CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF ORANGE TOWNSHIP VS. WILLIS EDWARDS, III (L-1805-13, ESSEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) , 455 N.J. Super. 261 ( 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  •                    NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-3729-15T4
    CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY
    OF ORANGE TOWNSHIP,                     APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    June 19, 2018
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    v.
    WILLIS EDWARDS III,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _____________________________
    Argued May 2, 2018 – Decided June 19, 2018
    Before Judges Alvarez, Currier, and Geiger.
    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Law Division, Essex County, Docket No.
    L-1805-13.
    Michael A. Cifelli argued the cause for
    appellant   (Florio    Kenny   Raval,  LLP,
    attorneys; Michael A. Cifelli and Edward J.
    Florio, of counsel and on the briefs;
    William J. Maslo, on the briefs).
    Robert L. Tarver, Jr., argued the cause for
    respondent (Law Offices of Robert L. Tarver,
    Jr., attorneys; Jeff Thakker, of counsel and
    on the brief; Robert L. Tarver, Jr., on the
    brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    CURRIER, J.A.D.
    In    this     matter,        we   consider        whether      the    appointment        of
    defendant Willis Edwards III to the position of Deputy Business
    Administrator in the City of Orange Township (City) was unlawful
    and   whether      defendant        knowingly       remained         in    the   unauthorized
    position.       If so, we must determine whether disgorgement of
    defendant's salaries is the appropriate remedy for the illegal
    action.
    We   conclude,         upon       review    of     the      record    and   applicable
    principles of law, that the appointment was ultra vires because
    the   mayor     lacked        the    authority          to    place       defendant      in    the
    position.     As defendant was aware that serving in the position
    was a violation of state and local law, he did not act in good
    faith in remaining in the position and collecting a salary.
    Therefore,      we      are    satisfied          that       the    equitable      remedy       of
    disgorgement       is     appropriate        under        these      circumstances.             We
    affirm.
    In July 2012, the mayor of the City1 appointed defendant to
    the   position       of   Acting         Business       Administrator.             The    City's
    ordinances permitted defendant to hold the position for a term
    not to exceed ninety days; the appointment did not require the
    advice and consent of City Council.                          At the end of defendant's
    1
    The mayor at the time of                       these      events       was   an   attorney
    practicing law in this state.
    2                                          A-3729-15T4
    ninety-day       term,      the    mayor    appointed      him    to    the   full-time
    position of Business Administrator, which did require the advice
    and consent of City Council.
    The municipal government of the City is organized as a
    "Mayor-Council Plan D" form of government under the Faulkner
    Act, N.J.S.A. 40:69A-1 to -210. This Act, in conjunction with
    City ordinances, requires persons appointed to the position of a
    department director, such as the Business Administrator, receive
    the advice and consent of City Council.                      On October 2, 2012,
    plaintiff,       City       Council    of    the    City     of    Orange      Township
    (plaintiff       or   City     Council),     voted    against          confirmation     of
    defendant    to       the     position.      The    following      day,       the   mayor
    appointed defendant as Deputy Business Administrator, setting a
    yearly salary of $105,000.2
    City Council objected to the appointment.                       A letter to the
    mayor on October 16, 2012 memorialized City Council's objections
    and    informed         him       defendant's      term     as     Acting      Business
    Administrator had expired and the Council had not confirmed him
    as    Business    Administrator.            The    mayor    had    no     authority    to
    appoint a deputy; only the department head had that authority.
    2
    He received an additional stipend of $10,000 for his service
    as Affirmative Action Officer.   At the time of his resignation
    on December 31, 2015, defendant's compensation had increased to
    $120,000.
    3                                  A-3729-15T4
    Nevertheless,    defendant     continued     in   the   position,    signing
    official documents as the Business Administrator and collecting
    a salary.
    In March 2013, plaintiff presented an Order to Show Cause
    and verified complaint against the mayor3 and defendant, seeking
    to   enjoin     defendant      from   serving      as    Deputy     Business
    Administrator.      A March 8, 2013 order required defendant and the
    mayor to appear and show cause why the court should not issue a
    preliminary injunction.        Defendant filed an answer and third-
    party   complaint    against   five   City   Council    members     in   their
    individual and official capacities.
