JOHN E. SUSKO VS. BOROUGH OF BELMAR (L-1427-15, MONMOUTH COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2019 )


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  •                NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-3059-16T2
    JOHN E. SUSKO, FRANCINE
    M. DOLAN, KYLE BROWN,
    MICHAEL SEEBECK, PATRICIA             APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    COREA, NOREEN DEAN, JAMES
    BEAN, and JOY DESANCTIS,1                     April 22, 2019
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    Plaintiffs-Respondents,
    v.
    BOROUGH OF BELMAR and
    MAYOR AND COUNCIL OF
    THE BOROUGH OF BELMAR,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    ______________________________
    Argued September 20, 2018 – Decided April 22, 2019
    Before Judges Alvarez, Nugent and Reisner.
    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Monmouth County, Docket No. L-1427-15.
    William W. Northgrave argued the cause for
    appellants (Mc Manimon, Scotland & Baumann, LLC,
    attorneys; William W. Northgrave and Thaddeus J.
    Del Guercio, III, on the briefs).
    1
    Plaintiffs Dolan and DeSanctis passed away while this litigation was
    pending.
    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
    REISNER, J.A.D.
    In response to the physical and economic devastation wrought by
    Superstorm Sandy, the Borough of Belmar took, or planned to take, a series of
    actions that were inconsistent with a thirty-year-old but still binding court
    decision in Slocum v. Borough of Belmar, 
    238 N.J. Super. 179
    (Law Div.
    1989). The trial court found that the Borough improperly used funds derived
    from beach fees (beach funds) to settle non-beach related litigation; improperly
    deposited into the Borough's general fund certain donations raised through a
    campaign to help rebuild the boardwalk (the buy-a-board donations); planned
    to improperly use the buy-a-board donations, and certain other funds restricted
    for beach use, to rebuild a boardwalk pavilion (the Taylor Pavilion) that was
    largely used for non-beach purposes; and doubled the fees for beach-front
    parking spaces in order to raise money for the general fund. The trial court
    found that defendants' actions or planned actions violated the Borough's
    obligations under the public trust doctrine and N.J.S.A. 40:61-22.20, which
    was enacted to implement the doctrine. The trial court also concluded that the
    Borough violated plaintiffs' substantive civil rights and awarded plaintiffs
    A-3059-16T2
    2
    about $170,000 in counsel fees and costs under the New Jersey Civil Rights
    Act (CRA), N.J.S.A. 10:6-2(f). 2
    In challenging the resulting trial court orders, defendants – the Borough,
    and its Mayor and Council – contend that most of plaintiffs' issues were not
    ripe; the trial court's decision violated the separation of powers doctrine; the
    court erred in holding that the Borough must use the buy-a-board donations to
    rebuild the boardwalk; the court erred in finding that violations of the public
    trust doctrine were substantive rights for purposes of a counsel fee award
    under the CRA; the court erred in voiding the ordinance doubling the par king
    fees; paying litigation fees from the beach fund did not violate the public trust
    doctrine or the CRA; no counsel fee could be awarded because plaintiffs'
    attorney had no retainer agreement; the counsel fee award was excessive; and
    any fee award should be paid from the beach fund instead of the general fund.
    We conclude that the disputes in this case were ripe for adjudication.
    We affirm the orders on appeal, except that we modify the order awarding
    counsel fees under the CRA. We hold that when a municipality violates the
    beach fee statute, N.J.S.A. 40:61-22.20, by charging unreasonable beach fees,
    that violation constitutes the deprivation of a substantive civil right under the
    2
    The trial court memorialized its decisions in orders dated January 27, 2016,
    September 27, 2016, and February 16, 2017.
    A-3059-16T2
    3
    New Jersey Civil Rights Act, and a successful plaintiff is entitled to counsel
    fees. However, because the CRA requires the violation of an unambiguous,
    specific statutory or constitutional provision, most of the conduct plaintiffs
    proved in this case, while wrongful, did not establish CRA violations or entitle
    them to counsel fees.
    Under the limited circumstances of this case, we agree with the trial
    court that parking fees – charged only for beach-front parking and nowhere
    else in the Borough – constituted beach fees. The record supports the trial
    court's findings that doubling the parking fees in order to raise general
    revenues for the Borough imposed an unreasonable beach fee on users of the
    beach. Plaintiffs are entitled to counsel fees under the CRA for that violation
    of N.J.S.A. 40:61-22.20. Plaintiffs did not prove that the Borough's regular
    beach-badge fees were unreasonable, nor did they prove that they were
    physically excluded from any portion of the Borough's beach. Because CRA
    counsel fees are available for the violation of N.J.S.A. 40:61-22.20 that
    plaintiffs proved, we do not reach the separate issue of whether counsel fees
    are available under the CRA solely for a violation of the common-law public
    trust doctrine.
    A-3059-16T2
    4
    I
    As background, it is helpful to briefly review the public trust doctrine
    and the Slocum decision.
    The public trust doctrine refers to the common-law principle that a state
    holds, "'in trust for the people,'" "'ownership, dominion and sovereignty' over
    tidally flowed lands" extending to the mean high water mark. City of Long
    Branch v. Liu, 
    203 N.J. 464
    , 474-76 (2010) (quoting Matthews v. Bay Head
    Improvement Ass'n, 
    95 N.J. 306
    , 316-17 (1984)). Accord Borough of Neptune
    City v. Borough of Avon-By-The-Sea, 
    61 N.J. 296
    , 303-04 (1972) (stating that
    "land covered by tidal waters belonged to the sovereign, but for the common
    use of all the people"). The public trust doctrine guarantees the public's right
    to reasonable access to the trust lands. Raleigh Ave. Beach Ass'n v. Atlantis
    Beach Club, Inc., 
    185 N.J. 40
    , 51-55 (2005). "[W]ithout access the doctrine
    has no meaning." 
