David Mrowko v. Belleville Township Zoning Board of Adjustment ( 2024 )


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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-0473-23
    DAVID MROWKO,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    BELLEVILLE TOWNSHIP
    ZONING BOARD OF
    ADJUSTMENT, FRANK
    DELORENZO, JR., in his
    official capacity as Construction
    Official for Belleville Township,
    KEVIN CRISTANCHO, and
    VICTOR M. CRISTANCHO,
    Defendants-Respondents.
    __________________________
    Submitted October 23, 2024 – Decided November 7, 2024
    Before Judges Mayer and Puglisi.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Essex County, Docket No. L-3771-23.
    Weiner Law Group LLP, attorneys for appellant
    (Steven R. Tombalakian, of counsel and on the briefs).
    Gaccione Pomaco, PC, attorneys for respondents Kevin
    Cristancho and Victor M. Cristancho (Diana Powell
    McGovern, of counsel and on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Plaintiff David Mrowko appeals from a July 20, 2023 order denying relief
    requested in his order to show cause (OTSC) and a September 13, 2023 order
    entered in favor of defendants Kevin Cristancho and Victor M. Cristancho1 and
    dismissing his complaint in lieu of prerogative writs with prejudice. We affirm.
    We recite the facts from the record. Plaintiff owns property located at 31
    Bridge Street, Belleville, New Jersey, also known as Block 6706, Lot 22.02 (rear
    lot). The Cristanchos own property located 35 Bridge Street, also known as
    Block 6706, Lot 22.01 (front lot). The front lot and the rear lot share a common
    driveway.
    On May 14, 2009, the Belleville Township Zoning Board of Adjustment
    (Board) approved an application to create two separate lots, 22.01 known as the
    front lot, and 22.02, known as the rear lot. The front and rear lots were originally
    part of one lot. A new single-family dwelling would be built on the rear lot and
    an existing two-family home would remain on the front lot.
    1
    Kevin Cristancho is the son of Victor M. Cristancho. Because these
    defendants share the same last name, we refer to them individually by their first
    name and collectively by their last name. No disrespect is intended.
    A-0473-23
    2
    In granting approval for the two lots, the Board required the rear lot to
    "create an easement for the benefit of the front lot to gain access to the parking
    area of the two-family home and that the easement area remain unobstructed by
    vehicles or otherwise at all times." Additionally, the Board required "the owner
    of the rear larger lot maintain the easement in good repair so that continuous
    access for ingress and egress be provided."
    Consistent with the Board's resolution approving the subdivision, an
    "ingress/egress easement" was prepared, allowing a mutual easement "upon a
    portion of [the rear lot] for the benefit of [the front lot] to gain access to the
    parking area of [the front lot]." The owners of the front and rear lots were
    required to "keep the easement area unobstructed at all times so that continuous
    access for ingress and egress . . . be provided." Nothing in the easement's
    language required consent from the front or rear lot owners for future
    applications related to either lot.
    A-0473-23
    3
    In July 2016, plaintiff and his uncle, Andrzej Kokoszka, became co-
    owners of the rear lot. 2 In 2017 or 2018, Kevin and Victor purchased the front
    lot.
    On December 18, 2020, the Cristanchos applied to the Board to convert
    the existing two-family home on the front lot into a four-family home.3 In March
    2021, the Cristanchos' attorney served notice to property owners within two
    hundred feet of the front lot regarding the four-family dwelling application. The
    Cristanchos counsel sent the notice to plaintiff and his uncle by certified mail.4
    In March 2021, plaintiff lived at "513 Davis Avenue, Kearny, NJ 07032."
    However, counsel inadvertently addressed the notice to "513 David Avenue,
    Kearny, NJ 07032." The Cristanchos' counsel also published notice of the
    application in the Belleville Times.