    After oral argument, the court issued an order on April 18,
    2013, stating:
    1. [Defendant] shall not perform any of
    the functions of Business Administrator or
    Acting Business Administrator after May 30,
    2013, unless appointed to those positions
    through the advice and consent of City
    Council.
    2. On or before the date of May 30,
    2013, the City of Orange Township shall
    appoint a Business Administrator or Acting
    Business    Administrator   to   head   the
    Department of Administration as required by
    Statute and Ordinance.
    3
    On the eve of trial, the parties stipulated to the dismissal
    of the mayor from the lawsuit.   Therefore, we refer to Willis
    Edwards III as defendant.
    4                              A-3729-15T4
    3. The City shall be required to comply
    with . . . N.J.S.A. 40:69A-43.1 and 43.2 in
    the appointment of any Deputy Director and
    any such appointment shall be made by the
    Director of the Department and the salary of
    that Deputy must be approved by the City
    Council.
    4. The Counterclaim and Third Party
    Complaint filed by [d]efendant . . . shall
    be   dismissed  in  its   entirety without
    prejudice.
    As   a    result   of   this    order,    defendant    subsequently       left      the
    position      of   Deputy      Business       Administrator      and    the      mayor
    appointed him Chief of Staff.4
    Defendant and the mayor filed motions for reconsideration,
    which were granted by a different judge than had considered the
    Order to Show Cause.           On February 28, 2014, in an oral decision,
    the second judge found it improper for his predecessor to have
    issued      injunctive    relief     without       hearing       testimony.          He
    therefore     vacated    paragraphs       one   and   two   of    the   April     2013
    order, and amended paragraph four to reinstate one count of the
    third-party complaint.
    Following the ruling, plaintiff's counsel queried: "Judge,
    just so that I'm clear and I get this, . . . is it the [c]ourt's
    intention by vacating [c]ounts 1, 2 and 4 that Mr. Edwards can
    now serve as the deputy business administrator because . . .
    4
    Defendant received the same salary for Chief of Staff as he
    was paid as Business Administrator.
    5                                   A-3729-15T4
    that   was    the    thrust    of     the    initial        complaint."        The   judge
    responded: "The effect of the order vacating [the prior] order
    does just that.           The factual effect of it, you know, remains to
    be executed.         All I did was vacate the order based upon the
    reasons I stated."          (Emphasis added).           Following the issuance of
    this order, defendant re-assumed the position of Deputy Business
    Administrator.
    Trial5     was     scheduled    for        January    4,     2016   before    Judge
    Christine A. Farrington.              Defendant resigned from the position
    of Deputy Business Administrator on December 31, 2015.                                 As a
    result,      he   contended     the     matter       was     moot    and     requested      a
    dismissal.6
    Testimony at trial from a current councilwoman corroborated
    City   Council's        rejection     of     the    appointment       of   defendant        as
    Business Administrator and that a City ordinance required the
    mayor to remove acting persons after ninety days if the Council
    did    not   approve       them.       The    councilwoman          also     advised    the
    appointment of defendant as Deputy Business Administrator was
    contrary     to     the    municipal       ordinance.         Only     the    head     of   a
    5
    A trial initially began in September 2015.  After opening
    statements, the parties entered into a settlement agreement.
    Shortly thereafter, material terms of the agreement were
    breached, and the court vacated the settlement.
    6
    The court reserved decision on the motion.
    6                                  A-3729-15T4
    department could appoint a deputy director.                       The mayor had no
    authority to appoint a Deputy Business Administrator.                             That was
    the province of the Business Administrator.
    The councilwoman further stated that even when defendant
    briefly left the position pursuant to court order and assumed
    the job of Chief of Staff, he continued to perform duties of the
    Business     Administrator.          Finally,       the    councilwoman       confirmed
    City Council did not approve defendant's salary, which exceeded
    the salary of other deputies by $25,000 to $30,000.
    Plaintiff's second witness, the municipal clerk, testified
    that the position of Deputy Business Administrator had never
    been     lawfully    created.        A      position      of    Assistant         Business
    Administrator was created in 1985 but repealed that same year.
