IN THE MATTER OF STEVEN ISRAEL (LINCOLN HARBOR YACHT CLUB), ETC. (NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION) ( 2022 )


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  •                              NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-4700-18
    IN THE MATTER OF
    STEVEN ISRAEL (LINCOLN
    HARBOR YACHT CLUB)
    WATERFRONT DEVELOPMENT
    INDIVIDUAL PERMIT AND
    WATER QUALITY CERTIFICATE
    NO. 0911-14-0001.1 WFD180002
    CHALLENGED BY HARTZ
    MOUNTAIN INDUSTRIES, INC.
    AND 1500 HARBOR BOULEVARD
    PARTNERS, LLC.
    _______________________________
    Submitted June 8, 2022 – Decided July 5, 2022
    Before Judges Whipple, Geiger and Susswein.
    On appeal from the New Jersey Department of
    Environmental Protection.
    Chiesa, Shahinian & Giantomasi, PC, attorneys for
    appellants Hartz Mountain Industries, Inc. and 1500
    Harbor Boulevard Partners, LLC (Dennis M. Toft and
    Michael K. Plumb, on the briefs).
    Matthew J. Platkin, Acting Attorney General, attorney
    for respondent New Jersey Department of
    Environmental Protection (Sookie Bae, Assistant
    Attorney General, of counsel; Jason B. Kane, Deputy
    Attorney General, on the brief).
    Steven Israel, respondent pro se.
    PER CURIAM
    Steven Israel is the president of Lincoln Harbor Yacht Club (LHYC), a
    condominium association that owns and operates a marina on the Hudson
    River in Weehawken, New Jersey. LHYC's condominium interests are owned
    by Lincoln Harbor Enterprises, LLC, of which Israel is the sole managing
    member.
    Hartz Mountain Industries, Inc., (Hartz), previously owned the marina.
    In 1986, Hartz and the Township of Weehawken executed a Reciprocal
    Construction Operation and Easement Agreement (RCOEA) that reserved
    certain of Hartz's rights in the marina. Those rights run with the land and bind
    subsequent owners. In 1989, after developing the marina, Hartz conveyed it to
    Sloan Marine Associates, L.P., (Sloan).     Sloan subsequently conveyed the
    property, which LHYC now owns.
    The marina has six docks, Docks A through F, extending eastward into
    the Hudson River. Along the federal navigation channel, a fixed, wooden
    A-4700-18
    2
    wave screen1 extended the length of Dock F between the dock and the river.
    The wave screen extended southward approximately twice the length of Dock
    F, and then westward back toward the marina at a near ninety-degree angle.
    Over the past two decades, a dramatic increase in ferry wakes and storms
    caused the wave screen to deteriorate.
    In 2015, to prevent complete collapse of the wave screen, LHYC moored
    a barge up against it, inside the Federal Navigation Channel. The barge was
    moored parallel to Dock F and a portion of the wave screen that ran alongside.
    The barge also allowed LHYC to maintain its thirty-year relationship with
    Spirit Cruises, which provides required public access and operates scheduled
    cruises.
    In June 2016, Israel applied to the New Jersey Department of
    Environmental Protection (NJDEP) for a Waterfront Development (WFD)
    permit to rehabilitate the wave screen. Licensed marine engineers compiled
    the accompanying supporting documentation, which included a project
    1
    A wave screen is a fixed structure that is a type of wave attenuator; both
    wave screens and wave attenuators are types of breakwaters. We use the term
    "wave screen" to refer to the existing deteriorated breakwater, and we use the
    term "wave attenuator" to refer to the applied-for breakwater. Wave
    attenuators are "designed to protect boat moorings, including those at marinas,
    by intercepting wakes or waves . . . which would normally impact the adjacent
    boat mooring areas." N.J.A.C. 7:7-12.20(a).
    A-4700-18
    3
    narrative, an environmental review and coastal zone management assessment,
    site photos, current site surveys, proposed plans, an inspection report, and an
    alternatives analysis.    In July 2016, NJDEP deemed the application
    administratively complete.
    The application proposed demolition of Dock F and the entire wave
    screen, then repositioning the barge to take the place—and function—of both
    Dock F and the wave screen. To replace the portions of the wave screen that
    extended southward beyond Dock F and then westward back toward the
    marina, the application proposed installation of two separate floating wave
    attenuators.   All three structures would extend below the surface and be
    anchored to the bottom of the river or mudline.