    Id. at 53
    (citing 
    Matthews, 95 N.J. at 323
    ).
    Our courts have extended the uses covered by the public trust doctrine,
    beyond navigation, commerce, and fishing "to recreational uses, including
    bathing, swimming and other shore activities." 
    Avon, 61 N.J. at 309
    . See
    Lusardi v. Curtis Point Prop. Owners Ass'n, 
    86 N.J. 217
    , 228 (1981) ("The
    public trust doctrine is premised on the common rights of all the State's
    citizens to use and enjoy the tidal land seaward of the mean high water
    A-3059-16T2
    5
    mark."). To accommodate these uses, our courts consequently extended the
    public's right of accessibility beyond the foreshore to the beaches and the
    upper dry sand areas. Times of Trenton Publ'g Corp. v. Lafayette Yard Cmty.
    Dev. Corp., 
    183 N.J. 519
    , 532 (2005) (stating that "the doctrine has been
    applied in New Jersey to ensure access by the public to areas of the beach ").
    "Whether natural, or man-made, the beach is an adjunct to ocean swimming
    and bathing and is subject to the Public Trust Doctrine." Van Ness v. Borough
    of Deal, 
    78 N.J. 174
    , 180 (1978). See also 
    Lusardi, 86 N.J. at 228
    (stating that
    the scope of the doctrine was expanded to beaches "[b]ecause the use of dry
    sand beaches is practically inseparable from enjoyment of ocean swimming").
    Our courts have also emphasized the importance of equal access: "a
    modern court must take the view that the public trust doctrine dictates that the
    beach and the ocean waters must be open to all on equal terms and without
    preference and that any contrary state or municipal action is impermissible."
    
    Avon, 61 N.J. at 309
    . Over the years, our courts have enforced the public trust
    doctrine by overturning actions favoring residents over non-residents with
    regard to access to and fees for using beaches and related facilities. In Van
    
    Ness, 78 N.J. at 180
    , the Court held that a municipality could not set aside part
    of its public beach for use by residents only. In Matthews, 
    95 N.J. 330-32
    , the
    Court held that a beach owned and operated by a quasi-public association with
    A-3059-16T2
    6
    close connections to the municipality could not exclude certain beach-goers
    from the dry upland portion of the beach. In 
    Avon, 61 N.J. at 310
    , the Court
    overturned an ordinance that restricted the sale of seasonal beach badges to
    residents, which resulted in non-residents paying disproportionately higher
    fees for daily and monthly badges.
    In Slocum, the plaintiff filed a wide-ranging challenge to the Borough's
    beach fees and its alleged misuse of the fees for purposes unrelated to the
    beach. After a trial, a Law Division judge invalidated the Borough's beach fee
    schedule, finding that it discriminated against non-residents by doubling the
    fees on weekends as compared to weekdays, and by charging more for the cost
    per day of a weekend daily badge than the cost per day for a seasonal badge.
    
    Slocum, 238 N.J. Super. at 190
    . "The majority of weekend badge purchasers
    were nonresidents . . . [and b]y paying a vastly greater per day price for their
    badges, the daytrippers have been subsidizing season badge holders." 
    Ibid. The judge also
    reasoned that, because the State holds certain lands in
    trust for the public, municipalities have a duty to take special care to account
    for all "beachfront related expenditures" and "beachfront related revenues."
    
    Id. at 183,
    188. The judge determined that the Borough had "breached its duty
    of loyalty to the public" as trustee under the public trust doctrine by increasing
    "beach admission fees," rather than real estate taxes, in order to raise general
    A-3059-16T2
    7
    revenues.     
    Id. at 188.
        In fact, the judge found that the Borough had
    commingled its beach badge revenues with its general revenues, essentially
    "operat[ing] the beach area as though it were a commercial business enterprise
    for the sole benefit of its taxpayers." 
    Ibid. He found: "This
    conduct resulted
    in surplus beach fee revenues being used to subsidize other municipal
    expenditures for the exclusive benefit of the residents of Belmar, rather than
    being set aside to meet future beach-related costs." 
    Ibid. Thus, the judge
    held
    that the Borough had violated its "duty under the public trust doctrine" by
    "plac[ing] the interest of Belmar's residents before those of the beachgoers. "
    
    Ibid. As a remedy
    for Belmar's past violations of the public trust doctrine, to
    prevent future violations, and to effectuate its obligation as a trustee of its
    beach-fee related funds, the judge ordered the Borough to keep clear financial
    accounts in the future:
    Commencing with the 1990 summer season, Belmar
    shall maintain complete, accurate, and traceable
    records documenting the costs relating to its
    beachfront facilities. Belmar shall maintain a separate
    beach account in which all revenues collected by the
    borough, from beach admission fees and any other
    beach use fees, shall be deposited, and from which all
    expenditures for beach related costs will be paid.
    [Id. at 208.]
    A-3059-16T2
    8
    Based on extensive expert testimony, the judge also specifically delineated the
    allowable beach-related costs that could be included as components of the
    Borough's beach fees. 
    Id. at 196-208.
    To comply with Slocum, the Borough created a beach utility fund (beach
    fund), which was separate from its municipal general fund. At the time the
    current litigation arose, the Borough was still required to comply with Slocum.