    Therefore, the positions of both Deputy and Assistant Business
    Administrator       were   unlawful      after      that       time.        She    further
    advised the City had never enacted an ordinance creating a Chief
    of Staff, and it did not approve the salary of defendant in that
    post.7
    Defendant also testified.                In addition to his Bachelor of
    Arts     degree,    he   holds   a   dual       Masters   degree       in   finance     and
    business management from Columbia University.                      He was currently
    7
    The clerk acknowledged that previous people have held the
    title of Chief of Staff.
    7                                     A-3729-15T4
    pursuing his MBA from New Jersey Institute of Technology and was
    a   Ph.D.   candidate     at   Seton   Hall   University.       Defendant    had
    served as a New Jersey state legislator and on numerous boards
    in both New York and New Jersey.            Defendant advised as a college
    professor    for   more   than   twenty     years,   he   was   familiar    with
    municipal government because he taught courses in government and
    public administration.
    Defendant's testimony conflicted on whether he ever read
    the pertinent statutes and municipal ordinances regarding his
    position.     At times, defendant testified he did not read the
    applicable ordinances and statutes, at other times, he thought
    the statutes, codes, and court orders were subject to differing
    interpretations.      He was adamant the mayor appointed him to the
    position, thus rendering defendant blameless for any wrongdoing,
    and claimed ignorance of the unlawfulness of his position.                     He
    also denied knowledge of his removal from the position by court
    order or that the Deputy Business Administrator position was
    unauthorized.
    In    a     comprehensive,       well-reasoned       opinion,       Judge
    Farrington determined defendant's appointment to the position of
    Deputy Business Administrator was ultra vires in the primary
    sense as the mayor had no authority to appoint a Deputy Business
    Administrator. She stated the actions of defendant and the mayor
    8                              A-3729-15T4
    were     purposeful      and    designed           to    circumvent         City    Council's
    decision to deny confirmation.
    Judge Farrington found both the councilwoman and municipal
    clerk    knowledgeable         and    credible.               In    contrast,      the     judge
    described defendant as "argumentative, combative and evasive."
    She     noted     his    "impressive           education           credentials"     and       his
    background       of     serving      as    a       state      legislator      and       college
    professor conflicted with his numerous declarations that he did
    not     understand      questions         posed,        was    ignorant      of     the      City
    ordinances and applicable statutes, and had a lack of knowledge
    and recall.
    Judge Farrington further concluded defendant was a de facto
    officer and he had not rendered his services in good faith as
    either    the    Deputy    Business        Administrator             or   Chief    of     Staff.
    Reiterating that defendant was not credible, the judge found, in
    light    of     his   extensive      experience          working       in   government        and
    advanced degrees in public administration, "[h]is attempts to
    present himself as an innocent party and cast blame for the
    appointments on the [m]ayor are unconvincing and disingenuous.
    . . . [H]e knew or had the ability to know the requirements of
    state and local law."
    The judge concluded disgorgement of defendant's salary was
    the appropriate remedy for his deliberate and knowing actions.
    9                                        A-3729-15T4
    Because defendant intentionally violated the statutes and City
    ordinances,    she    rejected      defendant's     contention        that    he    was
    entitled to his salary under a quantum meruit theory.                       The court
    ordered remuneration for all salary defendant received serving
    in the unauthorized position of Deputy Business Administrator.8
    "Final determinations made by the trial court sitting in a
    non-jury    case    are   subject    to    a    limited    and    well-established
    scope of review."         D'Agostino v. Maldonado, 
    216 N.J. 168
    , 182
    (2013) (quoting Seidman v. Clifton Sav. Bank, SLA, 
    205 N.J. 150
    ,
    169 (2011)).        Although our review of legal determinations made
    by the trial court is de novo, we do not disturb the factual
    findings of the trial court "unless we are convinced that they
    are so manifestly unsupported by[,] or inconsistent with[,] the
    competent, relevant[,] and reasonably credible evidence as to
    offend the interests of justice."                
    Ibid.
     (quoting Seidman, 
    205 N.J. at 169
    ).     Additionally,        we   defer     to   the   trial    court's
    credibility determinations, because it "'hears the case, sees
    and observes the witnesses, and hears them testify,' affording
    it 'a better perspective than a reviewing court in evaluating
    the veracity of a witness.'"              Gnall v. Gnall, 
    222 N.J. 414
    , 428
    (2015) (quoting Cesare v. Cesare, 
    154 N.J. 394
    , 412 (1998)).