    Hartz and 1500 Harbor Boulevard Partners, LLC (1500 Harbor), own
    adjacent properties and received notice of the permit application.            In
    September 2018, they submitted a joint objection to the NJDEP application,
    arguing that they had been, and would continue to be, adversely impacted by
    the improper and illegal operations at LHYC. They argued the application was
    substantively deficient and should be denied.     In support, they submitted
    expert memoranda from a former NJDEP Commissioner who opined on the
    A-4700-18
    4
    noncompliant conditions at LHYC and deficiencies with the permit
    application.
    The NJDEP reviewed the application as well as the objections. In mid-
    September 2018, NJDEP requested additional information from Israel, which
    he provided and later requested and received additional information from
    Israel about issues raised by the objections.      NJDEP also completed a
    Threatened and Endangered Species Review in September. NJDEP completed
    the WFD Environmental Report, which concluded the proposal conformed
    with several Coastal Zone Management (CZM) rules.          NJDEP issued the
    permit on October 11, 2018, and published the permit in the November 7, 2018
    NJDEP Bulletin.
    On November 26, 2018, Hartz and 1500 Harbor requested an
    adjudicatory hearing, which Israel opposed.     The request took issue with
    several findings adduced through NJDEP's permit review. Hartz and 1500
    Harbor also included expert reports from two separate engineering firms that
    analyzed the approved plans and argued that each was entitled to an
    adjudicatory hearing given the "particularized property interests that [were]
    significantly and detrimentally affected" by NJDEP's approval of the permit.
    A-4700-18
    5
    In May 2019, the NJDEP Commissioner issued a seven-page order
    denying Hartz's and 1500 Harbor's requests because neither demonstrated a
    statutory or constitutional right to an adjudicatory hearing. This appeal by
    Hartz and 1500 Harbor contests both the permit approval and the
    Commissioner's order that followed.
    I.
    In an appeal of a final agency decision, we "intervene only in those rare
    circumstances in which an agency action is arbitrary, capricious, or
    unreasonable . . . or [is] otherwise not supported by substantial credible
    evidence in the record . . . ." Twp. Pharmacy v. Div. of Med. Assistance &
    Health Servs., 
    432 N.J. Super. 273
    , 283 (App. Div. 2013) (citations omitted).
    Three inquiries inform this deferential standard: "(l) whether the agency's
    decision conforms with relevant law; (2) whether the decision is supported by
    substantial credible evidence in the record; and (3) whether, in applying the
    law to the facts, the administrative agency clearly erred in reaching its
    conclusion." 
    Id. at 283-84
    .
    Should the final decision satisfy these criteria, we must "give substantial
    deference to the agency's fact-finding and legal conclusions," in part because
    of the "agency's 'expertise and superior knowledge of a particular field.'" 
    Id.
     at
    A-4700-18
    6
    284; (quoting Circus Liquors, Inc. v. Middletown Twp., 
    199 N.J. 1
    , 10 (2009)).
    However, our review should not be "a pro forma . . . rubber stamp[]" of the
    agency's decision when that action was "not reasonably supported by the
    evidence." Outland v. Bd. of Trs. Pension & Annuity Fund, 
    326 N.J. Super. 395
    , 400 (App. Div. 1999).
    In New Jersey, "third parties generally are not able to meet the stringent
    requirements for constitutional standing in respect of an adjudicatory hearing."
    In re NJPDES Permit No. NJ0025241, 
    185 N.J. 474
    , 482 (2006). A third-party
    objector may only trigger an adjudicatory hearing when it "can show a
    statutory right or a constitutionally protected property interest."       In re
    Waterfront Dev. Permit No. WD88-0443-1, 
    244 N.J. Super. 426
    , 436 (App.
    Div. 1990).    Enforceable deed restrictions in a permittee's property may
    constitute a particularized interest sufficient to warrant an adjudicatory
    hearing. See In re Riverview Dev., LLC, 
    411 N.J. Super. 409
    , 434-35 (App.
    Div. 2010).
    II.
    Hartz argues that valid restrictive covenants in the RCOEA establish the
    requisite interests that entitle it to an adjudicatory hearing.   Based on our
    A-4700-18
    7
    examination of the RCOEA and the deed transfers, we agree with the
    Commissioner's conclusion that they do not create such an interest.
    Notably, the RCOEA differentiates between restoration work and other
    alterations. Article XII of the RCOEA obligates the owner to repair or rebuild
    any damage to improvements.        Article XIII mandates that any "alteration,
    addition, [or] improvement[]" conform to certain provisions of Article X.
