cast in the municipality at the most
    recent general election at which members of
    the General Assembly were elected, in which
    case such ordinance shall remain inoperative
    until a proposition for the ratification
    thereof shall be adopted, at an election to
    be held for that purpose, by a majority of
    the qualified voters of the municipality
    voting on the proposition, subject to the
    provisions of [N.J.S.A.] 40:49-10 to 40:49-
    12.
    3                         A-1074-16T3
    [ ] NO       Construction of the Fifth Avenue
    Pavilion in and by the Borough of
    Belmar, in the County of Monmouth,
    New      Jersey,      Appropriating
    $4,100,000       Therefor       and
    Authorizing    the   Issuance    of
    $3,895,000 Bonds or Notes of the
    Borough to Finance Part of the
    Cost Thereof'; finally adopted on
    July 7, 2015, be ratified?"
    Section  4.   The   Clerk   is  hereby
    authorized and directed to submit this
    resolution to the county clerk so the
    process of placing a referendum on a ballot
    can begin.
    The County Clerk received the resolution and public question on
    August 19, 2015.5
    An     interpretive        statement      of    the     ordinance        was    not
    initially     included    in     the   passed       resolution,     although         the
    Borough Administrator testified before the trial court that both
    she and the Mayor and Council informed a resident at the August
    18   meeting    that      one     would       be    prepared.           The    Borough
    Administrator also testified that, after "[i]ndividual members
    of Council spoke to [her] one-on-one after that meeting, again
    reiterating    their     desire    that     there    would    be   an    explanatory
    5
    The trial judge indicated on the record that this date was
    provided in "a certification of Bertha C. Sumick, Special Deputy
    Monmouth County Clerk."   No such certification was provided in
    the record on appeal, but the parties do not contest the date of
    receipt.
    4                                    A-1074-16T3
    statement,"6            she    drafted          the       interpretive        statement       and
    "circulated       it"    to    the    Borough             Attorney,       Borough    Clerk    and
    Mayor.     She submitted the interpretive statement – never voted
    on by the Mayor and Council – which was received by the County
    Clerk on August 28, 2015; it read:
    This     Ordinance     provides     for     the
    reconstruction    of    the   [Fifth]    Avenue
    Pavilion, also known as Taylor Pavilion,
    destroyed by Superstorm Sandy. The pavilion
    will   be   one-story    and  have   the   same
    functions   and    footprint   as   the   prior
    building.      This   Ordinance   enables   the
    Borough of Belmar to finance the project
    while   obtaining    reimbursement   from   the
    Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).
    The short term borrowing is expected to be
    repaid between 24 to 36 months.            This
    Ordinance was unanimously approved by Belmar
    Mayor and Council on July 7, 2015.
    Plaintiffs          DeSanctis         and        Bean        first    learned     of    the
    interpretive      statement          on    September          9,    2015;     that   day     Bean
    expressed to the County Clerk his concern about information in
    the interpretive statement.                 The County Clerk replied to him on
    September    17    that       she    did    "not          believe     there    is    any    legal
    recourse    at     this       point        as        to     the     explanation       [in     the
    interpretive statement] in terms of changing the ballot"; the
    County Clerk mailed those ballots to the public the next day.
    6
    The parties use "explanatory statement" instead of interpretive
    statement.
    5                                     A-1074-16T3
    Plaintiffs              filed      suit    on      September       22,       2015    seeking
    judgment declaring the interpretive statement invalid because it
    was never voted on by the Mayor and Council, thereby depriving
    plaintiffs     and           the    public      an    opportunity       to     comment      on    and
    object to its content, which contained "inaccurate, misleading
    and   extraneous              information,"          presenting        another       ground       for
    invalidation.                They    also     sought      removal      of    the    interpretive
    statement      –        in     whole     or     part      –    from    the     ballot;      and     a
    determination of their claim under the New Jersey Civil Rights
    Act   (CRA),       N.J.S.A.           10:6-1     to      -2,   including       a    request       for
    attorneys' fees and costs.                      We perpend Judge Katie A. Gummer's
    rulings on these issues, which arise from a series of orders
    that: (1) held the interpretive statement invalid because it was
    not submitted to the Mayor and Council for resolution and no
    such resolution was made, and because it was misleading and
    contained    extraneous               information        intended      to    influence       –    not
    inform   –     voters;             (2)   held    defendants           violated      the    CRA     by
    depriving plaintiffs a free and fair election, thus entitling
    plaintiffs         to        attorneys'       fees       and   costs;        and    (3)    awarded
    attorneys'      fees          and     costs     and      prohibited         payment       from    the
    Borough of Belmar's Beach Utility Fund.
