STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. STEVEN PEZZINO (18-025, MORRIS COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2021 )


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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the
    internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-2248-19
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    STEVEN PEZZINO,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _________________________
    Argued December 1, 2021 – Decided December 15, 2021
    Before Judges Mayer and Natali.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Morris County, Municipal Appeal No. 18-
    025.
    Steven Pezzino, appellant, argued the cause pro se.
    Gregory F. Kotchick argued the cause for respondent
    (Durkin & Durkin LLC, attorney; Gregory F. Kotchick,
    of counsel and on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Defendant Steven Pezzino appeals from a December 24, 2019 Law
    Division order finding him guilty of violating several zoning ordinances in the
    Township of East Hanover (Township). We affirm.
    Defendant received three summonses in 2015 for violating Township
    ordinances. The summonses charged defendant with the following: erecting a
    six-foot high fence in his front yard without a permit, Ordinance 95-65B(2);
    storing more than three motor vehicles on his property, Ordinance 95 -50-
    A(2)(a); and storing vehicles in his front yard and not on a driveway or other
    parking surface, Ordinance 1119A-13(F)(1).
    The following facts were adduced during the municipal court trial. In
    1992, defendant purchased a home in East Hanover. The property is located at
    a "bend in the street" according to defendant.        However, the Township
    considered defendant's property to be a corner lot with "two front yards" because
    the front door of the home and the driveway face two different streets.
    In July 2012, the Township's building inspector went to defendant's house
    in response to residents complaining defendant stored old cars on his property.
    The municipal building inspector confirmed the cars situated on defendant's
    property were lawfully registered and took no further action at that time.
    A-2248-19
    2
    In January 2015, the Township's code enforcement officer served
    defendant with three "Notices of Abatement," citing defendant for violation of
    municipal ordinances. The notices gave defendant until February 10, 2015, to
    correct the violations to avoid issuance of any summons. Defendant failed to
    cure the violations and the municipal code enforcement officer issued
    summonses on June 2, 2015.
    Defendant proceeded to trial on the ordinance violations in municipal
    court. At the municipal trial, the Township's code enforcement officer testified
    the Township received numerous complaints regarding the number of vehicles,
    as many as eight, parked on defendant's property. Defendant also stored his
    vehicles on a gravel surface adjacent to his driveway. Under the Township's
    ordinance, it is illegal for a homeowner to enlarge a driveway without a permit.
    Defendant never applied for a permit to enlarge his driveway to accommodate
    his cars.
    During the municipal court trial, the judge also heard testimony regarding
    a six-foot resin fence erected on defendant's property in violation of a Township
    ordinance. The Township's code enforcement officer explained the Township's
    ordinance allowed only a four-foot chain link fence in the front yard of a home.
    Further, a homeowner is required to apply for a construction permit prior to
    A-2248-19
    3
    installing a fence. The homeowner must also provide a professional survey
    showing the proposed location of the fence and obtain a zoning permit.
    Defendant testified he submitted an application to install a fence in May
    2014.     However, the Township's code enforcement officer testified the
    application failed to include the required professional survey. Defendant then
    hired a Pennsylvania company to conduct the necessary survey.
    Defendant claimed he presented the survey to the Township's code
    enforcement officer's secretary, who purportedly advised he could construct the
    fence. The secretary testified she never stated defendant could build a fence and
    she lacked the authority to approve any fence construction.        According to
    defendant, based on the secretary's statement, he hired a contractor to build the
    fence. However, defendant offered a 2014 survey as evidence during the trial
    which showed a six-foot fence already existed on the property.
    The municipal court judge inquired if the survey was conducted before
    or after the fence was erected. Defendant testified he was "not sure." Defendant
    admitted he never applied for, or received, a fence permit.
    After hearing the testimony and reviewing the evidence, the municipal
    court judge found defendant guilty of all three municipal ordinance violations
    and imposed over $16,000 in fines.
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    4
    Defendant appealed his municipal court convictions to the Superior Court,
    Law Division. The Law Division judge conducted a de novo review of the facts
    from the record of the municipal court proceedings in accordance with Rule
    3:23-8 and issued an eight-page written decision. The judge agreed with the
    municipal court judge's credibility determinations.     Specifically, the Law
    Division judge noted defendant "was not a reliable historian" and his testimony
    before the municipal court judge was "equivocal and vague."