    II
    As a precursor to our legal analysis, we briefly summarize the evidence
    presented in the trial court.   In 2012, Superstorm Sandy caused extensive
    damage along the Borough's beachfront. The storm virtually destroyed the
    boardwalk and several pavilions located along the boardwalk. Some of the
    pavilions had been built, or rebuilt after previous storms, using money raised
    from beach-badge fees, and they were used for beach-related purposes. But
    the Taylor Pavilion was not built with beach funds and had primarily been
    used for community functions unrelated to the beach. The Borough anticipated
    that it would receive insurance proceeds from policies covering the pavilions,
    as well as money from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)
    to cover some reconstruction costs. In an effort to raise private funds toward
    the cost of rebuilding the boardwalk, the Borough also conducted a "buy-a-
    A-3059-16T2
    9
    board" campaign, telling potential donors that their donations would allow
    them to pay for actual boards on the boardwalk.
    The    Borough     planned   to    use   insurance   proceeds   and    FEMA
    reimbursement money associated with beach-related pavilions to rebuild the
    Taylor Pavilion.       The Borough also anticipated using the buy-a-board
    donations for that purpose. The Borough Council planned to issue bonds to
    fund the Taylor Pavilion construction, and it anticipated using the insurance,
    FEMA, and buy-a-board monies to repay the bonds. In addition, to avoid
    raising taxes on its residents, the Borough doubled the parking fees along the
    street adjacent to the beach, and paid certain non-beach-related litigation
    expenses using money from its beach fund instead of from its general fund.
    Plaintiffs filed a nine-count complaint challenging these actions as violating
    Slocum, violating the public trust doctrine, and violating the beach fee statute.
    After hearing motions and a two-day bench trial, the trial court decided the
    issues in plaintiffs' favor.
    III
    We will defer to a trial court's factual findings so long as they are
    supported by substantial credible evidence. Rova Farms Resort, Inc. v. Inv'rs
    Ins. Co. of Am., 
    65 N.J. 474
    , 484 (1974). We owe particular deference to a
    trial court's evaluation of witness credibility. Cesare v. Cesare, 
    154 N.J. 394
    ,
    A-3059-16T2
    10
    412 (1998). However, we engage in de novo review of a trial court's legal
    interpretations. Manalapan Realty, LP v. Twp. Comm. of Manalapan, 
    140 N.J. 366
    , 378 (1995).
    We begin by addressing the issue of ripeness. In deciding whether an
    issue is ripe, the court should consider whether the issues are fit for judicial
    review and whether withholding judicial review would cause hardship to the
    parties. K. Hovnanian Cos. of N. Cent. Jersey, Inc. v. N.J. Dep't of Envtl.
    Prot., 
    379 N.J. Super. 1
    , 9 (App. Div. 2005). On this record, we affirm the
    trial judge's decision that the issues were ripe, substantially for the reasons
    stated in her thoughtful oral opinions of October 6, 2015, and October 23,
    2015. We add these comments.
    As the trial court noted, the Borough had taken certain concrete steps
    toward misallocating some of the beach funds and violating requirements
    imposed by Slocum.      Under the Slocum opinion – the validity of which
    defendants did not question in the trial court and do not question here – beach
    fund monies were to be treated as trust assets. 
    Slocum, 238 N.J. Super. at 187
    -
    88. Slocum found that the Borough had routinely misused beach revenues,
    failed to properly account for beach fees, and "operated the beach area as
    though it were a commercial business enterprise for the sole benefit of its
    taxpayers."   
    Id. at 188.
      Slocum imposed certain prophylactic remedies to
    A-3059-16T2
    11
    preclude future misuse of beach funds and make it easier to determine whether
    future beach fees were reasonable. Those remedies included a requirement
    that the Borough place all beach funds in a dedicated account. 
    Id. at 208.3
    There was evidence before the trial court that the Borough was violating the
    Slocum decision by placing $727,000 in buy-a-board proceeds in a non-beach
    account. Further, due to the Borough's failure to use those proceeds to pay off
    a boardwalk construction bond, the beach fund was incurring about $36,000 a
    year in interest costs on the bond.
    The trial court also determined that the parties needed a decision on the
    allowable use of FEMA reimbursement funds, insurance proceeds, and the
    buy-a-board funds, in time for an upcoming referendum on whether to issue
    about $4 million in bonds to pay for construction of the Taylor Pavilion.
    Underlying the referendum was a dispute over whether the FEMA, insurance,
    3
    Our view of Slocum finds support in the following observation:
    [W]e are not convinced that Slocum should be read, as
    plaintiffs demand, to require a municipality to
    maintain a separate account for beach tag revenue in
    all cases. Slocum provides an example of a remedy
    that may be used in a case where serious accounting
    irregularities have been proven. The nature of the
    remedy is necessarily dependent on the severity of the
    irregularities uncovered.
    [Secure Heritage, Inc. v. City of Cape May, 361 N.J.
    Super. 281, 310 (App. Div. 2003).]
    A-3059-16T2
    12
    and buy-a-board monies could be used to repay the bonds. Through a petition
    drive, objectors to the rebuilding project had already forced the Borough to
    hold a referendum on the bond issue. The record here reflects that municipal
    government officials then embarked on a campaign of disinformation,
    designed to influence the outcome of the referendum.
    DeSanctis v. Borough of Belmar, 
    455 N.J. Super. 316
    (App. Div. 2018),
    a separate lawsuit filed by some of the same plaintiffs who filed this case,
    supports the judge's decision that the dispute in this case was ripe.         In
    DeSanctis, the municipal clerk drafted an interpretive statement for the same
    referendum involved in the present case. 
    Id. at 322.
    We affirmed the trial
    judge's finding that, viewed in context, the interpretive statement was not an
    objective explanation of the referendum. 
    Id. at 332-33,
    335. Instead, it was
    biased and designed to "sell" the referendum to voters based on a
    representation that the Borough would use FEMA and other funds to repay the
    bonds without expense to the taxpayers. 4 
    Id. at 331-32.