    Those Article X provisions require the owner to submit any plans for
    "alterations, additions or other improvements" to Hartz. Any alterations must
    also conform to the "design criteria" for "utilities," "walkways," "lighting," as
    well as "architectural continuity." "The plans for all buildings, structures . . .
    or other improvements being or to be constructed on the Property shall, to
    extent reasonably possible, be harmonious as to quality and type of exterior
    materials to be used with other improvements." Section seven of Article X
    holds the owner "responsible for obtaining all licenses, permits and approvals
    required" to make such improvements.
    When Hartz conveyed the marina to Sloan, the deed reserved Hartz's
    rights to architectural continuity. The deed included a series of additional
    provisions that provided, in relevant part, "[n]o alterations may be made to the
    A-4700-18
    8
    Dock System" which includes but is not limited to "decking," "pilings," "pile
    guides," and "hardware."
    While the RCOEA limits some alterations, those limitations do not apply
    to activities by an owner to repair, rebuild, or restore improvements on a lot
    that has been damaged or destroyed. We agree with the Commissioner that:
    [T]he activities authorized under the Permit allow
    [LHYC] to repair the damaged docks and wave
    [screen] by removing two docks and replacing the
    wave [screen] with a new wave attenuator. The
    architectural continuity obligations relied on by Hartz
    do not establish a property right particular to the
    activities authorized by the Permit. To the extent
    Hartz seeks to enforce its contractual rights to control
    the aesthetic aspects of the marina, an adjudicatory
    hearing would not be the proper forum.
    The provisions contained in the deed prohibiting alterations to the dock
    system do not support Hartz. Those provisions were excised by LHYC in a
    subsequent, duly recorded deed amendment.
    The deed reserved Hartz's "Air Rights Parcel" over the marina. These
    retained air rights did not, however, give Hartz the right to interfere with or
    veto use of the marina; moreover, the record established the restrictions were
    abrogated and completely excised by a subsequently recorded deed
    amendment.     Accordingly, we agree Hartz lacks a particularized property
    interest and is not entitled to an adjudicatory hearing.
    A-4700-18
    9
    We discern nothing arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable about the
    NJDEP's determinations concerning Hartz's rights under the RCOEA and deed.
    III.
    1500 Harbor argues the permitted activity will result in trespass and
    damage to its property. It cites its experts' reports to assert this damage is
    impending, rather than merely speculative.      These harms, they argue, are
    sufficient to confer the particularized property interest needed to obtain an
    adjudicatory hearing. We disagree.
    Speculative damages to neighboring property do not amount to a
    particularized interest. See In re Freshwater Wetlands Statewide Gen. Permits,
    
    185 N.J. 452
    , 473 (2006). Proximity to the permitted site and a general fear of
    future damage to one's own property is similarly insufficient to trigger an
    adjudicatory hearing. Spalt v. N.J. Dep't of Env't Prot., 
    237 N.J. Super. 206
    ,
    212 (App. Div. 1989).      "[I]mpacts commonly experienced by owners of
    property in the vicinity of any proposed new development[]" do not constitute
    particularized property interests.   In re AMICO/Tunnel Carwash, 
    371 N.J. Super. 199
    , 212 (App. Div. 2004).
    1500 Harbor also argues the permit affects its interests in its own
    property. First, it claims that floating docks at the marina have already caused
    A-4700-18
    10
    damage and the proposed anchoring system approved by the permit, " may slide
    through the mud," presenting "potential hazards for . . . 1500 Harbor." Despite
    the ambiguous language its expert uses, 1500 Harbor argues its fear of damage
    is not speculative. They claim the anchors will eventually slip in the mud,
    moving the wave attenuation system, which could also "break[] free in an
    inevitable storm event."
    The Commissioner determined 1500 Harbor's arguments were too
    speculative and attenuated to entitle it to an adjudicatory hearing. Clearly, the
    harms claimed by 1500 Harbor involve speculation about future events.
    Though characterizing its expert reports as predicting impending damage, the
    reports themselves bely any such notion. Because 1500 Harbor's arguments
    here suffer from the same lack of specificity, they are insufficient to entitle
    1500 Harbor to an adjudicatory hearing.
    IV.
    Hartz and 1500 Harbor both argue due process entitles them to a hearing
    under the three-part test in Mathews v. Eldridge, 
    424 U.S. 319
     (1976). We are
    not persuaded because the parties received all the process they were due.
    "[A] third-party objector's due process rights may be satisfied by an
    agency's review process, even absent trial-type procedures." In re Freshwater
    A-4700-18
    11
    Wetlands, 
    185 N.J. at 471
    . "[W]hether a third-party objector's due process
    rights may be satisfied by an agency's review process depends in significant
    part on the objector's ability to participate in the process."   In re Thomas
    Orban/Square Props., LLC, 
    461 N.J. Super. 57
    , 79 (App. Div. 2019).