    Regarding the installation of a fence without a permit, the Law Division
    judge found defendant filed an application for construction of a fence, but the
    2014 application lacked the required survey to be deemed a completed
    application.   The subsequent survey submitted in support of defendant's
    application showed a six-foot fence already existed on the property as of June
    2014. The Law Division judge concluded the Township's ordinance governing
    fencing required a permit prior to any fence construction and defendant never
    received such a permit or any verbal authorization to build the fence.
    Additionally, the Law Division judge determined defendant erected his fence
    prior to submitting a completed application based on the 2014 survey of
    defendant's property.
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    5
    Regarding the number of vehicles parked on defendant's property,
    defendant admitted to storing more than three cars.    The Law Division judge
    found the ordinance limiting the number of vehicles allowed on a residential
    property was clear and unambiguous, and defendant admitted violating the
    ordinance by having more than three cars stored on his property. However, the
    judge agreed with defendant that the Township's former mayor created
    confusion concerning the number of vehicles defendant could park on his
    property. The former mayor, absent any legal authority, apparently granted a
    private exemption from the ordinance's provisions and allowed defendant to
    store more than three cars at his home.
    The Law Division judge rejected defendant's argument regarding the
    Township's selective enforcement of the parking ordinance. Other than his own
    self-serving testimony, defendant failed to provide evidence of other properties
    in the municipality with more than three parked cars to support his selective
    prosecution and enforcement argument.
    Regarding the enlargement of defendant's driveway, the Law Division
    judge found defendant, without a permit, "parked no less than eight cars on a
    gravel surface adjacent to his driveway." Under the Township's zoning code,
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    all driveway construction required a permit and defendant never applied for a
    permit.
    Regarding the unlawful parking of cars in the front yard, the Law Division
    judge rejected defendant's argument.       The Law Division judge concluded
    defendant is bound by the municipality's determination in 2015 that his home
    has two front yards due to its location. While defendant claimed to have
    appealed the Township's designation of two front yards for his home, the record
    was devoid of any evidence defendant challenged the municipality's
    determination.
    Based on his de novo review of the evidence presented to the municipal
    court judge, the Law Division judge found defendant guilty of all three zoning
    ordinance violations. However, based on the "[s]ubstantial confusion . . .
    occasioned by the wrongful issuance of a purported 'private exemption' from the
    former mayor to [defendant]," the Law Division judge substantially reduced the
    fines imposed to $549. The Law Division judge granted defendant "a final
    opportunity to correct the deficiencies" and instructed defendant "to cure all
    property deficiencies and violations" by May 31, 2020 to avoid potential
    "exposure to continuing violations, fines and penalties."
    On appeal, defendant raises the following points:
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    POINT I
    [DEFENDANT] WAS DEPRIVED OF DUE
    PROCESS WHEN THE TRIAL COMMENCED
    ABSENT THE DEFENDANT WITHOUT HIS
    CONSENT /KNOWLEDGE AND WAS HARMED
    WHEN THE COURT COMMITTED ERROR
    PERMITTING THIS.
    POINT II
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN FINDING
    [DEFENDANT] GUILTY. (Not raised below)
    POINT III
    COUNSEL WAS INCOMPETENT, FAILED TO
    PROVIDE [DEFENDANT] WITH EFFECTIVE
    ASSISTANCE, WHEREBY HE DEPRIVED THE
    DEFENDANT OF HIS RIGHTS GUARANTEED BY
    THE SIXTH AMENDMENT FAILING TO MAKE
    ANY RATIONAL LEGAL ARGUMENTS IN
    REBUTTAL. (Not raised below)
    We find defendant's arguments lack sufficient merit to warrant extended
    discussion in a written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(2). We add only the following
    comments.
    "The review in the Law Division is de novo on the record, although th e
    court must give 'due regard to the municipal judge's opportunity to view the
    witnesses and assess credibility.'" State v. Golin, 
    363 N.J. Super. 474
    , 481 (App.