    6                                     A-1074-16T3
    I
    Judge   Gummer   found   persuasive    the   holding   in   Town    of
    Harrison Board of Education v. Netchert, 
    439 N.J. Super. 164
    ,
    186 (Law Div. 2014), and adopted that court's conclusion that an
    interpretive statement submitted to a county clerk without a
    resolution by the borough council was invalid.             Echoing that
    holding, which the judge found "well established and consistent
    with the longstanding tradition of our State and our Country to
    ensure fairness of our election system," she declared the Belmar
    interpretive   statement   invalid.   As   plaintiffs   note    in   their
    merits brief, the Netchert court "did not precisely articulate
    the rationale for [its] holding that [interpretive] statements
    that are not required by N.J.S.A. 19:3-6 must be adopted by
    resolution."   We review questions of statutory interpretation de
    novo.   Tumpson v. Farina, 
    218 N.J. 450
    , 467 (2014).
    We follow the well-trod trail of statutory interpretation:
    In construing any statute, we must give
    words    "their    ordinary    meaning    and
    significance," recognizing that generally
    the   statutory   language   is   "the   best
    indicator of [the Legislature's] intent."
    DiProspero v. Penn, 
    183 N.J. 477
    , 492
    (2005); see also N.J.S.A. 1:1-1 (stating
    that customarily "words and phrases shall be
    read and construed with their context, and
    shall . . . be given their generally
    accepted   meaning").       Each    statutory
    provision must be viewed not in isolation
    but "in relation to other constituent parts
    so that a sensible meaning may be given to
    7                              A-1074-16T3
    the   whole  of  the   legislative  scheme."
    Wilson ex rel. Manzano v. City of Jersey
    City, 
    209 N.J. 558
    , 572 (2012). We will not
    presume that the Legislature intended a
    result different from what is indicated by
    the plain language or add a qualification to
    a statute that the Legislature chose to
    omit. DiProspero, 
    183 N.J. at 493
    .
    On the other hand, if a plain reading
    of the statutory language is ambiguous,
    suggesting    "more   than   one    plausible
    interpretation," or leads to an absurd
    result, then we may look to extrinsic
    evidence,   such   as  legislative   history,
    committee    reports,   and   contemporaneous
    construction in search of the Legislature's
    intent. 
    Id. at 492-93
    .
    [Tumpson, 218 N.J. at 467-68 (alterations in
    original).]
    The   Legislature   provided,   in   N.J.S.A.   19:3-6,   for   both   the
    mandatory and permissive inclusion of an interpretive statement:
    Any public question voted upon at an
    election   shall   be  presented  in  simple
    language that can be easily understood by
    the voter.     The printed phrasing of said
    question on the ballots shall clearly set
    forth the true purpose of the matter being
    voted upon. Where the question concerns any
    amendment to the State Constitution, or any
    act or statute or other legal titles of any
    nature, the printed phrasing on the ballots
    shall include a brief statement interpreting
    same.    In event that in any statute the
    public question to be voted upon is so
    stated as not clearly to set forth the true
    purpose of the matter being voted upon and
    no provision is made in said statute for
    presenting the same in simple language or
    printing upon the ballots a brief statement
    interpreting the same, there may be added on
    the ballots to be used in voting upon the
    8                           A-1074-16T3
    question, a brief statement interpreting the
    same and setting forth the true purpose of
    the matter being voted upon in addition to
    the   statement   of  the   public  question
    required by the statute itself.
    Although the interpretive statement here is not mandated because
    the public question does not concern a constitutional matter,
    the    discrete       treatment      accorded          mandatory     interpretive
    statements enlightens our analysis.
    Our   Supreme    Court    in   Gormley      v.   Lan,   observed     N.J.S.A.