    Our courts employ the three-part test in Mathews to determine "whether
    administrative procedures are 'constitutionally sufficient.'" In re Freshwater
    Wetlands, 
    185 N.J. at 467
    .     Under Mathews, we consider (i) "the private
    interest that will be affected by the official action;" (ii) "the risk of an
    erroneous deprivation of such interest through the procedures used;" and (iii)
    the State's "interest, including the function involved and the fiscal and
    administrative burdens" that a hearing would entail. 
    424 U.S. at 334-35
    .
    The first Mathews factor requires the permit to affect appellants' private
    interests, but Hartz and 1500 Harbor cite the same interests we previously
    rejected.   The lack of any particularized property interest also dooms any
    chance of prevailing under Mathews.
    Even if we recognized a sufficient property interest, which we do not,
    appellants received all process due under the second Mathews factor through
    NJDEP's permit application procedures.      Both participated actively in the
    application process and raised a multitude of concerns and their objections
    A-4700-18
    12
    resulted in NJDEP requesting additional information from Israel.            NJDEP
    procedures provided, and appellants availed themselves of, the opportunity to
    be heard.
    The third Mathews factor also weighs against conducting an
    adjudicatory hearing. The Office of Administrative Law routinely adjudicates
    contested permits from applicants where a third-party objector has clearly
    established rights in the property subject to the DEP's permitting decision, but
    appellants lack any appreciable rights in the marina, which fails to outweigh
    the burden imposed in conducting a hearing.         Accordingly, denial of an
    adjudicatory hearing did not deny appellants of their due process rights.
    Both appellants also argue NJDEP improperly reviewed the application
    of its CZM rules and in so doing, arbitrarily, capriciously, and unreasonably
    issued the permit. They argue NJDEP misapplied the CZM rule regarding
    vertical wave attenuators, and failed to apply rules concerning public access,
    submerged aquatic vegetation, and solid and hazardous waste and that since
    the now-permitted barge will continue to function as a pier, NJDEP should
    have analyzed a series of separate CZM rules pertaining to docks and piers.
    We reject this argument.
    A-4700-18
    13
    The CZM rules allow for certain permit-by-rule activities where certain
    activities may "be conducted without prior [DEP] approval . . . ." N.J.A.C.
    7:7-3.3(a). One such permit-by-rule "authorizes the reconfiguration of any
    legally existing dock, wharf, or pier . . . located at a legally existing marina
    . . . ." N.J.A.C. 7:7-4.14.
    Here, even though the attenuator is a change in structure from fixed to
    floating, it still falls under the permit-by-rule regulations.    The marina's
    original wave screen and fixed pier was already previously permitted with the
    initial marina construction in 1989. Here, the new structure remains in the
    same footprint, with the same function.       The proposal does not involve
    construction of new recreational docks and piers; therefore, N.J.A.C. 7:7-12.5
    is inapplicable.
    The permit authorizes the repositioning of the barge to replace a
    previously permitted dock within the same footprint. Essentially, the barge
    would become the new dock.       The two additional wave attenuators would
    extend from the barge, taking up the portion of the wave screen that extended
    beyond the original Dock F. Here, since swapping out the fixed pier with the
    barge constitutes a "reconfiguration," NJDEP properly determined this
    proposal to be within the permit-by-rule guidelines. As such, a review of CZM
    A-4700-18
    14
    rules relating to docks, piers, buffers, compatibility of uses, traffic impacts,
    recreational uses, and secondary impacts was not necessary. CZM rules use
    the word "preexisting" to indicate a structure already in physical existence.
    See, e.g., N.J.A.C. 7:7-1.5; N.J.A.C. 7:7-2.2(f)(2). The marina and pier had
    both legally existed since NJDEP approved the initial development in 1989.
    Nothing in the administrative record indicates that the permit does not
    authorize this proposed action.
    N.J.A.C. 7:7-12.20 governs vertical wave attenuators like those
    authorized by the permit.     They are "structures designed to protect boat
    moorings, including those at marinas, by intercepting wakes or waves and
    reducing the wake or wave energy which would normally impact the adjacent
    boat mooring areas." N.J.A.C. 7:7-12.20(a). They "may be fixed or floating,
    attached or detached, depending on the water depth, tidal range, and wave
    climate." N.J.A.C. 7:7-12.20(e).