    Div. 2003) (citing State v. Johnson, 
    42 N.J. 146
    , 157 (1964)); see also R. 3:23-
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    8
    8(a)(2). On appeal from the Law Division judge's decision, we must determine
    whether the Law Division judge's findings "could reasonably have been reached
    on the sufficient credible evidence present in the record." State v. Locurto, 
    157 N.J. 463
    , 471 (1999) (quoting Johnson, 
    42 N.J. at 162
    ). Our review of municipal
    court convictions is "exceedingly narrow." Id. at 470. Additionally, "appellate
    review of a municipal appeal to the Law Division is limited to the 'action of the
    Law Division and not that of the municipal court.'" State v. Hannah, 
    448 N.J. Super. 78
    , 94 (App. Div. 2016) (quoting State v. Palma, 
    219 N.J. 584
    , 591-92
    (2014)).
    Contrary to defendant's arguments, the Law Division judge made his own
    findings of fact based on the record before the municipal court judge and
    counsels' arguments on the municipal appeal. The Law Division judge also
    properly acknowledged the municipal judge's opportunity to observe, first-hand,
    the demeanor of the witnesses. Based on the Law Division judge's review of the
    transcripts from the municipal court proceeding, he agreed with the municipal
    court judge's credibility determinations and concluded those determinations
    were supported by the record.
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    9
    We also reject defendant's claimed due process violation based on the Law
    Division judge's proceeding with the trial de novo absent defendant's presence
    in the courtroom.
    Criminal defendants are generally entitled to be present for every part of
    their proceedings unless their appearance is waived.         Rule 3:16(b) allows
    defense counsel to waive a defendant's appearance. However, since a sentence
    "cannot be increased on a municipal appeal and the matter is almost always tried
    de novo on the record, defendants frequently elect not to attend when
    represented by counsel." State v. Taimanglo, 
    403 N.J. Super. 112
    , 121 (App.
    Div. 2008) (internal citations omitted). "Because of the nature of a trial de novo,
    we need not require strict adherence to the waiver rules and cases governing
    indictable offenses . . . ." 
    Id.
     at 121 n.6. A "trial court has wide latitude in
    conducting" a waiver inquiry. State v. Luna, 
    193 N.J. 202
    , 214 (2007). In
    reviewing a waiver of a criminal defendant's appearance, the "trial judge should
    attempt to learn where the defendant is and why he is absent and make
    appropriate factual findings." State v. Davis, 
    281 N.J. Super. 410
    , 416 (App.
    Div. 1995).
    Here, the Law Division judge asked why defendant was absent from the
    trial de novo proceeding. Defendant's attorney responded there was "confusion"
    A-2248-19
    10
    regarding the trial date, and counsel made a mistake. The Law Division judge
    explained "[defendant] has a right to be present" and asked defense counsel if
    he was "waiving [defendant's] presence."         Defense counsel replied that
    defendant was getting married in another state and unable to attend the trial de
    novo. Defendant's attorney then stated he was "prepared to waive." Under these
    circumstances, the judge satisfied his obligation by obtaining confirmation from
    defense counsel as to the reason for defendant's absence and the ability to
    proceed without defendant in the courtroom.
    Moreover, the Law Division judge proceeded with a trial de novo based
    on the record before the municipal court judge. Defendant's claim he was denied
    an opportunity to participate in the hearing before the Law Division judge is
    without merit because no additional testimony is taken during a trial de novo.
    The de novo hearing is based solely on the record before the municipal court
    judge and the briefs submitted to the Law Division judge. Further, defendant
    failed to demonstrate he suffered any prejudice based on his absence from the
    trial de novo hearing. Nor do we discern any resulting prejudice to defendant
    based on our review of the record.
    We also reject defendant's ineffective assistance of counsel claim based
    on the Law Division judge's substantial reduction in the fines and costs imposed.
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    11
    The amount of the fines decreased from $16,000 assessed by the municipal court
    judge to $549 imposed by the Law Division judge. Further, at the request of
    defense counsel, the Law Division judge gave defendant additional time to cure
    the violations and deficiencies on his property. Having reviewed the record, we
    are satisfied there is no evidence defense counsel's performance was deficient
    or that defense counsel's handling of the municipal appeal prejudiced defendant
    such that the outcome of the trial de novo would have been different.
    Affirmed.
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    12
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A-2248-19

Filed Date: 12/15/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 12/15/2021