    8
    Plaintiff did not seek             the      return    of     salaries    paid   to
    defendant as Chief of Staff.
    10                                 A-3729-15T4
    On appeal, defendant argues the court erred in determining
    his conduct was ultra vires or, if it was ultra vires, it was
    not an act in the primary sense because City Council ratified
    his   conduct     in   approving   yearly     budgets       that    included      his
    salary.
    Two forms of ultra vires acts exist under the law: ultra
    vires acts in the primary sense and ultra vires acts in the
    secondary    sense.      See   Middletown     Twp.    Policemen's         Benevolent
    Ass'n Local No. 124 v. Twp. of Middletown, 
    162 N.J. 361
    , 368
    (2000).   Ultra    vires   acts    in   the       primary   sense    are     "act[s]
    utterly beyond the jurisdiction of a municipal corporation" and
    are void.       
    Ibid.
     (quoting Summer Cottagers' Ass'n v. City of
    Cape May, 
    19 N.J. 493
    , 504 (1955)).               In contrast, an ultra vires
    act in the secondary sense arises from the "irregular exercise
    of a basic power under the legislative grant in matters not in
    themselves      jurisdictional.    .     .    .    [It]     does    not     preclude
    ratification or the application of the doctrine of estoppel." 9
    
    Ibid.
     (quoting Summer Cottagers' Ass'n, 
    19 N.J. at 504
    ).
    9
    The doctrine of equitable estoppel, however, is "applied
    against a municipality only in very compelling circumstances,"
    Maltese v. Twp. of N. Brunswick, 
    353 N.J. Super. 226
    , 244 (App.
    Div. 2002), and is "rarely invoked against a governmental
    entity."  Twp. of Middletown, 
    162 N.J. at 367
     (quoting Wood v.
    Borough of Wildwood Crest, 
    319 N.J. Super. 650
    , 656 (App. Div.
    1999)).
    11                                  A-3729-15T4
    As did the trial court, we employ a two-step analysis in
    reviewing     the      validity      of    a        government     appointment.          See
    Casamasino v. City of Jersey City, 
    158 N.J. 333
    , 347 (1999).
    First, we must determine whether the appointment was ultra vires
    and, if so, whether it was in the primary or secondary sense.
    
    Ibid.
           Second,     if    the    appointment         was     ultra    vires    in    the
    secondary sense and can be ratified, then we must determine
    whether     the   appointment        was    "made       with    the    same    formalities
    required for the original exercise of power"                             and, thus, was
    properly ratified.           
    Ibid.
    For a municipal decision or action to be considered ultra
    vires in the primary sense, the municipality must be "utterly
    without capacity to perform the act or make the appointment."
    Maltese, 
    353 N.J. Super. at 246
     (quoting Casamasino, 
    158 N.J. at 347
    ).     "[A] void act results where the public officer has no
    authority to act at all."                  Independence One Mortg. Corp. v.
    Gillespie, 
    289 N.J. Super. 91
    , 94 (1996).                        In comparison, an act
    is   ultra    vires     in    the    secondary         sense     when    the    action    is
    generally within the power of the municipality but was carried
    out improperly or irregularly.                 See 
    ibid.
    The    appointment       of    a     Deputy       Business       Administrator     is
    controlled        by   N.J.S.A.       40:69A-43.1,             which     provides:      "The
    director of each department . . . may appoint a deputy director
    12                                 A-3729-15T4
    of   his    department     who    shall   serve,     and     be    removable   at    the
    pleasure       of    the   director."          The   power    to     appoint    deputy
    directors is, therefore, solely vested in the directors of the
    departments, not the mayor.
    Here,    the     mayor    nominated     defendant     to     the   position    of
    Acting Business Administrator.                This appointment was within his
    authority.          See N.J.S.A. 40:69A-43(b) ("Each department shall be
    headed by a director, who shall be appointed by the mayor with
    the advice and consent of the council").                   The corresponding City
    ordinance provides the mayor's department head appointments must
    have the advice and consent of City Council.                      Orange, N.J., Code
    § 4-24(A) (2015).