    19:3-6 "appears to impose [the duty to provide an interpretive
    statement]     mandatorily      on   the      Legislature     itself      where   an
    amendment to the State Constitution is involved," but considered
    it "understandable that the Legislature might prefer to leave
    that task to others.          Interpretive statements can be drafted in
    an infinite variety of ways, and the Legislature may simply have
    determined that arriving at an acceptable draft was not worth
    the legislative energy."         
    88 N.J. 26
    , 36-37 (1981).
    The Court did not expansively treat alternate authorship of
    interpretive statements.         It concluded only the Attorney General
    was   vested    with    the    "discretion        to     determine    whether     an
    interpretive    statement      should      be    added   to   the    ballot   under
    N.J.S.A.    19:3-6,    as     well   as    the    content     of    the   statement
    9                                A-1074-16T3
    itself," id. at 44, reading other statutes in pari materia with
    N.J.S.A 19:3-67:
    Cognate statutes in L. 1930, c. 187,
    the act that is the source for N.J.S.A.
    19:3-6,   deal   with   the   preparation   of
    referendum information to be distributed
    with   sample  ballots    (N.J.S.A.   19:14-27
    through -32). Where the referendum concerns
    a constitutional amendment, the Attorney
    General is specifically required to inform
    the Secretary of State what portions of the
    State Constitution should be printed and
    mailed to voters to help them understand
    "the relation of the amendment submitted to
    the existing constitution." N.J.S.A. 19:14-
    29,   -30.     In    addition,   the   statute
    authorizes the Attorney General to make a
    summary statement in order to inform the
    voters of the effect that adoption or
    rejection of the question will have on
    statute law or the State Constitution.
    N.J.S.A. 19:14-31.
    [Gormley, 88 N.J. at 44.]
    The Court recognized that the absence of an express authorship
    grant   to   the   Attorney   General    in   N.J.S.A.   19:3-6   "might   be
    construed to evince an intent to vest the authority under that
    section elsewhere," but reasoned "the sample ballot provisions
    [of the 1930 law] reflect a pattern of legislative intent that
    should be followed in interpreting [that statute]."               Id. at 45.
    7
    "Statutes that deal with the same subject matter or subject
    should be read in pari materia and construed together as a
    unitary and harmonious whole." St. Peter's Univ. Hosp. v. Lacy,
    
    185 N.J. 1
    , 14-15 (2005) (quoting In re Adoption of a Child by
    W.P. and M.P., 
    163 N.J. 158
    , 182 (2000) (Poritz, C.J.,
    dissenting)).
    10                              A-1074-16T3
    If    the   Legislature,        under     N.J.S.A.          19:14-31,         granted        the
    Attorney General the discretion to decide if a summary statement
    should be provided to the public — and if so, the wording of
    that statement — the Court saw "no reason why the Legislature
    would have intended a different procedure in the case of [a]
    brief interpretive statement."               
    Ibid.
    The Court specifically excluded the Secretary of State as
    an    alternate      interpretive       statement          author,      concluding           the
    Legislature invested no similar authority as that conferred on
    the Attorney General.           Id. at 44.              Further, the Court observed
    "that   the      Legislature     in     passing         N.J.S.A.      19:3-6        [did     not
    intend]     to    authorize     one     of        its    committees         to     provide     a
    conclusive interpretive statement when the Legislature itself
    declined to do so."         Id. at 45.
    Likewise,      we    perceive     no    legislative            intent      to    vest    a
    borough administrator or municipal attorney with the authority
    to author and submit an interpretive statement with a referendum
    ballot.          While    the   Attorney          General      may     do     so      when    an
    interpretive statement is mandated, that authority is derived
    from the statutory framework pertinent only to that scenario.
    And   the   Attorney      General     may     act       only   when    the       Legislature
    declines.        Kimmelman v. Burgio, 
    204 N.J. Super. 44
    , 54 n.3 (App.
    Div. 1985).