    That was part of the
    same pattern of conduct involved here, including the mayor's public statements
    4
    In DeSanctis, we also affirmed the trial court's award to plaintiffs of about
    $40,000 in counsel fees under the CRA, for unlawfully interfering with
    plaintiffs' substantive right of referendum. 
    Id. at 334-35.
    See Tumpson v.
    Farina, 
    218 N.J. 450
    , 480-81 (2014).
    A-3059-16T2
    13
    and emails to constituents, designed to convince voters that the $4 million
    bond issue would cost the Borough's taxpayers nothing.
    The same trial judge who presided over this case was handling
    DeSanctis and was therefore familiar with the Borough's campaign to convince
    voters to support the referendum. The judge was also familiar with the long
    history of disputes over Belmar's use or misuse of beach funds. That litigation
    included an injunction issued by Assignment Judge Lawrence M. Lawson,
    precluding the Borough from spending beach funds to rebuild the Taylor
    Pavilion.5 The trial judge also construed the parties' joint submission of issues
    – which referred to "the Borough's plans" to take the disputed actions – as an
    admission by the Borough that it had such plans. We find no error in the trial
    judge drawing that inference.
    Given the history of this litigation, we cannot say the trial judge erred in
    deciding that there was a genuine dispute over which assets belonged in the
    beach fund and that there was a current need for a declaratory ruling as to the
    proper allocation of the funds, even in the absence of a municipal
    5
    The injunction was dissolved and the litigation dismissed without prejudice,
    after the Borough abandoned its plan to implement a bond ordinance that
    would have explicitly funded non-beach construction with beach funds. The
    evidence supports a conclusion that, in adopting the next ordinance, Ordinance
    2015-25, the Borough planned to accomplish indirectly that which Judge
    Lawson had enjoined it from doing directly.
    A-3059-16T2
    14
    appropriation of the funds or other legally binding action by the Borough
    Council.
    IV
    Several of defendants' additional arguments are clearly without merit
    and warrant only brief discussion. See R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
    Defendants argue that they were entitled to use the buy-a-board funds to
    reconstruct the Taylor Pavilion and the trial court erred in holdin g otherwise.
    We disagree. The buy-a-board funds were not beach fees. However, they
    were voluntary contributions, raised through a solicitation that clearly
    indicated they would be used to pay for the reconstruction of the boardwalk.
    The proper use of those contributions is governed by the statute
    addressing the use of funds raised by bequests, legacies and gifts. That statute,
    N.J.S.A. 40A:5-29, states in pertinent part: "Any local unit is authorized and
    empowered to accept . . . gifts made to it and is empowered to utilize such . . .
    gifts in the manner set forth in the conditions of the . . . gift . . . ." (emphasis
    added).    For the reasons stated in the trial judge's October 23, 2015 oral
    opinion, we conclude that the buy-a-board donations were solicited for the
    explicit purpose of rebuilding the boardwalk, and the language of the
    solicitations constituted the "conditions" of the gifts or donations. N.J.S.A.
    A-3059-16T2
    15
    40A:5-29. The judge's factual findings, underlying her legal conclusions, are
    supported by substantial credible evidence. Rova 
    Farms, 65 N.J. at 484
    .
    As the judge concluded, the fundraising proceeds constitute a trust for
    the purpose for which they were solicited, and hence, the funds must be used
    for boardwalk construction and cannot be used to rebuild the Taylor Pavilion.
    Accordingly, the donations must be deposited in the beach fund and used to
    pay for reconstruction of the boardwalk.       Defendants' arguments to the
    contrary are without sufficient merit to warrant further discussion. R. 2:11-
    3(e)(1)(E).
    On this appeal, defendants do not challenge the substance of the trial
    court's decision determining the extent to which beach funds could be used to
    reconstruct the Taylor Pavilion, although they contend the issue was not ripe
    for decision.   The funds at issue derived from pavilions whose prior
    construction was paid for with beach fees. The court held that when those
    pavilions were destroyed by Sandy, the insurance proceeds and FEMA
    reimbursement funds received, or to be received in future by the Borough, had
    to be allocated to the beach fund and used for beach purposes. With respect to
    the Taylor Pavilion, which was primarily to be used for non-beach purposes,
    the judge held that a portion of those funds could be used to pay the
    proportionate cost of rebuilding the relatively small area of the building that
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    16
    would be used for beach purposes. We affirm that decision, as to ripeness and
    as to the merits, for the reasons stated by the trial court. 6
    We agree with the trial judge that the Borough was not entitled to spend
    money from the beach fund to settle claims from a lawsuit (known as the
    "Partner Litigation") that were unrelated to the beach. That issue was ripe for
    the court's consideration. While the case was pending in the trial court, the
    parties were able to agree on which portion of the Partner Litigation settlement
    should be paid from the beach fund and which portion should be paid from the
    general fund. Accordingly, they agreed that the general fund would reimburse
    the beach fund for the former's share of the settlement obligation.
    V
    We next turn to the parking fee issue, which concerns parking spaces on
    the beach side of Ocean Avenue. The Slocum decision apparently assumed
    that parking fees could be considered beach-related income, because it held
    that the administrative costs associated with maintaining the parking meters
    could be charged to the beach fund. See 
    Slocum, 238 N.J. Super. at 206
    .
    Slocum also approved the use of beach funds to pay for what it called "traffic
    and paint supplies" on Ocean Avenue adjacent to the beach, because they were
    6
    Defendants' brief advised us that the Taylor Pavilion has now been rebuilt.
    We presume defendants complied with the trial court's order in paying for the
    reconstruction.
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    associated with "the summer parking lines." 
    Id. at 199-200.