    Plaintiff voted to reject the nomination of defendant as
    Business Administrator on October 2, 2012.                        The mayor did not
    appoint anyone else to fill that position.10                       Instead, the next
    day,   in    circumvention        of   City    Council,      the    mayor   appointed
    defendant to the position of Deputy Business Administrator in
    violation of both state and local law as the power to appoint
    deputies lies with the department director.                        See Orange, N.J.,
    10
    Section 4-24(A)(4) of the City Ordinances requires the mayor
    to appoint a new person to a department director position when
    City Council "declines to extend the timeframe within which the
    person is serving in an acting capacity or directly rejects the
    person." Orange, N.J., Code, § 4-24(A)(4) (2015).
    13                                   A-3729-15T4
    Code § 4-24(C)(1) (2015) (authorizing the department director to
    "appoint    subordinate          officers        and    employees      within     his/her
    department");       N.J.S.A.          40:69A-43-1       (permitting      a    department
    director    to    appoint        a     deputy      director     who    serves     at    the
    director's pleasure).
    The     mayor    acted       outside        the    bounds   of    his    statutorily
    prescribed authority, exercising instead a power only vested in
    the director of a department.                      As there was no authority for
    defendant    to     serve        in     the     deputy     position,        the   mayor's
    appointment of a deputy was an illegal act — an act that was
    ultra vires in the primary sense and, therefore, void.
    We find defendant's argument that he accepted the position
    of Deputy Business Administrator in good faith and with the
    "reasonable understanding" that the mayor had the authority to
    appoint him to the post disingenuous.                       Defendant is a highly
    educated man who had served in the state legislature and taught
    college     courses         in         municipal         government         and    public
    administration.       He acknowledged having reviewed the Faulkner
    Act, N.J.S.A. 40:69A-1 to -210, and the City ordinances that
    pertained to his employment.
    Defendant       also    knew       of     City     Council's     objection    to    him
    serving in the deputy position.                    If there was any doubt, it was
    certainly alleviated when he was named as a defendant along with
    14                                  A-3729-15T4
    the mayor in plaintiff's application for injunctive relief and
    Order to Show Cause.                  He was in court during the Order to Show
    Cause ruling and was directed in the April 2013 order to step
    down    from        the    deputy         position      as    his    appointment         was     in
    violation of section 4-24(A)(4) of the City ordinances.
    Following the April 2013 order, defendant was removed from
    the deputy job and appointed as Chief of Staff, evidencing an
    awareness      by        him    and    the      mayor    of    the    illegality         of     his
    appointment.          Although certain portions of the April order were
    vacated in a subsequent reconsideration, the provision ordering
    the City to comply with the statute's regulations concerning the
    appointment         of    a    deputy      director      remained         in   effect.         That
    provision directed any appointment of a deputy director be made
    by   the   director            of   the    department        and    the    salary     for      that
    position be approved by City Council.                         Nevertheless, in February
    2014,   in     contravention              of   this   order,       defendant     resumed       the
    position       of     Deputy        Business      Administrator.               Any   claim       of
    ignorance      of     the       applicable       laws    is    defeated        by    the    ample
    divergent evidence in the record.
    The record is bereft of any facts to support defendant's
    contention that plaintiff ratified his actions at any point.
    The filing of a lawsuit to enjoin his continued employment is
    more than sufficient to defeat that argument.                              His position that
    15                                      A-3729-15T4
    plaintiff's passage of a budget affirmed his salary and ratified
    his actions is also without merit.            Witnesses at trial confirmed
    the budget did not contain line items for specific salaries; it
    set a budget for each department and the mayor then determined
    the salaries for personnel.
    Judge Farrington also rejected defendant's argument that he
    should   retain    his   salary   based       upon   the   de   facto    officer
    doctrine.11    This doctrine, based on considerations of policy and
    public    convenience,       recognizes       the    validity       of   actions
    undertaken    by   a   person   who   acted    in    a   legally    non-existent
    position.     See Jersey City, 57 N.J. Super. at 27.               In that case,
    11
    A de facto officer is:
    one whose acts . . . will hold valid so far
    as they involve the interests of the public
    and third persons, where the duties of the
    office were exercised,
    . . . .
    . . . under color of a known election
    or appointment, void because the officer was
    not eligible, or because there was a want of
    power in the electing or appointing body, or
    by reason of some defect or irregularity in
    its exercise, such ineligibility, want of
    power, or defect being unknown to the
    public.