    Consistent with the certified mail notice, the Board held a public hearing
    on the Cristanchos' application on May 6, 2021. At the start of hearing, the
    2
    In October 2021, plaintiff became sole owner of the rear lot. The dates
    relevant to plaintiff's claims occurred prior to his sole ownership of the rear lot.
    In February 2023, plaintiff's uncle passed away.
    3
    The zoning ordinance allowed up to a three-family home as of right.
    4
    The United States Post Office has a two-year limit for retrieving certified mail
    delivery information. Thus, confirmation regarding the certified mail notice
    sent to plaintiff and his uncle was no longer available after March 2023.
    A-0473-23
    4
    Board's counsel confirmed the Board's secretary received "notice of
    publication."   In summarizing the application, the Cristanchos' attorney
    explained there would be no changes to the footprint or square footage of the
    existing home on the front lot. Kevin, who testified at the Board hearing,
    confirmed "all seven [parking] spaces [would] be designated to all of the units
    in the proposed four-family dwelling."
    A Board member expressed concern about the parking for the proposed
    four-family home. To address any concerns, the Board's chairperson proposed
    the formation of a subcommittee to view the front lot and "report back." The
    Board adjourned the Cristanchos' application for the subcommittee to visit the
    property.
    At the reconvened hearing after the site visit, the Board heard additional
    testimony from Victor, John Guadagnoli, a licensed architect, and John Szabo,
    a licensed land use planner. Board members again raised the parking space
    issue. Counsel for the Cristanchos explained the site would have four tandem
    spaces and three individual spaces as allowed under the Township's zoning
    ordinance. On the topic of parking spaces, Guadagnoli testified there was a
    paved mutual driveway easement "along [the] left side that accesses the rear
    A-0473-23
    5
    property" and the occupants of the four-family home would use the paved area
    limited to seven parking spaces.
    Although the Board members personally disfavored the Cristanchos'
    application, they concluded the application satisfied all requirements under the
    Township's zoning code. As a result, on September 2, 2021, the Board approved
    a four-family dwelling on the front lot.
    The Board adopted an October 7, 2021 resolution memorializing its
    approval of a four-family dwelling on the front lot. The resolution stated the
    Cristanchos "provided adequate notice of the [a]pplication and the hearing in
    accordance with [the] statute." Regarding parking for the four-family dwelling,
    the resolution noted there would be seven parking spaces and the spaces would
    be "specifically designated for each unit." Additionally, the resolution found
    "no expansion of the building footprint and no site improvements" would result
    from the approval of the four-family dwelling. The Board's memorializing
    resolution was published in the Belleville Times on October 28, 2021.
    Plaintiff claims he first learned of the Cristanchos' application on May 26,
    2023, when he saw contractors working at the home. Plaintiff then filed an Open
    Public Records Act (OPRA) request for information related to any development
    approvals associated with the front lot. Based on information from his OPRA
    A-0473-23
    6
    request, plaintiff learned the Board granted approval for a four-family dwelling
    on the front lot.
    In June 2023, plaintiff filed a verified complaint in lieu of prerogative
    writs and an OTSC. In his complaint, plaintiff requested reversal of the Board's
    approval of a four-family home on the front lot. He also asked the court to deem
    the Board's resolution memorializing the approval null and void based on
    allegedly defective notice. The judge signed plaintiff's OTSC and set July 20,
    2023 as the return date.
    Prior to the OTSC hearing, the Cristanchos moved to dismiss plaintiff's
    complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted. The
    Board filed a cross-motion on the same grounds.
    At the OTSC hearing, plaintiff acknowledged the easement allowed
    mutual use of a paved driveway. However, plaintiff argued the Cristanchos
    intensified the use of the easement without his consent. Additionally, plaintiff
    asserted the Board lacked jurisdiction to consider the Cristanchos' application
    as a result of "botched [notice] to the neighboring property owner who's
    impacted by the application."