    11                                       A-1074-16T3
    The statutory scheme also weighs against allowing a mayor
    and    council    to   outsource    an        interpretive    statement.       The
    referendum procedure of the Home Rule Act — pursuant to which
    the protest petition here was filed — requires a clerk to submit
    a petition, once it is found sufficient, "to the governing body
    of    the   municipality    without    delay,"      N.J.S.A.     40:49-27b,    and
    vests the governing body with the authority to "call a special
    election therefor," N.J.S.A. 40:49-10.              So too, N.J.S.A. 40:69A-
    120    requires    Belmar   —   a     Faulkner      Act8     Small   Municipality
    government — to exercise legislative powers by council.9
    New Jersey has long recognized that governing bodies
    "must act when assembled at stated or
    special meetings, and organized with a
    president to conduct, and a clerk to record,
    its proceedings.   Such body can hardly act
    in any other manner than by ordinance or
    resolution. Every act must be by a vote of
    the members present; and, whether it is
    called an order, direction or determination,
    it is still a resolution, because it must be
    resolved on, upon a motion made by some
    member."   Dey v. Jersey City, 
    19 N.J. Eq. 412
    , 416 (Ch. 1869).       All through our
    numerous   cases   dealing  with   municipal
    action, it will be seen that a board or body
    8
    N.J.S.A. 40:69A-1 to -210.
    9
    Although the "legislative power" in a Small Municipality is
    "exercised by the council," "[t]he mayor . . . participate[s]
    and vote[s] as other council members" and "preside[s] over all
    meetings of the council."   N.J.S.A. 40:69A-120.  We therefore
    refer throughout this decision to actions by both "mayor and
    council."
    12                              A-1074-16T3
    can act only by ordinance or resolution;
    these are the alternative methods.     Any
    action of the body which does not rise to
    the   dignity of   an   ordinance,  is   a
    resolution.
    [Woodhull v. Manahan, 
    85 N.J. Super. 157
    ,
    166 (App. Div.) (quoting Town of Irvington
    v. Ollemar, 
    128 N.J. Eq. 402
    , 406 (Ch.
    1940), aff'd o.b. sub nom. Irvington Nat'l
    Bank v. Geiger, 
    131 N.J. Eq. 189
     (E. & A.
    1942) (emphasis added)), aff'd o.b., 
    43 N.J. 445
     (1964).]
    These         enactments      lead    us       to    conclude       that    when     the
    Legislature provided the option for an interpretive statement to
    "be added on the ballots to be used in voting upon [a public]
    question" that does not clearly set forth its true                                   purpose,
    N.J.S.A. 19:3-6 – such as the ballot containing the referendum
    approved        by     resolution      of    the       Mayor    and    Council       –      that
    interpretive          statement      had    to    be   approved       by   the     Mayor     and
    Council.
    Such a procedure promotes government transparency, a clear
    legislative aim discerned from reading the Open Public Meetings
    Act (Sunshine Law), N.J.S.A. 10:4-6 to -21, in pari materia with
    the statutes we here considered.                      See Polillo v. Deane, 
    74 N.J. 562
    ,   574-76         (1977)   (acknowledging          the     importance     of     allowing
    voters:    to        follow    the    progress         of    public    bodies       that    can
    "influence in a material way a person's vote"; and to "have
    access     to    the      information        considered         by    [such       bodies]    in
    13                                  A-1074-16T3
    arriving at [a] decision"); McGovern v. Rutgers, 
    211 N.J. 94
    , 99
    (2012) (acknowledging the Sunshine Law's "clear statement of New
    Jersey's public policy 'to insure the right of its citizens to
    have adequate advance notice of and the right to attend all
    meetings of public bodies at which any business affecting the
    public is discussed or acted upon in any way'" (quoting N.J.S.A.
    10:4-7)).      It is also in line with the liberal construction that
    must     be   accorded      referendum           statutes    "for       the   purpose      of
    'promot[ing] the "beneficial effects"' of voter participation."
    Tumpson, 218 N.J. at 468 (alteration in original) (quoting In re
    Referendum Petition to Repeal Ordinance 04-75, 
    192 N.J. 446
    , 459
    (2007)).
    We     previously      held     the        Faulkner       Act     initiative       and
    referendum      provisions,        N.J.S.A.        40:69A-184,         -185   –   which    we
    characterized        as    "two    useful    instruments         of    plebiscite       power
    [which] provide a means of arousing public interest" – should be
    liberally      construed.          Twp.     of    Sparta    v.    Spillane,       
    125 N.J. Super. 519
    , 523 (App. Div. 1973).                    Our Supreme Court conferred
    "equally useful" status to the referendum provisions in the Home
    Rule Act, N.J.S.A. 40:49-27, in holding "we have an obligation
    to promote, where appropriate, its beneficial effects."                            Retz v.