    [City of Jersey City v. Dept. of Civil
    Serv., 
    57 N.J. Super. 13
    , 27 (App. Div.
    1959) (quoting State v. Carroll, 
    38 Conn. 449
    , 471-72 (Sup. Ct. Err. 1871)).]
    16                                 A-3729-15T4
    we considered the consequences of the actions of a person who
    "had the reputation of being a public official and possessing
    the   authority     purportedly        vested      in   such     position"       but      who
    served in a position that had no de jure existence.                           Id. at 28.
    Because the faux official's actions could affect third parties,
    we determined she would be considered a de facto officer and her
    actions deemed valid despite the absence of a de jure office.
    Ibid.      Under the circumstances here, in light of defendant's
    performance    of    duties    under     the       guise   of    the       City's    Deputy
    Business Administrator, we deem he was properly considered a de
    facto officer.        The doctrine is appropriately applied here to
    protect    innocent    third     parties          who   relied        on   the   acts       of
    defendant    holding    himself       out    as     having      the    authority       of    a
    public officer.        See, e.g., Casamasino, 
    158 N.J. at 349-51
    ;
    Jersey City, 
    57 N.J. Super. at 27
    .
    Defendant testified as Deputy Business Administrator he
    presented resolutions to City Council for its approval, reduced
    spending    and     salaries,        consolidated       departments,          eliminated
    contractors,       entered    into     contracts        with     third      parties       and
    approved invoices, proposed a bond ordinance and infrastructure
    reinvestment, and worked with the governor and legislature on
    grants.       He    advised     he    was        instrumental         in   obtaining        an
    appropriation from the legislature of several million dollars
    17                                      A-3729-15T4
    for needed infrastructure repairs and operational needs of the
    city.     Clearly, the official acts defendant performed in his
    public office capacity must be valid and binding as to third
    parties and the public.            Any other conclusion would create chaos
    and uncertainty for all dealings defendant had with others under
    color of a legal authorized position.                  See Slurzberg v. Bayone,
    
    29 N.J. 106
    , 139 (1959) (work done for a municipal office not
    created, or properly filled, by ordinance or statute is void
    regardless       of    whether     the     City    accepts    that   office's       work
    product).
    We disagree, however, with defendant's contention that his
    status    of     a    de   facto    officer       entitles    him    to    retain    the
    compensation he received for the services he rendered on behalf
    of the City.          He argues "clear interests of justice, morality
    and common fairness" entitle him to retain his salary.                       However,
    the issue of the validity of his acts performed as a purported
    public official is distinct from his entitlement to retain his
    salaries.
    Inherent in a decision to compensate a de facto officer for
    his services is the tenet that such services were rendered in
    good    faith.        "[A]   de    facto    officer    may,    by    his   good-faith
    rendering of services, acquire rights against the municipality"
    entitling him to compensation.                   Jersey City, 
    57 N.J. Super. at
    18                                A-3729-15T4
    37.     A de facto officer carries the burden of showing he acted
    in good faith and is thus entitled to compensation.                  See 
    id. at 37-38
    ; Casamasino, 
    158 N.J. at 349-51
    .                 Our determination that
    defendant's actions in accepting and holding the deputy post
    were ultra vires in the primary sense negates any proposition
    that he was acting in good faith.                To the contrary, the record
    is     replete   with    evidence   of        defendant's    awareness   of    his
    unlawful employment.
    Although defendant did not raise N.J.S.A. 40A:9-6 to either
    the trial judge or this court in support of his argument, we
    feel it important to briefly address it.                    That statute, which
    codified the common law definition of de facto officer provides:
    Any person who has held or who may
    hereafter hold, de facto, any office or
    position in the public service of any county
    or municipality, and who has or shall have
    performed the duties thereof, shall be
    entitled to the emoluments and compensation
    appropriate to such office or position for
    the time in fact so held and may recover
    therefor   in   any    court  of   competent
    jurisdiction, notwithstanding any refusal or
    failure of any other person or officer to
    approve or authorize the payment of said
    emoluments and compensation.
    [N.J.S.A. 40A:9-6.]