    Construction of vertical wave attenuators "is conditionally acceptable,"
    and the "porosity" of the structure, which includes "the distance between the
    structure and the bottom of the water body, shall be determined on a case-by-
    case basis."   N.J.A.C. 7:7-12.20(b).     In this assessment, NJDEP should
    consider vessel traffic, water depth, and tidal flow. N.J.A.C. 7:7-12.20(c)(1)
    A-4700-18
    15
    explains "vertical wake or wave attenuation structure[s] may be designed [in]
    [h]igh wake or wave energy areas . . . such as the Hudson River between New
    Jersey and New York . . . ." Further, such structures "may be designed to . . .
    extend to a depth of between [thirty] and [forty] feet, or to the bottom of the
    water body, whichever is less, to intercept almost all wave energy." 
    Ibid.
    The water is approximately thirty-eight feet deep where the attenuators
    would be installed. The attenuators "would be approximately [twenty-one]
    feet deep and ballasted to maintain separation from the mudline of between
    [twenty] and [twenty-six] feet." On this basis, appellants argue that N.J.A.C.
    7:7-12.20(c)(1) requires vertical wave attenuators either extend thirty to forty
    feet below the water's surface or to the mudline.       Because the permitted
    structures are "up to [twenty-one] feet short of being the minimum allowable
    depth for a wave attenuation structure," NJDEP mis-applied this CZM rule.
    However, the CZM rule pertaining to wave attenuators merely "provides
    design guidance for these structures." NJDEP should consider aspects like
    "vessel traffic" and "water depth," and "shall" make such determinations "on a
    case-by-case basis."    N.J.A.C. 7:7-12.20(b).      NJDEP did so here and
    determined that the wave attenuators sought in the application conformed to
    the CZM rules.
    A-4700-18
    16
    We also reject appellants' argument NJDEP should have evaluated the
    public access requirements of N.J.A.C. 7:7-16.9.       Appellants reference the
    original WFD permit that required public access opportunities in the marina's
    initial development.     N.J.A.C. 7:7-16.9(m)(1) relates to "existing marina
    development . . . ." When "the proposed activity consists of maintenance,
    rehabilitation, renovation, redevelopment, or expansion that remains entirely
    within the parcel containing the existing development," then "[a]ny existing
    public access shall be maintained." 
    Ibid.
    Here, the "breakwater rehabilitation and restoration" would "remain[] in
    the same footprint, with the same function." The application "did not propose
    any new or modified use to the marina operations itself or to public access."
    Thus, because the permit sought to rehabilitate pre-existing portions within the
    marina and did not propose any change to public access, NJDEP appropriately
    refused to apply the more stringent public access requirements of N.J.A.C. 7:7 -
    16.9.
    We similarly reject the arguments considering Submerged Aquatic
    Vegetation (SAV) requirements of N.J.A.C. 7:7-9.6. and solid and hazardous
    waste requirements of N.J.A.C. 7:7-16.14.
    A-4700-18
    17
    SAV rules generally prohibit development in certain SAV-designated
    areas. See N.J.A.C. 7:7-9.6. SAV area maps are publicly available on the
    internet. No part of the Hudson River is designated as an SAV area.
    Appellants also argue NJDEP failed to fully assess "solid and hazardous
    waste associated with the development." Specifically, they contend survey
    data provided with the application shows LHYC has violated the River and
    Harbors Act of 1899, 
    33 U.S.C. § 407
    , and NJDEP should have rejected this
    application due to the "ongoing violation."
    The application analyzed the applicability of N.J.A.C. 7:7-16.14. The
    CZM rules assessment contained in the application detailed the equipment that
    would be used for removal and demolition of certain structures at the marina.
    "All protocols related to spoils handling and disposal would conform with all
    applicable state and Federal regulations, standards[,] and guidelines for the
    handling and disposal of solid and hazardous wastes."
    NJDEP was within its ability to conclude no further consideration was
    required. The application laid out a plan for compliance with the solid and
    hazardous waste rule.    Moreover, to the extent appellants allege ongoing
    violation of a federal statute based on one aerial photo and overlaid drawing,
    NJDEP refused to "review the operation of the existing marina." Further, the
    A-4700-18
    18
    permit remained expressly contingent on federal approval, thus appellants'
    arguments in this regard are either premature or misplaced.     Accordingly,
    NJDEP properly refused to consider the provisions of N.J.A.C. 7:7-16.14.
    As to any remaining arguments, we are satisfied they are without
    sufficient merit to warrant further discussion in a written opinion. R. 2:11-
    3(e)(1)(D).
    Affirmed.
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