    Saddle      Brook,    
    69 N.J. 563
    ,    571     (1976).           If,    through     the
    referendum process, citizens are allowed "the right to test a
    14                                    A-1074-16T3
    challenged ordinance in the crucible of the democratic process,"
    In re Ordinance 04-75, 
    192 N.J. at 450
    ; see also Tumpson, 218
    N.J. at 467, we do not see that submission of an interpretive
    statement       to     a    county     clerk    without      open    approval         of   the
    governing       body       is   consonant      with    the   public    spirit         of    the
    referendum laws.
    We want to make clear, our ruling should not be construed
    to require the Mayor and Council to formulate an interpretive
    statement       that       is   acceptable     to     all.    Plaintiffs          argue    the
    members of the Committee of Petitioners that filed the protest
    petition    were       never      informed      by    defendants     of     the      proposed
    interpretive           statement       language,        depriving         them       of    "an
    opportunity to object or propose alternative language" to the
    interpretive statement.                While we fully agree the public should
    be informed of the interpretive statement terms                                – hence our
    requirement that the interpretive statement be publicly approved
    – we point to the Gormley Court's perspicacious observation:
    "Obviously there can be substantial dispute as to what the true
    purpose    of    [a        question]    is;    indeed    there   may      be    many      'true
    purposes.'"            88       N.J.   at     37.       In   light     of      the     knotty
    possibilities          stemming        from         protracted      debate        over     the
    interpretive statement language, we leave the final wording to
    the governing body, subject, of course, to the requirement that
    15                                    A-1074-16T3
    it fairly interpret the public question and set forth its true
    purpose.    Id. at 37-38.
    We     also   note    that   a    public   vote     on    an    interpretive
    statement will allow objectors to commence court actions earlier
    than if they learned of the content of same, as they did here,
    after it is filed with the county clerk.              In the tight electoral
    time frame, any added time will avoid the rush to the courthouse
    door, foster a more considered treatment of the issues involved
    in a challenge, and avoid the expense of the publication – and
    provision to the voters – of improper interpretive statements.
    We agree with Judge Gummer that the never-formally-approved
    interpretive statement was invalid.
    II
    Before    analyzing     whether    attorneys'      fees   and    costs   were
    properly awarded to plaintiffs under the CRA, we must first
    address the judge's ruling that the interpretive statement was
    invalid    because   it   was    misleading    and     contained     extraneous
    language; then whether defendants' actions deprived plaintiffs
    of a substantive right protected by the CRA.
    In our review of the interpretive statement, we heed the
    Gormley Court's caution:
    Rare is the case where the inadequacy of the
    interpretive statement will justify the risk
    of judicial intervention. That risk inheres
    not simply in the proposal of an alternative
    16                                A-1074-16T3
    but as well in the mere enjoining of the                         use
    of the proposed statement.        Either                         can
    readily be perceived by one side or                              the
    other as both prejudicial to their cause                         and
    partial to that of their adversary.
    [Id. at 39.]
    Our    highly          deferential       review       is    grounded        in    "settled
    principles         of     law"      and     "the     glaring       inappropriateness             of
    judicial management and supervision of such matters."                                     Id. at
    38.         The     Court        explained,         "When        within     the        scope     of
    legislatively-delegated                   authority,         administrative              agents'
    actions      are    presumptively            valid,     and       where     that       authority
    confers      discretion            upon    those      agents,       their     actions          will
    ordinarily        not     be    overturned      by    the     courts      unless       they    are
    manifestly corrupt, arbitrary or misleading." Ibid.
    The Legislature made clear its intent that an interpretive
    statement     be        "a     brief      statement    interpreting          [the       proposed
    public    question]          and    setting     forth       the    true     purpose      of    the
    matter    being         voted    upon."       N.J.S.A.        19:3-6.        We    previously
    recognized that the legislative aim was not focused on
    whether advocates on one side of the issue
    might prefer that the Act's description be
    phrased differently to better enhance their
    political position.      In short, we may
    intervene in such a circumstance only when
    the interpretive statement is so unclear as
    to preclude the voters' understanding of the
    true   purpose   of  the   question   or  so
    substantially unbalanced as to be biased.