    The Slocum court
    further approved allocating "a small percentage of road repair costs" to the
    beach fund due to "increased volume of traffic on the streets during the
    summer months[.]" 
    Id. at 202.
    As previously noted, defendants did not ask
    the trial court to relieve them from the orders resulting from Slocum, but
    instead accepted that the Borough was still bound by the Slocum decision. As
    a result, we need not decide whether the public trust doctrine or N.J.S.A.
    40:61-22.20 apply to parking fees generally.         However, we add these
    observations pertinent to this particular case.
    At oral argument on May 6, 2016, both sides agreed on the essential
    facts concerning parking in the Borough. There are no parking lots where
    beach users can park. Therefore, anyone arriving by car to use the beach must
    use street parking.    The Borough does not charge for street parking (i.e.,
    through meters or parking kiosks) anywhere except for the parking spaces on
    the eastern side of Ocean Avenue, directly adjacent to the beach. Under those
    unique circumstances, it is reasonable to conclude that the parking fees are a
    form of beach fee – a fee aimed at persons who are parking in order to obtain
    access to the beach.    The Borough has essentially conceded that point for
    decades; it has allocated sixty percent of the parking revenue to the beach fund
    and forty percent to either its general fund or a parking utility fund, on the
    A-3059-16T2
    18
    theory that the majority of parking revenue comes from beach users, but some
    parking revenue is earned at night from people who do not intend to use the
    beach. In turn, Slocum allows the Borough to charge the beach fund for the
    upkeep of the meters and for other costs related to the parking spaces.
    We affirm the trial court's finding that in 2013 and 2014, the Borough
    departed from the sixty-forty split of income between the parking utility fund
    and the beach fund without a financial justification. 7 We also find that the trial
    court's decision, ordering the allocation to the beach fund of parking fees paid
    during hours the beach was open to the public, was reasonable and supported
    by the evidence. Rova 
    Farms, 65 N.J. at 484
    .
    There is also substantial credible evidence to support the judge's finding
    that the one hundred percent increase in the hourly parking fee, from a dollar
    to two dollars per hour, was not imposed to pay for permissible beach -related
    costs, but was instead aimed at increasing the Borough's general revenues to
    avoid raising taxes on its residents. Contrary testimony from the Borough's
    CFO was vague and not supported by documentary evidence. The mayor and
    7
    In her deposition testimony, the Borough's Chief Financial Officer (CFO),
    Robbin Kirk, admitted that she did not note any interfund loan on the
    Borough's books and records, which would have indicated an intent to
    reimburse the beach fund for a temporary fund transfer to the parking fund.
    The record supports the judge's finding that Kirk had no intention of causing
    any such repayment.
    A-3059-16T2
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    Borough Council members repeatedly expressed their intent to increase
    general revenues without raising taxes, and the Council rejected proposals to
    impose parking fees anywhere else in the town. Given this particular town's
    past history as detailed in Slocum, and its current policy of charging for
    parking on the beachfront and nowhere else in the town, we conclude there
    was sufficient credible evidence to support the trial court's findings that the
    parking charge amounted to a beach fee and the town violated N.J.S.A. 40:61 -
    22.20, by imposing on beach users an unreasonable increase in that fee.
    To be clear, we are not holding that any and all fees for parking near a
    beach necessarily constitute beach fees; that issue is not before us. However,
    the record here supports the trial court's finding that these parking fees were
    beach fees. The record also supports the court's conclusion that in doubling
    the fees, the Borough was intentionally and improperly using beach fees to
    raise money for its general fund, to avoid raising taxes on its residents.
    "Limiting access by placing an unreasonable economic burden on the public
    undermines the objectives of the public trust doctrine to the same extent as any
    physical barrier. . . . The notion that lands are to be held in public trust,
    protected and regulated for the common use and benefit, is incompatible with
    the concept of profit." Raleigh Ave. Beach Ass'n v. Atlantis Beach Club, Inc.,
    
    370 N.J. Super. 171
    , 193 (App. Div. 2004), aff'd, 
    185 N.J. 40
    (2005).
    A-3059-16T2
    20
    VI
    Before reaching the CRA counsel fee issue, we find it necessary to
    address more precisely the violations the Borough committed. We agree with
    the trial judge's conclusions that the Borough misallocated and misused some
    beach-related funds, for the reasons she stated. However, apart from parking
    fees, the judge did not decide the reasonableness of the Borough's beach fees,
    an issue that was not before her in any event. In their appellate brief, plaintiffs
    argue that we can infer from the record that they paid unreasonable beach -
    badge fees, but their claim is unsupported by the evidence. Plaintiffs assert
    that if the Borough misspent money from the beach fund, or failed to deposit
    monies into the fund that belonged there, the beach-badge fees the Borough
    charged must necessarily be unreasonable. We cannot agree.
    The Slocum case illustrates the kind of expert evidence needed to
    present a rate-setting case concerning the reasonableness of beach-badge fees.
    See 
    Slocum, 238 N.J. Super. at 192-93
    , 196-207. The evidence in this case did
    not approach that level of detail. There was, for example, no evidence as to
    the reasonableness of the amount of the reserve in the beach fund. 8 At most,
    there was evidence that buy-a-board funds that should have been placed in the
    8
    Our courts have consistently recognized that a municipality may maintain "a
    reasonable annual reserve designed to meet expected future capital expenses "
    connected with the beach. E.g. 
    Avon, 61 N.J. at 311
    .
