Abel v. Elizabeth Bd. of Works

164 A.2d 764, 63 N.J. Super. 500
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedOctober 31, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 164 A.2d 764 (Abel v. Elizabeth Bd. of Works) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abel v. Elizabeth Bd. of Works, 164 A.2d 764, 63 N.J. Super. 500 (N.J. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

63 N.J. Super. 500 (1960)
164 A.2d 764

DR. HENRI E. ABEL, JOHN SZOSTEK AND JOSEPH BUTT, PLAINTIFFS-APPELLANTS,
v.
BOARD OF WORKS OF CITY OF ELIZABETH, MAYOR OF THE CITY OF ELIZABETH, THE CITY OF ELIZABETH, BUILDING INSPECTOR JOHN T. BENESCH OF THE CITY OF ELIZABETH, VISITING NURSE ASS'N OF EASTERN UNION COUNTY, UNION COUNTY TRUST COMPANY, UNION COUNTY SAVINGS BANK, AND JERSEY MORTGAGE COMPANY, DEFENDANTS-RESPONDENTS.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Argued October 17, 1960.
Supplemental Briefs Submitted October 27, 1960.
Decided October 31, 1960.

*503 Before Judges GOLDMANN, CONFORD and KILKENNY.

Mr. Joseph Butt argued the matter for appellants.

Mr. H. Russell Morss, Jr., argued the cause for respondents Union County Trust Company, Union County Savings Bank and Jersey Mortgage Company (Messrs. O'Connor, Morss & O'Connor, attorneys).

The opinion of the court was delivered by GOLDMANN, S.J.A.D.

Plaintiffs appeal from a Law Division judgment dismissing their proceeding in lieu of *504 prerogative writs attacking the validity of an amendment to the Elizabeth zoning ordinance.

I.

The Elizabeth Board of Public Works is, under the city charter and appropriate legislation, the municipal legislative body insofar as zoning is concerned. On July 16, 1958 Richard R. O'Connor, Esquire, made application to the Board on behalf of the Union County Trust Company, Union County Savings Bank, Jersey Mortgage Company and others to rezone from Residence C to Business A classification an area of some 8 1/2 acres adjoining the business center of Elizabeth. The application was accompanied by copies of a survey prepared by Luster & Luster, licensed professional engineers and land surveyors. This survey, in the form of a large map, showed the area to be rezoned in heavy outline, as well as the surrounding area, in some detail, including streets, individual plots, ownerships and distances. The 8 1/2-acre area with which we are concerned is bisected in a north-south direction by Union Avenue, one block of which, between Morris Avenue and Prince Street, is to be rezoned. Plaintiffs live on the eastern side of this block.

The application and survey map were presented to the Board of Public Works at its regular meeting on July 24, 1958 and, after consideration by it, referred to the Elizabeth Planning Board. The Planning Board requested its consultant, I. Candeub & Associates, to study the matter and report. The consultant did so and on August 26, 1958 submitted a memorandum which recommended, on the basis of the Elizabeth Master Plan and the character of existing and recent development in the general area, that the specific area under consideration be rezoned from Residence C to Business A.

The memorandum noted that the surrounding area was zoned Business B, except for adjoining blocks to the north *505 zoned Residence A, B and C, and Business A. Single and two-family residences are permitted in Residence A and B zones, respectively. These are also permitted in a Residence C zone, as are multiple-family dwellings, including apartments and apartment hotels. The surrounding Business B zone permits almost any type of commercial establishment and a limited amount of light industrial use. Under the existing zoning ordinance, the following uses are permitted in a Business A zone (the rezoning requested for the area in question): any use permitted in a residence zone, retail stores, banks and fiduciary institutions, barber shops, offices, studios, restaurant or lunch counters, telephone exchanges, art galleries, and undertakers and embalmers' establishments. The consultant's memorandum noted that in the area considered for rezoning the predominant use on the easterly side of Union Avenue is single and two-family dwellings, the majority of which are in good or fair condition. On the westerly side are a Knights of Columbus clubhouse with parking, a 32-family apartment house, an old house recently purchased by the Visiting Nurse Association of Eastern Union County (this was torn down, and the lot is now vacant), a large single-family residence containing a doctor's office, and a recently abandoned public school which the city is considering using as a City Hall Annex. This description by the consultant of existing uses is confirmed by the testimony taken in the Law Division, except that there should be added to the description of uses on the westerly side of Union Avenue a dwelling with a real estate broker's office on the first floor.

The surrounding land uses to the south, east and west of the area are concededly commercial in nature. That part of Prince Street, which bounds the area to be rezoned on the north, contains two office buildings converted from residences, a single-family residence and doctor's office, and a church with its parking lot and playground, in the block between Westminster Avenue on the east and Union Avenue; between Union Avenue and Irvington Avenue to the west *506 there are a church, a vacant lot, and a firehouse, all in a Business A zone.

The consultant's memorandum further noted that the Elizabeth Master Plan, which was adopted by the Planning Board of the city on December 27, 1955, proposed development of the area in question for general commercial usage. The area is contiguous to what the Master Plan map shows as the central business district of the city.

It thus appears from the memorandum, as well as the testimony, that the area to be rezoned is surrounded on three sides by commercial uses; on the fourth side, the north, there is an immediately adjacent strip now in commercial, church and public use, beyond which lies a residential area of medium density.

On August 26, 1958 the Planning Board considered the rezoning request, the survey map accompanying it, and the consultant's report, and unanimously recommended to the Board of Public Works that the area be rezoned from Residence C to Business A. The recommendation was received by the Board of Public Works at its regular meeting on September 4, 1958. At its request Mr. O'Connor had Luster & Luster prepare a description of the area to be rezoned, based on the survey map previously submitted. We have examined this description and find that it precisely delineates the area bounded by a heavy line on the map. An amendatory zoning ordinance containing this description, and rezoning the area from Residence C to Business A, was then prepared and introduced. The Board of Public Works held a public hearing on the ordinance at its meeting of September 25, at which time it heard plaintiffs' present attorney and several Union Avenue residents in opposition, as well as Mr. O'Connor and several representatives of the applicant banks and of the Visiting Nurse Association in support of the rezoning. At the conclusion of the hearing the Board unanimously adopted the ordinance.

Plaintiffs filed their complaint on November 7, 1958, alleging that the amendatory ordinance constituted an abuse *507 of discretion and was arbitrary, unreasonable and capricious; the Board of Public Works had prejudged the case, failed to hold a bona fide hearing, and was prejudiced in favor of the applicants; the ordinance violated R.S. 40:55-32 because not in accordance with a comprehensive plan or designed for one or more of the various purposes set out in the statute; the ordinance was illegal because it constituted spot-zoning; and, finally, the action of the Board of Public Works violated the doctrine of res adjudicata.

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Bluebook (online)
164 A.2d 764, 63 N.J. Super. 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abel-v-elizabeth-bd-of-works-njsuperctappdiv-1960.