    17                                        A-1074-16T3
    [McKenzie v. Corzine, 
    396 N.J. Super. 405
    ,
    418-19 (App. Div. 2007).]
    As we discussed, the Gormley Court anticipated that there
    can be "substantial dispute" as to a public question's "true
    purposes."    88 N.J. at 37.       Even so, the Court distilled the
    "simple and clear" "spirit of the statute": "the brief statement
    is to be added to help the voter understand more about the
    amendment than the public question tells him, for the purpose of
    aiding him in his decision."       Ibid.   And it must also be fair.
    Id. at 38.
    Only the last three sentences of the interpretive statement
    are challenged:
    1.   This Ordinance enables the Borough of
    Belmar   to   finance   the   project while
    obtaining reimbursement from the Federal
    Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).
    2.   The short term borrowing is expected to
    be repaid between 24 to 36 months.
    3.   This Ordinance was unanimously approved
    by Belmar Mayor and Council on July 7, 2015.
    Both the content and context of these sentences manifest their
    misleading   nature,   rendering   the   statement   so   unclear     as   to
    preclude the voters' understanding of the true purpose of the
    question, and so substantially unbalanced as to be biased, thus
    requiring its invalidation.
    18                               A-1074-16T3
    The     Borough    Administrator            testified    that    she    "was   very
    careful in how [she] structured the [first] sentence because
    [she] did not specifically want to say that all of the costs
    would    be   reimbursed."           She    contended     she    "simply      said    [the
    project would be financed] as we pursue funding" from FEMA.
    But, as Judge Gummer noted, the first sentence indicates that
    the     ordinance       would    enable       the     Borough     to     finance       the
    construction "while obtaining reimbursement" as if reimbursement
    was a foregone conclusion.                  That is misleading.              The Borough
    Administrator knew the Borough was going to pursue funding; the
    interpretive statement, however, disguised the uncertainty of
    that funding, connoting to voters that the incurred indebtedness
    would not ultimately be borne by them.
    The judge found the second sentence to be unclear because
    "a voter could interpret that as meaning that everybody expects
    . . . to be repaid, or that someone, some omniscient person may
    expect    the   short[-]term         borrowing       to   be    repaid."        Standing
    alone,    the   sentence        is   a     fair    explanation    of    the     expected
    repayment schedule; we see no reason why deference should not be
    extended to this provision.                To the extent, however, the second
    sentence buttresses the misleading nature of the first sentence
    – that the indebtedness would be repaid – we look at it askance.
    19                                  A-1074-16T3
    Judge Gummer credited the Borough Administrator's testimony
    that the last sentence was added to the interpretive statement
    "at   the    suggestion    of   certain    members    of   the   Council,     who
    thought it was a matter of importance that the public know that
    the   vote    on   the   referendum   was   not   contentious      or   on    the
    ordinance was not contentious."             The judge found that "[t]he
    only purpose . . . for that last statement was . . . a means of
    persuasion to indicate to the voters that the Mayor and the
    entire Council was unanimous.         It does not inform them as to the
    substance of the issue put before them."             We wholly concur.
    Most of the brief interpretive statement was designed to
    sway – not inform – voters in defendants' attempt to finance
    construction of the pavilion.          This was their fourth attempt to
    garner public support for the project.10               Despite knowing that
    FEMA funds were not secured – albeit perhaps obtainable – the
    Borough Administrator's wording of the               interpretive statement
    conveyed to voters a misleading sense that funding was readily
    available.     And the intent of the last sentence was a blatant
    attempt to influence voters by presenting a unified front, in
    clear   contravention      of   the   interpretive     statement    statute's
    10
    According to the verified complaint, the Borough attempted to
    finance construction three other times, but the attempts failed
    due to judicial intervention, voter referendum and citizen
    outrage, respectively.
    20                                A-1074-16T3
    spirit and letter.11          Lest we forget, defendants submitted the
    interpretive statement without a public vote.                     These actions
    derogated what our Supreme Court held to be a substantive right
    protected by the CRA.         Tumpson, 218 N.J. at 472-86.