    A-3059-16T2
    21
    beach fund were placed in another account, some beach-related funds were
    improperly spent to pay litigation expenses, and the Borough government had
    future plans to spend beach funds on non-beach projects. However, those
    plans had not yet been implemented and might never have been implemented if
    the voters disapproved the bond ordinance for the Taylor Pavilion. There was
    also evidence that the beach fund could have avoided paying about $36,000 in
    annual bond interest if the Borough had used the buy-a-board proceeds to pay
    down the bonds. But, there was no evidence that the $36,000 would have
    made a difference to the reasonable amount of beach fees charged.
    Plaintiffs did not introduce the type of expert rate-setting testimony that
    would have been needed to support a conclusion that the current beach-badge
    fees the Borough was charging were unreasonable. In fact, their complaint did
    not even specifically allege that those rates were unreasonable. 9 Nor did they
    introduce the type of expert evidence the court relied on in Slocum concerning
    the reasonableness of the amount of the beach fund reserve. Those are not
    trivial evidentiary gaps.   Superstorm Sandy had recently inflicted tens of
    millions of dollars in damage to the beach and boardwalk. Absent expert
    9
    On December 16, 2014, the Borough Council passed Resolution 2014-196,
    increasing the beach-badge fees for 2015. However, plaintiff's second
    amended complaint, which was the basis for this litigation, did not challenge
    that resolution or seek to enjoin the increases from taking effect.
    A-3059-16T2
    22
    testimony, one cannot say that it was unreasonable for the Borough to maintain
    a significant reserve in the beach fund against potential future storm damage,
    or that it was unreasonable to raise the beach-badge fees.
    After reviewing the transcripts, we also have reservations about some of
    the language the court used concerning the absolute duty to maintain beach fee
    proceeds in the beach account at all times, and the imprecise use of language
    concerning the identity of money raised through beach fees. To address the
    latter issue first, both plaintiffs and the court repeatedly referred to the funds
    as belonging to beachgoers, as though they had an individual right to the
    money, which would be violated by any misallocation of the funds.             The
    characterization is inaccurate. The funds belong to the municipality, albeit
    they can only be used for restricted purposes relating to the beach, as provided
    in N.J.S.A. 40:61-22.20.
    The Borough's CFO, Robbin Kirk, testified that it is not unusual for a
    municipal fiscal administrator to transfer money back and forth between
    accounts during a fiscal year to meet temporary shortages in one account or the
    other. Kirk testified that on occasion, she had transferred funds from another
    account to the beach fund to meet a temporary shortfall in the beach fund, and
    vice versa. She testified that was not deemed improper accounting so long as
    the Borough's accounts documented the interfund transfers, so that money
    A-3059-16T2
    23
    temporarily transferred from one fund to another would be reimbursed to the
    proper fund.      There was no testimony, expert or otherwise, that this was
    improper or not a generally accepted practice in municipal finance and
    accounting.
    The Borough does not challenge that it remains bound by the accounting
    procedures set forth in Slocum. However, that does not necessarily mean that
    any violation of Slocum is itself a violation of the public trust doctrine or of
    plaintiffs' substantive civil rights.    In ruling otherwise, the trial court
    essentially morphed prophylactic remedies or procedures, designed to prevent
    violations of the public trust doctrine, into elements of the doctrine itself and
    characterized any variation from those procedures as violations of individual,
    substantive civil rights. Taking that approach conflates substantive rights w ith
    procedural remedies, may unduly involve courts in the day-to-day business of
    municipal accounting, and may encourage unnecessary litigation. See Secure
    
    Heritage, 361 N.J. Super. at 310
    (declining to read Slocum as "requir[ing] a
    municipality to maintain a separate account for beach tag revenue in all cases"
    provided the municipality has an appropriate accounting system in place for its
    10
    general fund).
    10
    The Legislature recently reaffirmed the broad authority of the Department
    of Environmental Protection (DEP) to protect the public's right of access to
    (continued)
    A-3059-16T2
    24
    VII
    Next, we address the CRA issue and plaintiffs' claim for counsel fees.
    We begin with the observation that plaintiffs did not need to assert a
    substantive, individual civil right in order to have standing to file this lawsuit.
    "[T]he standing of a taxpayer to attack illegal disbursements of public funds or
    other illegal official action has been long and firmly established." Crescent
    Park Tenants Ass'n v. Realty Equities Corp. of N.Y., 
    58 N.J. 98
    , 102 (1971).
    Consequently, the fact that plaintiffs filed the lawsuit to rectify misallocation
    of expenses for the Partnership Litigation, correct violations of accounting
    procedures required by Slocum, and prevent the future misuse of various
    funds, does not determine their right to counsel fees under the CRA.
    (continued)
    tidally flowed waters and their adjacent shorelines under the public trust
    doctrine, through the agency's permitting authority in N.J.S.A. 12:5-3(d)
    (regulating waterfront development) and N.J.S.A. 13:19-10(h) (regulating
    costal development). See L. 2015, c. 260. Those statutory amendments
    responded to our opinion in Hackensack Riverkeeper, Inc. v. New Jersey
    Department of Environmental Protection, 
    443 N.J. Super. 293
    (App. Div.
    2015), which invalidated DEP's public access rules. See Senate Env't &
    Energy Comm. Statement to S. 3321 (Jan. 7, 2016). Pursuant to its current
    regulations, N.J.A.C. 7:7-16.9, under the circumstances set forth therein, DEP
    has authority to review the reasonableness and use of beach-badge and parking
    fees. N.J.A.C. 7:7-16.9(v). See 49 N.J.R. 3145(a) (Sept. 18, 2017). See also
    N.J.A.C. 7:7-9.48 (addressing public trust rights). In addition, the Supreme
    Court previously recognized DEP's power to review beach fees as part of its
    authority to regulate coastal development. See Raleigh 
    Avenue, 185 N.J. at 61-62
    . DEP's exercise of its oversight authority may mitigate the need for
    individual lawsuits challenging the reasonableness of beach fees.