    We do not find our decision to disgorge defendant's compensation
    despite his status as a de factor officer to be incompatible
    with    the   statute.     The   common        law   precedent   permitting    the
    19                              A-3729-15T4
    compensation for services performed by a de facto officer is
    premised on the qualification that the services were rendered in
    good faith.         See Jersey City, 
    57 N.J. Super. at 37-38
    .                      Here,
    defendant's "actions do not bespeak the good faith required to
    invoke the rule of fairness and justice which underlies the
    grant   of    compensation      to     a    de    facto    officer."       O'Connor    v.
    Calandrillo, 
    117 N.J. Super. 586
    , 596 (Law Div. 1971), aff'd,
    
    121 N.J. Super. 135
     (App. Div. 1972).
    To remain consistent, we similarly conclude the equitable
    theories of quantum meruit and equitable estoppel are equally
    unavailable        to   defendant.          In    her    thorough      decision,   Judge
    Farrington considered these doctrines offered by defendant to
    support      the    retention   of         his    salary.        She   concluded    such
    defenses were inapplicable to defendant who acted willfully and
    unlawfully, "with knowledge and at [his] peril to circumvent the
    authority of the Council."             Concluding "the services rendered by
    Edwards      in     conjunction        with       both     the    Deputy    [Business]
    Administrator and chief of staff positions were not rendered in
    good faith," she determined there was "no interest of justice,
    morality     or     common   fairness         which      would   dictate    a   finding
    Edwards      is     entitled      to        retain        his    salary    under      the
    circumstances."
    20                                 A-3729-15T4
    Equitable         estoppel    and     quantum       meruit        are     equitable
    doctrines reserved for achieving fair and practical resolutions
    in    particular     circumstances.           See     Rutgers    Cas.     Ins.     Co.    v.
    LaCroix, 
    194 N.J. 515
    , 529 (2008) (holding a court has the power
    to adapt equitable remedies to the particular circumstances of a
    case).       We    are    satisfied    the      circumstances       to    support       such
    equitable remedies are not present here as there is sufficient
    evidence in the record for Judge Farrington's factual findings
    that defendant lacked credibility and he knew, or should have
    known, of the illegality of his appointment.
    The   trial        court     ordered      disgorgement        of        defendant's
    salaries      earned        while     serving         as   the      Deputy        Business
    Administrator.           Disgorgement is an equitable claim "grounded in
    the    theory      that     a    wrongdoer      should     not   profit          from    its
    wrongdoing regardless of whether the innocent party suffered any
    damages."     Cty. of Essex v. First Union Nat'l Bank, 
    186 N.J. 46
    ,
    61 (2006).        It is a harsh remedy and one to be used sparingly.
    In First Union, the Supreme Court noted the need for strong
    remedies,     including         disgorgement     of    wrongfully        paid    fees,    to
    combat unlawful conduct involving public officials.                             
    Id. at 58
    .
    The remedy has also been successfully invoked when we found a
    conveyance of land was ultra vires and void ab initio.                                  First
    21                                     A-3729-15T4
    Am. Title Ins. Co. v. Twp. of Rockaway, 
    322 N.J. Super. 583
    , 594
    (App. Div. 1999).
    Defendant conceded knowledge of municipal law and public
    administration, agreed he reviewed the applicable statutes and
    City ordinances, and advised he was aware of two court orders
    stating       he   was    illegally       serving      as    the     Deputy     Business
    Administrator.           Nevertheless, he remained in the position and
    took a salary paid out of taxpayer funds.                        His blatant disregard
    for the law forced plaintiff to litigate this matter for three
    years, resulting in the not unexpected conclusion that defendant
    acted     unlawfully         in      serving      as        the      Deputy     Business
    Administrator.
    Defendant has not demonstrated any factual dispute in the
    events surrounding his appointment, nor any ambiguity in the
    controlling statutes.             As a result, his actions were inexcusable
    and he displayed a flagrant contempt for the citizens of the
    City    and    the   law.     The     sole      remedy      to    make   the   aggrieved
    taxpayers whole is to disgorge defendant of the monies paid to
    him    during      his   service     in   the     unlawful         appointment.       We,
    therefore, affirm Judge Farrington's order for the return of all
    22                                   A-3729-15T4
    remuneration   paid   to   defendant   for   the   position   of    Deputy
    Business Administrator.12
    Affirmed.
    12
    We find defendant's remaining arguments that the trial court
    heard "inadmissible evidence" or should have recused itself to
    be unworthy of a written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
    23                               A-3729-15T4