    We    need     not    repeat    the     Court's     comprehensive         and
    penetrating analysis in Tumpson, determining a municipal clerk
    who refused to file a protest petition — proffered pursuant to
    the Faulkner Act version12 — deprived the petitioners of their
    substantive right of referendum under the CRA.                 Id. at 459-60,
    486.     We are unpersuaded by defendants' attempt to distinguish
    Tumpson.       Defendants      were    required   –   as   were     the    Tumpson
    defendants under the Faulkner Act, N.J.S.A. 40:69A-185, -187, -
    191, see Tumpson, 218 N.J. at 478 — to ascertain if a petition
    meets the statutory criteria and, if sufficient, to place the
    challenged ordinance before the voters, N.J.S.A. 40:49-27b.
    The   fact   that     the   interpretive   statement       in   issue     was
    permissive     does    not    negate    that    defendants    had      a   binding
    obligation to submit to the voters – once defendants chose to do
    so – a statement that was fair, and not misleading and biased.
    The "right to referendum is about enfranchisement, about self-
    11
    Even if the defendants acted in good faith, plaintiffs are
    still entitled to relief under the CRA.  Tumpson, 218 N.J. at
    485.
    12
    N.J.S.A. 40:69A-185.
    21                                 A-1074-16T3
    government,   and    about    giving    citizens      the    right    to    vote     on
    matters of importance to their community."              Tumpson, 218 N.J. at
    480.   That       right   –   found    substantive      by    the    Court       —    is
    meaningless    if    a    governing    body   can     alter     that       right     by
    submitting    a     manipulative       interpretive         statement       to       the
    electorate.    In determining whether the Faulkner Act referendum
    provision    conferred     substantive      rights,    the    Court     applied       a
    three-part test whereby
    plaintiffs must establish that (1) the
    referendum statutes were intended to confer
    a    "benefit"    on    plaintiffs   as    a
    representative class of voters of [the
    municipality]; (2) the statutory right to
    challenge an ordinance and place it before
    the voting public is not "so 'vague [or]
    amorphous' that its enforcement would strain
    judicial competence"; and (3) the Faulkner
    Act   "unambiguously  impose[s]    a binding
    obligation" on [the municipality].       Cf.
    Blessing v. Freestone, 
    520 U.S. 329
    , 340-41
    (1997).
    [Tumpson, 218 N.J. at 477 (second and third
    alterations in original).]
    We note the Supreme Court has recently refined the three-part
    test outlined in Tumpson to determine whether a statute confers
    substantive rights for the purpose of establishing a CRA claim,
    holding,
    a court must 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
    22                                   A-1074-16T3
    judicial competence"; and (3) whether the
    statute "unambiguously impose[s] a binding
    obligation on the [governmental entity]."
    [Harz v. Borough of Spring Lake, ___ N.J.
    ___,   ___  (2018)   (slip   op.  at 19-20)
    (alterations in original) (quoting Tumpson,
    218 N.J. at 475) (citing Gonzaga Univ. v.
    Doe, 
    536 U.S. 273
    , 283-84 (2002)).]
    This change however does not alter Tumpson's holding that "the
    Legislature,   through    the    Faulkner      Act,    clearly      intended   to
    confer the right of referendum on the plaintiffs and voters of
    [the municipality]."      Harz, ___ N.J. ___ (slip op. at 22).
    This was not, as defendants contend, a mere procedural act
    of sending an interpretive statement to the County Clerk.                      The
    drafting and submission of the misleading interpretive statement
    violated the right of referendum as much as – although perhaps
    more furtively – a clerk who refused to file a protest petition.
    Controverting defendants' argument, plaintiffs established: the
    referendum statute conferred a right on them as representatives
    of the Belmar voters; the right to challenge an ordinance and
    submit a question before the public is not at all amorphous or
    vague;   and   N.J.S.A.      40:49-27b     –    like     its     Faulkner      Act
    counterpart    –   imposes   a   binding       obligation      on   defendants.
    Tumpson, 218 N.J. at 477-78.       They have proven their substantive
    right, giving rise to this cause of action.