    During the OTSC argument, the judge stated plaintiff's complaint failed
    to allege that neither plaintiff nor his uncle received notice of the Cristanchos'
    A-0473-23
    7
    application. The judge noted such an omission might be "a fatal error in
    [plaintiff's] order to show cause." The judge also acknowledged the Cristanchos
    did not increase the square footage or the footprint of the existing home on the
    front lot. She further noted the number of parking spaces associated with the
    approval of a four-family dwelling on the front lot remained unchanged because
    there were "only seven cars before and seven cars after [that] can use those
    parking spaces."
    In opposing the OTSC, the Cristanchos' counsel argued plaintiff's action
    was time barred because he did not file his complaint within forty-five days of
    publication of the Board's memorializing resolution. The Board's attorney also
    argued the existing easement remained unchanged after the Board approved the
    four-family dwelling and the Cristanchos were "using that easement the same
    now as [they] did then and the property in the back is using the easement for the
    same purpose."
    In denying the OTSC, the judge first addressed the issue of notice, stating:
    In this particular case it appears to be truly a
    typographical error. There is no question it wasn't
    purposeful.
    ....
    So, is that a fatal defect? So with regard to the notice,
    itself, for purposes of this motion without further
    A-0473-23
    8
    discovery in the case, the court finds that that is not a
    fatal defect without further discovery on the issue. And
    the reason I say that is twofold.
    Number one, . . . I don't have anything from the
    plaintiff, himself, saying ["]I did not receive that notice.
    If I had received that notice it would have been
    important to me.["] Nothing like that. . . .
    Number two, there was a co-owner at the time. And he
    was the first person to whom it was addressed. He has
    not submitted anything saying ["]I did not receive it. I
    did not know about this.["]
    The judge then addressed the claimed intensification of use of the
    easement. She explained:
    I find it hard to believe that the plaintiff didn't
    know. . . it was being used as a four-family house. He
    must be. It's right in front of his house – how many
    people are parking.
    But most importantly to me at least at this juncture is
    the fact that there could not be intensification of
    use. . . . [A]gain, there might be proof that that is not
    true. Seven parking spaces. . . . Probably the same
    number of people because the house is not being
    expanded.
    ....
    So, . . . the question of intensification of use is . . . a
    fact issue . . . under these circumstances. Probably not
    favorably towards [plaintiff]. But that's not for me to
    determine today.
    A-0473-23
    9
    Two months after the judge's denial of the OTSC, the parties appeared for
    renewed argument on the motions to dismiss. Counsel for the Board and the
    Cristanchos argued plaintiff failed to file his complaint in lieu of prerogative
    writs within forty-five days of publication of the Board's resolution under Rule
    4:69-6. Consequently, they asserted plaintiff's claims were time barred.
    Plaintiff argued the motions to dismiss should be denied under Rule 4:6-
    2(e) "because the two claims that were raised in the plaintiff's complaint are
    cognizable. One is that the notice was defective and, two, that the easement was
    intensified without consent." Plaintiff also advised that because his uncle died
    in February 2023, he was unable to proffer a certification concerning the lack of
    notice.
    In ruling for the Board and the Cristanchos, the judge found plaintiff's
    consent was not required for the Board to approve a four-family dwelling on the
    front lot because the size of the home remained the same. The judge stated
    "under the facts of this case . . . [t]here is . . . absolutely no increase whatsoever
    of the use of that easement."
    The judge also concluded plaintiff failed to meet his burden of proof
    concerning the lack of notice. The judge cited the unrefuted certification from
    the Cristanchos' counsel stating that he handled the certified mailing of the
    A-0473-23
    10
    notices, and plaintiff's notice "did not come back."       The judge also noted
    plaintiff failed to cite any case law that the minor typographical error in the
    notice was "fatal" to the Board's approval of the four-family dwelling.
