BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE TOWNSHIP OF PISCATAWAY, ETC. VS. A.V. and S.V., ETC. (NEW JERSEY COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION)

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedSeptember 27, 2021
DocketA-4113-19
StatusUnpublished

This text of BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE TOWNSHIP OF PISCATAWAY, ETC. VS. A.V. and S.V., ETC. (NEW JERSEY COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION) (BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE TOWNSHIP OF PISCATAWAY, ETC. VS. A.V. and S.V., ETC. (NEW JERSEY COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION)) 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.

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BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE TOWNSHIP OF PISCATAWAY, ETC. VS. A.V. and S.V., ETC. (NEW JERSEY COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION), (N.J. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court."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-4113-19

BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE TOWNSHIP OF PISCATAWAY, MIDDLESEX COUNTY,

Petitioner-Respondent,

v.

A.V. and S.V., on behalf of minor children, N.V. and T.V.,

Respondents-Appellants. ____________________________

Submitted September 20, 2021 – Decided September 27, 2021

Before Judges Vernoia and Firko.

On appeal from the New Jersey Commissioner of Education, Docket No. 232-8/16.

A.V., appellant pro se.

David B. Rubin, attorney for respondent Board of Education of the Township of Piscataway.

Andrew J. Bruck, Acting Attorney General, attorney for respondent Commissioner of Education (David L. Kalisky, Deputy Attorney General, on the statement in lieu of brief).

PER CURIAM

A.V., the father of two children, N.V. and T.V., appeals from a

Commissioner of Education (Commissioner) final decision adopting an

administrative law judge's (ALJ) findings and conclusion that the children were

not entitled to a free education in the Township of Piscataway public schools,

and directing that A.V. pay $8,830.08 in tuition reimbursement to the Board of

Education of the Township of Piscataway (BOE). 1 We affirm.

I.

The BOE filed a complaint in the Law Division "alleg[ing] that, for

several months during the 2010-[2011] school year, . . . A.V. and [S.V.] were

'not domiciled within [the Piscataway] school district,' but that their children

attended its schools."2 Piscataway Tp. Bd. of Educ. v. A.V., No. A-2991-12

1 The Commissioner's final decision also ordered that S.V., who is A.V.'s wife and the children's mother, pay $8,830.08 in tuition reimbursement to the BOE. S.V. did not appeal from the Commissioner's final decision and has not participated in this appeal. 2 In our prior decision, we refer to the mother of the children as "S.S." In the present matter, the children's mother is referred to as "S.V." We understand that although she is referred to by different initials in the two cases, S.S. and S.V. are the same person. A-4113-19 2 (App. Div. June 11, 2015) (slip op. at 1-2). The BOE sought tuition

reimbursement under N.J.S.A. 18A:38-1(b)(2) for the children's "'ineligible

attendance' in its schools." Id. at 2. The court held a bench trial, found A.V.

and S.V. were not domiciled in Piscataway during a period the children attended

schools in the district, and awarded the BOE damages. Id. at 10. We vacated

the court's judgment and remanded to the Law Division for referral of "the

matter to the Commissioner . . . for administrative adjudication on the issue of

domicile, the issue of whether tuition is due, and, if tuition is due, the amount

of tuition due." Id. at 18. Following our remand, the Law Division referred the

matter to the Commissioner, who transmitted it to the Office of Administrative

Law as a contested case.

An ALJ held a hearing over seven days, and issued a detailed written

Initial Decision following the submission of post-hearing briefs. The ALJ noted

the BOE presented the testimony of T.V.'s eighth grade teacher, Mary Juffey;

school psychologist, Allyson Brown; the Piscataway school district's former

director of student personnel services and current homeless liaison , Diane

Janson; the district's past superintendent, Robert Copeland; and the district's

current superintendent, Teresa Rafferty. A.V. testified, and he and S.V. also

presented the following witnesses: the BOE's former supervisor of enrollment

A-4113-19 3 and attendance, David Ford; and Bridgewater-Raritan Regional School District

residency officer, Walter Kalicki. Based on the testimony of the witnesses and

documentary evidence presented at the hearing, the ALJ made detailed findings

of fact.

The ALJ found that A.V. and his family began living in Piscataway "in or

around 2006 and lived at various locations in the Piscataway school district prior

to the 2010-2011 school year." In May 2010, S.V. and her mother signed an

"Affidavit of Residency of Student" which included a representation that S.V.

"and her . . . children[,] N.V., T.V. . . . were residing at [S.V.'s] mother's home

in Piscataway."3 The affidavit further stated S.V. understood it was her

responsibility to inform the BOE of any change in residence.

The ALJ further found the evidence established that in the "spring of

2010," A.V. became employed as a superintendent of a housing complex in

Raritan, which is outside of the Piscataway school district. A.V. was permitted

to reside in the housing complex as a condition of his employment, and he was

3 The affidavit also referenced S.V.'s third child, A.V., who shares the initials of appellant A.V. here. We do not address any issues concerning S.V.'s third child because the ALJ did not recommend awarding any tuition reimbursement based on that child's attendance in the Piscataway school district, and the Commissioner did not order any tuition reimbursement based on that child 's attendance at a district school. A-4113-19 4 provided a lease for an apartment in the complex with a term commencing on

April 17, 2010 and ending on August 17, 2010. The lease identified S.V., N.V.,

and T.V. as residents of the apartment. The lease also included an addendum

stating A.V. would occupy the premises "in connection with [his] employment"

and providing "the apartment is provided to him as an incident to his

employment." The ALJ noted that the lease and addendum were not signed.

The ALJ further found that A.V.'s employment was terminated in August

2010, and he was provided a notice to vacate the apartment. The record,

however, established A.V. did not vacate the apartment until a landlord-tenant

complaint was filed against him in October 2010. A subsequent warrant of

removal directed that A.V. vacate the apartment by December 20, 2010.

The ALJ explained that during the 2010 school year, N.V. was in sixth

grade, T.V. was in eighth grade, and they attended schools in the Piscataway

school district. The ALJ also explained that by January 2011, A.V. and the

children were domiciled in Piscataway. Thus, the ALJ found the issue presented

was whether the children were domiciled in Piscataway during the period from

the commencement of the school year on September 3 to December 21, 2010.

The ALJ recounted the testimony she found established N.V. and T.V.

were not domiciled in Piscataway during the relevant period. Based on Juffey's

A-4113-19 5 and Brown's testimony, the ALJ found that in December 2010, T.V. reported she

was upset because her family was being evicted from the Raritan home in which

they had been living. T.V. said the family had been living in Raritan because

that is where her father, A.V., was employed. In response to T.V.'s report,

Janson spoke with S.V., and recommended that S.V. contact Social Services in

Somerset County for housing services because that is where Raritan is located.

In response, S.V. did not say the family lived in Piscataway.

The ALJ further found Janson advised Ford about what she had learned

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