    A-3059-16T2
    25
    The CRA does not extend the right to counsel fees for any and all
    successful litigation against a government entity. It is limited to successful
    litigation concerning individual substantive rights guaranteed by "laws" or by
    the Constitution. The CRA provides in relevant part:
    Any person who has been deprived of any substantive
    due process or equal protection rights, privileges or
    immunities secured by the Constitution or laws of the
    United States, or any substantive rights, privileges or
    immunities secured by the Constitution or laws of this
    State, or whose exercise or enjoyment of those
    substantive rights, privileges or immunities has been
    interfered with or attempted to be interfered with, by
    threats, intimidation or coercion by a person acting
    under color of law, may bring a civil action for
    damages and for injunctive or other appropriate relief.
    [N.J.S.A. 10:6-2(c) (emphasis added).]
    We previously construed this provision as requiring either (a) a
    deprivation of a substantive right; or (b) threats, intimidation, or coercion
    constituting an interference or attempted interference with the right.
    [P]lacement of a comma after "laws of this State" and
    before the word "or" divides the clause into two
    separate, independent phrases that do not act to
    modify nor qualify one another. Thus, properly read,
    the statute provides a person may bring a civil action
    under the Act in two circumstances: (1) when he's
    deprived of a right, or (2) when his rights are
    interfered with by threats, intimidation, coercion or
    force. Clearly, defendants' contrary interpretation
    renders the terms "deprive" and "interfere"
    indistinguishable, yet they are clearly different in
    meaning. Indeed, it makes sense to require, as the
    A-3059-16T2
    26
    Legislature evidently did, that a plaintiff show
    "threats, intimidation or coercion" were employed if
    constitutional rights were merely interfered with or an
    attempt was made at interfering with them, and that no
    such showing is required where one has actually been
    deprived of the right.
    [Felicioni v. Admin. Office of the Courts, 404 N.J.
    Super. 382, 400 (App. Div. 2008).]
    In Tumpson v. Farina, 
    218 N.J. 450
    (2014), the Supreme Court
    confirmed that reading. In Tumpson, a municipal clerk unlawfully refused to
    file a referendum petition. In determining whether the plaintiffs were entitled
    to counsel fees under the CRA, the Court observed:
    Although N.J.S.A. 10:6–2(c) provides relief for either
    the deprivation of a statutory substantive right or the
    interference with such a right "by threats, intimidation
    or coercion," no one contends that the Clerk engaged
    in "threats, intimidation or coercion" in refusing to file
    the referendum petition. Therefore, plaintiffs cannot
    look to the interference portion of this statute for
    relief. Their claim under the Civil Rights Act must
    rise or fall on whether the Clerk deprived them of a
    substantive right.
    [Id. at 473.]
    In Tumpson, the Court found that the right at issue was "substantive" because
    it gave rise to a cause of action to enforce a right specified in the referendum
    statute, and the Legislature did not intend to withhold relief under the CRA
    merely because the plaintiffs could enforce their rights through an action in
    lieu of prerogative writs. 
    Id. at 478-79.
    Instead, the Legislature would have
    A-3059-16T2
    27
    intended to empower voters to enforce the right of referendum, because it is
    fundamental to representative democracy. 
    Id. at 480-81.
    The Court rejected the defendant's argument that the plaintiffs were not
    entitled to counsel fees because they obtained injunctive relief and hence were
    not "deprived" of their right to file the petition.
    Certainly, before plaintiffs secured judicial relief, the
    Clerk's refusal to file their referendum petition took
    away, withheld, and kept plaintiffs from enjoying their
    right of referendum. That the Law Division later
    provided a judicial remedy by compelling the Clerk to
    abide by the Faulkner Act and process the referendum
    petition does not alter the nature of the Clerk's earlier
    act, which deprived plaintiffs of a statutory right.
    [Id. at 481.]
    Most recently, in Harz v. Borough of Spring Lake, 
    234 N.J. 317
    (2018),
    the Court set forth a three-step test, derived from Blessing v. Freestone, 
    520 U.S. 329
    , 340-41 (1997), to determine whether a right is "substantive" for
    purposes of the CRA. See also Gonzaga Univ. v. Doe, 
    536 U.S. 273
    (2002).
    In the three-step test, 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 judicial competence,"
    and (3) whether the statute "unambiguously impose[s]
    a binding obligation on the [governmental entity]."
    In addition to satisfying those three "factors,"
    for purposes of our Civil Rights Act, plaintiffs must
    A-3059-16T2
    28
    also "show that       the right     is substantive, not
    procedural." . . .
    In essence, a substantive right is "[a] right that
    can be protected or enforced by law; a right of
    substance rather than form." Black's Law Dictionary
    1437, 1438 (9th ed. 2009) (defining a procedural right,
    in contrast, as "[a] right that derives from legal or
    administrative procedure; a right that helps in the
    protection or enforcement of a substantive right").
    
    [Harz, 234 N.J. at 331-32
    (bracketed alterations in
    original) (emphasis added) (additional citations
    omitted).]
    In Harz, the Court found that a property owner's statutory right to appeal
    from the decision of a zoning officer was substantive:
    Here, the nature of the substantive right at
    issue—a property right—is clearly identifiable. The
    right of an interested party to appeal the issuance of a
    zoning permit—to have her concerns 'heard'—is
    rooted in principles of property rights, specifically the
    right to not be deprived of an interest in one's property
    without process.
    [Id. at 333.]