    In dismissing plaintiff's complaint, the judge further stated:
    It is my ruling[] that [N.J.S.A.] 40:55D-12 has been met
    in this particular case. I find . . . the [forty-five] days
    that are required for the bringing of the prerogative
    writ[s] has not been met and even if we were to go
    further, quite frankly, under the . . . uncontested facts
    of this case . . . there is no question that there is no
    intensification of the easement. . . . [T]he notice that
    was provided was clearly sufficient to notify of what
    the issue would be with regard to this and . . . I don't
    find there to be anything . . . that was out of order with
    regard to this matter.
    On appeal, plaintiff contends the judge erred in declining to permit full
    discovery prior to dismissing his complaint. Further, plaintiff argues the judge's
    findings, were contrary to the Municipal Land Use Law (MLUL), N.J.S.A.
    40:55D-1 to -163. Additionally, plaintiff contends his consent was required
    because the Cristanchos' four-family home intensified the use of the easement.
    We reject these arguments.
    In reviewing a judge's decision on an action by a governing body, such as
    a zoning board of adjustment, we are bound by the same standard of review as
    the trial court. CBS Outdoor, Inc. v. Borough of Lebanon Plan. Bd., 414 N.J.
    A-0473-23
    11
    Super. 563, 577 (App. Div. 2010). Our review of decisions by a zoning board
    is limited. Friends of Peapack-Gladstone v. Borough of Peapack-Gladstone
    Land Use Bd., 
    407 N.J. Super. 404
    , 424 (App. Div. 2009).
    "[A]n overriding principle governing judicial review of variance decisions
    by a board of adjustment is that, assuming an adequate basis in the record for a
    board's conclusions, deference to the judgment of local zoning boards ordinarily
    is appropriate." Lang v. Zoning Bd. of Adjustment of N. Caldwell, 
    160 N.J. 41
    ,
    58 (1999). We will reverse a board's decision only if its action was so arbitrary,
    capricious, or unreasonable, as to amount to an abuse of discretion. Zilinsky v.
    Zoning Bd. of Adjustment of Verona, 
    105 N.J. 363
    , 367 (1987). The burden is
    on the party challenging the board's decision to demonstrate the decision was
    arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable. Cell S. of N.J., Inc. v. Zoning Bd. of
    Adjustment of W. Windsor Twp., 
    172 N.J. 75
    ,81 (2002). If the record contains
    sufficient evidence to support the municipal board's determination, we will defer
    to the Board's decision. Kramer v. Bd. of Adjustment of Sea Girt, 
    45 N.J. 268
    ,
    296 (1965). Further, a board's factual determinations are presumptively valid.
    Dunbar Homes, Inc. v. Zoning Bd. of Adjustment of Franklin, 
    233 N.J. 546
    , 558
    (2018).
    A-0473-23
    12
    We review a judge's decision on an action in lieu of prerogative writs de
    novo based on the record before the municipal board. See N.Y. SMSA, L.P. v.
    Bd. of Adjustment of Weehawken, 
    370 N.J. Super. 319
    , 331 (App. Div. 2004).
    Plaintiff incorrectly contends the judge should have allowed broad discovery
    and accorded him all favorable inferences in deciding the dismissal motions.
    However, in a prerogative writs action, our review of the Board's decision is
    limited to whether there was substantial evidence in the record justifying the
    Board's approval of the four-family home on the front lot.
    Having reviewed the record before the Board, there was sufficient
    evidence supporting the approval of the requested four-family dwelling on the
    front lot. The Board heard testimony from the Cristanchos, the Board's engineer,
    the municipality's zoning officer, the Cristanchos' expert planner, and the
    Cristanchos' architect. Additionally, a subcommittee of Board members visited
    the front and rear lots prior to approving the application. The Board also issued
    a memorializing resolution stating the reasons for allowing the four-family
    home. Plaintiff failed to present any contrary evidence suggesting the Board 's
    approval of the four-family home was arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable.
    We next consider plaintiff's arguments that the Boards' approval of a four-
    family dwelling resulted in an intensification of the use of the easement and
    A-0473-23
    13
    required his consent. He further asserts the Cristanchos lacked standing to file
    their application because they did not own the easement.