    23                                  A-1074-16T3
    We also reject defendants' contention that plaintiffs "were
    not deprived of the benefit conferred by N.J.S.A. 40:49-27 the
    power of referendum since the referendum was received, reviewed
    and   put    to    a    vote       without   inclusion"         of   the     interpretive
    statement.        In Tumpson, the Court ruled the municipal clerk's
    refusal to file the protest petition violated plaintiffs' right
    of referendum even though judicial intervention later compelled
    the   filing.          Id.    at   481-84.        Here,   but    for       Judge   Gummer's
    intervention,          the     interpretive        statement         would     have     been
    included with the public question.                   Indeed, as the judge found,
    the statement was printed in the Asbury Park Press prior to the
    court's order.13             Thus defendants deprived plaintiffs of their
    right   to   referendum.             "That   a    court   comes       to    [plaintiffs']
    rescue does not alter the nature of the earlier governmental
    deprivation or anticipated deprivation."                   Id. at 483.
    Any other arguments advanced by defendants on this issue
    are   without     sufficient         merit   to     warrant      discussion        in   this
    opinion.     R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
    13
    Counsel for the County Clerk informed the trial court that the
    interpretive statement was also included with 229 vote-by-mail
    ballots; although the votes were later stricken by the trial
    court, the interpretive statement reached these voters.       The
    court did not find this as a fact; while we have no reason to
    doubt counsel, we will not consider it as competent evidence.
    24                                    A-1074-16T3
    We therefore agree with Judge Gummer that the interpretive
    statement was invalid because it was misleading and contained
    extraneous    language;       and    that    defendants'    actions    deprived
    plaintiffs of a substantive right protected by the CRA.
    III
    Defendants     reprise       their    arguments     relating    to    the
    attorneys' fees and costs awarded pursuant to N.J.S.A. 10:6-
    2(f): absent a retainer agreement between plaintiffs and counsel
    it was not possible to assess the reasonableness of the fees
    requested; that the fees and costs were to be borne by the
    Borough's beachgoers should have been considered in denying a
    contingency enhancement; and "the beachgoers, as beneficiaries
    of plaintiffs' efforts in this case, should bear" the awarded
    fees and costs.
    We review fee determinations by trial courts with deference
    and will disturb them "only on the rarest occasions, and then
    only   because   of   a     clear   abuse    of   discretion."     Rendine    v.
    Pantzer, 
    141 N.J. 292
    , 317 (1995); see also Packard-Bamberger &
    Co. v. Collier, 
    167 N.J. 427
    , 444 (2001).              In our review of fees
    awarded   pursuant     to    fee-shifting     provisions,    we   do   consider
    whether the trial court "sufficiently address[ed] the factors or
    the framework that [our Supreme Court] established in Rendine."
    Walker v. Giuffre, 
    209 N.J. 124
    , 148 (2012).                The Court reposed
    25                             A-1074-16T3
    discretion        in     trial      courts      to     establish       any    contingency
    enhancement in fee-shifting cases.                      New Jerseyans for a Death
    Penalty Moratorium v. N.J. Dep't of Corrs., 
    185 N.J. 137
    , 158
    (2005).
    Just as she did throughout the case, Judge Gummer, in her
    comprehensive          and    well-reasoned          oral     decision,      gave   careful
    treatment    to        this   issue,        setting    forth     and    assessing      every
    applicable standard in computing the lodestar fee, costs and the
    contingency enhancement.              Presented with an invoice and numerous
    certifications of counsel — sufficient evidence from which to
    analyze this issue, notwithstanding the absence of a retainer
    agreement     —        she    carefully       appraised        plaintiffs'       counsels'
    unchallenged       billable         hours    and     hourly    rates,     even   excluding
    excessive briefing hours; reviewed counsels' qualifications and
    the high quality of the work that earned a successful result;
    considered the complexity and pace of this litigation; and noted
    the entirely contingent nature of counsels' compensation which
    rendered     the       risk    of     non-payment       high,     before      awarding       a
    lodestar fee of $36,940, costs of $1131.88 and a twenty-five
    percent     enhancement.               We     agree     with     her      rationale       and
    conclusions, including her determination that the voters – not
    the beachgoers – of Belmar were the beneficiaries of plaintiffs'
    action.    We therefore fully uphold her award decision.
    26                                   A-1074-16T3
    Affirmed.
    27   A-1074-16T3