    Against that backdrop, we begin our analysis by considering the possible
    sources of the rights plaintiffs asserted here. Like the trial court, plaintiffs rely
    heavily on the public trust doctrine. On the one hand, it can be argued that
    since the doctrine is grounded in the common law rather than in statutory or
    constitutional provisions, a violation of the doctrine is not covered by the
    CRA.     On the other hand, because the CRA is remedial legislation, and
    A-3059-16T2
    29
    because it uses the term "laws" rather "statutes," it could be argued that the
    Legislature intended the term "laws" to include fundamental rights enshrined
    in our common law and that the right to use the beaches is such a fundamental
    right. The Supreme Court has never extended the CRA that far, however, and
    we need not decide that novel issue here. 11 Plaintiffs were not prevented from
    using the Borough's beach, which is the core substantive right protected by the
    public trust doctrine, and their right to pay reasonable beach fees is protected
    by a statute.
    Thus, we look to N.J.S.A. 40:61-22.20(a), which delegates to
    municipalities the State's responsibilities under the public trust doctrine and is
    integral to its enforcement.
    The statute amounts to a delegation to a municipality
    having a dedicated beach (dry sand area) of the state's
    police power over that area and the tide-flowed land
    seaward of the mean high water mark; the proviso
    indicates an affirmation of the state's paramount
    interest and inherent obligation in insuring that such
    seaward land be equally available for the use of all
    citizens.
    
    [Avon, 61 N.J. at 301-02
    .]
    11
    Research reveals no reported opinions awarding CRA counsel fees for a
    violation of the public trust doctrine or the beach fee statute. In Secure
    
    Heritage, 361 N.J. Super. at 310
    -11, which predated enactment of the CRA, the
    plaintiff sought counsel fees for proving a violation of the public trust
    doctrine. We found no source of authority for a fee award.
    A-3059-16T2
    30
    We have also recognized that "a municipality's obligation to charge only
    reasonable, non-discriminatory beach fees is a well-established component of
    the public trust doctrine[.]" Borough of Avalon v. N.J. Dep't of Envtl. Prot.,
    
    403 N.J. Super. 590
    , 607-08 (App. Div. 2008). The beach fee statute enforces
    that component.
    We conclude that a violation of N.J.S.A. 40:61-22.20(a)'s prohibition on
    unreasonable beach fees would entitle an injured plaintiff to an award of
    counsel fees under the CRA, but a violation of financial accounting rules
    would not.   The statutory mandate that municipalities charge "reasonable"
    beach fees states a substantive individual right of members of the public. 12
    N.J.S.A. 40:61-22.20(a).   It is a "clearly identifiable" right, rooted in the
    historic and fundamental principle of public access to the beach. 
    Harz, 234 N.J. at 333
    . See Borough of 
    Avalon, 403 N.J. Super. at 607-08
    . On the other
    hand, N.J.S.A. 40:61-22.20(a) contains no specific provision, unambiguous or
    otherwise, that guarantees the public a right to any particular form of
    municipal financial accounting or fund allocation, including the creation of a
    12
    In so holding, we do not mean to imply that every rate-setting statute
    creates a substantive individual right that can be enforced under the CRA. The
    beach fee statute is unique; in prohibiting unreasonable beach fees, it
    safeguards a fundamental public right of beach access. See 
    Avon, 61 N.J. at 302
    . We also do not decide here whether physical exclusion from the beach
    would entitle an excluded party to CRA counsel fees under N.J.S.A. 40:61-
    22.20; that issue is not before us.
    A-3059-16T2
    31
    separate beach fund.     The only unambiguous fiscal-related obligation the
    statute creates is the requirement that a municipality charge beachgoers
    "reasonable" beach fees.13 See 
    Harz, 234 N.J. at 331-32
    .
    As previously noted, the Borough did not physically exclude plaintiffs
    from the beach, or attempt to do so, and plaintiffs did not prove that the
    current beach-badge fees were unreasonable. The fact that, at some future
    point, the Borough might charge unreasonably high beach-badge fees as a
    result of having misallocated monies due to the beach fund, does not constitute
    the current violation of a substantive right. Nor does that conduct constitute an
    attempt to interfere "by threats, intimidation or coercion" with the exercise of
    either of those substantive rights. N.J.S.A. 10:6-2(c). See 
    Tumpson, 218 N.J. at 473
    . The only unreasonable fee that plaintiffs proved the Borough actually
    imposed on them was the increased fee for beach parking which, in the
    particular circumstances of this case, was tantamount to a beach fee.
    Accordingly, with the exception of that limited and discrete claim, plaintiffs
    were not entitled to counsel fees under the CRA, N.J.S.A. 10:6-2(f).
    13
    Likewise, for CRA purposes, we could not infer such an unambiguous
    "substantive right" of proper municipal accounting from the common law. It
    would be anomalous to limit substantive statutory rights to those
    unambiguously guaranteed by a statute, but to apply a looser standard to rights
    created by the common law.
    A-3059-16T2
    32
    We therefore reverse the order awarding counsel fees except as to the
    parking fee claim. We remand the case to the trial court to recalculate the fee
    award based on plaintiffs' limited success on their CRA-related claims. See
    Szczepanski v. Newcomb Med. Ctr., Inc., 
    141 N.J. 346
    , 354-56 (1995). For
    the court's guidance on remand, we reject defendant's arguments that no
    counsel fees were due because there was no retainer agreement and that any
    fee award should be paid from the beach fund rather than the general fund. As
    we held in DeSanctis, those arguments are completely without merit, and they
    do not warrant further discussion. 
    DeSanctis, 455 N.J. Super. at 335-36
    ; R.
    2:11-3(e)(1)(E).14
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part, remanded in part. We do not retain
    jurisdiction.
    14
    We have not specifically addressed defendants' contentions based on the
    separation of powers doctrine, because those arguments are without sufficient
    merit to warrant discussion in a written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
    A-3059-16T2
    33