    Under the MLUL, a developer may submit an application to a municipal
    board for development approval. N.J.S.A. 40:55D-3. A "developer" is "the
    legal or beneficial owner or owners of a lot or of any land proposed to be
    included in a proposed development, including the holder of an option or
    contract to purchase, or other person having an enforceable proprietary interest
    in such land." N.J.S.A. 40:55D-4.
    Here, the Cristanchos had an enforceable interest in the existing easement,
    consistent with the express language of the written "ingress/egress easement."
    Thus, the Cristanchos had the right to submit an application to the Board for
    approval of a four-family house on the front lot.
    Contrary to plaintiff's argument, the four-family home did not intensify
    the use of the easement requiring plaintiff's consent to the application. There
    were seven designated parking spaces when the property was a three-family
    home and there remained seven designated parking spaces upon approval of the
    four-family home. No additional parking spaces were created as a result of the
    four-family dwelling. Nor did the application for a four-family home expand
    A-0473-23
    14
    the footprint or square footage of the existing structure on the front lot. Nothing
    about the approval of the four-family home altered the existing easement.
    Further, plaintiff failed to proffer evidence supporting any intensification
    of the use of the easement. In her fact findings, the judge stated the size,
    location, and use of the existing easement remained unchanged after the Board
    approved the four-family home. Because the use of the easement remained
    unchanged, plaintiff's consent was not required.         Further, nothing in the
    easement's language required consent from the owner of the rear lot for any
    approvals related to the front lot.
    We next consider plaintiff's argument that the Board lacked jurisdiction
    to consider the Cristanchos' application because he did not receive notice. The
    MLUL requires notice pertaining to the "property which is the subject of [the
    Board] hearing." N.J.S.A. 40:55D-12(b).
    Specifically, plaintiff raises the following arguments: (1) the notice failed
    to comply with N.J.S.A. 40:55D-11 because it did not include the rear lot; and
    (2) notice purportedly sent to plaintiff violated N.J.S.A. 40:55D-12 because it
    was incorrectly addressed to "David" Avenue rather than "Davis" Avenue .
    The MLUL sets forth the notice requirements for a hearing on a
    development application. N.J.S.A. 40:55D-11. The statute requires the notice
    A-0473-23
    15
    "state the date, time and place of the hearing, the nature of the matters to be
    considered and . . . an identification of the property proposed for development
    by street address." 
    Ibid.
    The MLUL also sets forth the requirements for publication and delivery
    of the notice. N.J.S.A. 40:55D-12. An applicant may provide public notice by
    publication in "a newspaper of general circulation in the municipality ." 
    Ibid.
    Individual notice of an application may be provided
    to the owners of all real property as shown on the
    current tax duplicates, located in the State and within
    200 feet in all directions of the property which is the
    subject of such hearing. . . . Notice shall be given by:
    (1) serving a copy thereof on the property owner as
    shown on the said current tax duplicate, or his agent in
    charge of the property, or (2) mailing a copy thereof by
    certified mail to the property owner at his address as
    shown on the said current tax duplicate.
    [Ibid.]
    Here, plaintiff argues notice of the Cristanchos' application was defective
    because the notice "failed to include any mention of [the rear lot] in . . . [the]
    notice published and mailed to property owners." According to plaintiff, the
    notice needed to include the rear lot as the rear lot had use of the easement.
    However, the Board's approval of the four-family home on the front lot did not
    A-0473-23
    16
    alter the easement or its use. Because the Cristancho's application did not
    involve any changes to the easement, the notice as worded was sufficient.
    Plaintiff also argues notice was defective because it was "incorrectly
    addressed to 513 David Avenue, rather than 513 Davis Avenue." Based on the
    deficient notice, plaintiff contends the Board lacked jurisdiction to hear the
    Cristanchos' application.
    We are unaware of any case law deeming errors in notices sent under
    N.J.S.A. 40:55D-11 to be fatal per se and divest a municipal board of jurisdiction
    to consider a development application. To the contrary, our Supreme Court has
    held "a minor, clerical deviation that had no potential to mislead any interested
    member of the public [did] not fall short of the statutory requirement for
    describing the property to be developed." Northgate Condo. Ass'n v. Borough
    of Hillsdale Plan. Bd., 
    214 N.J. 120
    , 142 (2013). In Pond Run Watershed
    Association v. Township of Hamilton Zoning Board of Adjustment, 
    397 N.J. Super. 335
    , 349 (App. Div. 2008), we sustained a "trial court's finding that [a]
    typographical error . . . did not vitiate the legal sufficiency of the notice."
    Here, it is undisputed the Cristanchos' attorney obtained a certified list of
    property owners within two hundred feet of the front lot from the municipality
    and mailed notice of the application to those property owners by certified mail
    A-0473-23
    17
    consistent with the MLUL. It is also undisputed that plaintiff's address on the
    certified list was correct, but the Cristanchos' attorney inadvertently
    misaddressed plaintiff's notice to "David" Avenue rather than "Davis" Avenue.
    The judge found nothing in the record indicated the Town of Kearney had
    both a David Avenue and a Davis Avenue that might have resulted in the
    misdelivery of the notice to be to someone other than plaintiff. She also noted
    plaintiff never submitted a certification claiming neither he nor his uncle
    received the certified mail notice.
    Additionally, plaintiff never identified any other streets in the Town of
    Kearney that could have resulted in the post office misdelivering the notice sent
    to plaintiff. The Cristanchos' attorney certified he sent the notice to plaintiff by
    certified mail and it was not returned to the law firm as undeliverable.
    Moreover, plaintiff could have submitted certification denying receipt of notice
    but failed to do so. Additionally, due to the passage of time, the Cristanchos
    were unable to confirm that the certified letter directed to plaintiff was delivered
    because the post office did not maintain such records after two years. Because
    there is no "David" Street in Kearny and because the certified mail notice
    directed to plaintiff did not come back marked as "undeliverable," the judge
    found plaintiff received the notice despite the minor typographical error.
    A-0473-23
    18
    We are satisfied the record contains sufficient credible evidence that
    notice was effectively served on plaintiff despite the minor typographical error.
    The judge thoroughly considered the issue of notice and found the MLUL's
    notice requirements were satisfied. Additionally, plaintiff does not challenge
    publication of the notice in the local newspaper. Thus, on these facts, the Board
    had jurisdiction to consider the requested four-family dwelling on the front lot.
    We also agree that plaintiff's complaint in lieu of prerogative writs was
    time barred. An objector may challenge a Board decision upon the filing of an
    action in lieu of prerogative writs within forty-five days of the first publication
    of the notice of decision. N.J.S.A. 40:55D-17h.
    Here, plaintiff filed his complaint in lieu of prerogative writs on June 13,
    2023, approximately one year and eight months after the Board published the
    resolution approving the four-family dwelling in the local newspaper. As the
    owner of the rear lot, plaintiff had ample opportunity to observe any work related
    to the home on the front lot and should have timely filed his action in lieu of
    prerogative writs.   Based on the judge finding the notice requirements of
    N.J.S.A. 40:55D-12 were met, plaintiff had forty-five days from publication of
    the Board's memorializing resolution to file his action in lieu of prerogative
    A-0473-23
    19
    writs and failed to do so. As a result, the judge properly dismissed plaintiff's
    complaint as time barred.
    To the extent we have not addressed any arguments raised by plaintiff,
    they lack sufficient merit to warrant discussion in a written opinion. R. 2:11-
    3(e)(1)(E).
    Affirmed.
    A-0473-23
    20
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A-0473-23

Filed Date: 11/7/2024

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/7/2024