Centex Homes, LLC v. Township Committee

857 A.2d 649, 372 N.J. Super. 186, 2004 N.J. Super. LEXIS 352
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJune 4, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 857 A.2d 649 (Centex Homes, LLC v. Township Committee) 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
Centex Homes, LLC v. Township Committee, 857 A.2d 649, 372 N.J. Super. 186, 2004 N.J. Super. LEXIS 352 (N.J. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

SWEENEY, A.J.S.C.

On November 12, 2003, with the adoption of resolution no. 2003-11-8, the Mansfield Township Committee (Mansfield or Township) terminated a general development plan (GDP) previously approved by the Mansfield Township Planning Board (Board) for Centex Homes, LLC (Centex), formerly known as Calton Homes, Inc. in December, 197Y. Five public hearings preceded the adoption of the resolution. The question presented in this action in lieu of prerogative writs is whether Mansfield had “good cause” for terminating the GDP. The issue of termination of a GDP has not been previously addressed by the courts of this state.

It is important to understand the factual and procedural history leading to the termination of the GDP.

Resolution 1997-12-17 was adopted by the Board on February 23, 1998, memorializing the action taken at the Board meeting on December 22, 1997, approving the GDP. It is that resolution that defines the general parameters of the GDP, makes factual findings and conclusions, and sets forth the terms and conditions of the [190]*190GDP approval pursuant to N.J.S.A. 40:55D-45.1. The proposed development was to be known as “Mansfield Crossing” and was to consist of 414 homes constructed in ten sections over a ten-year period on 478.13 acres. Petticoat Bridge Road bisects the project. To the east, 233 homes were proposed on two farms. One is the “Puglia” farm consisting of 68 acres. The other is the “Reed” farm consisting of 197 acres. The remaining parcel to the west of Petticoat Bridge Road is the “Carty” farm on which Centex proposed to construct 181 homes. The proposed development conformed to existing zoning requirements and “clustering” was allowed providing the total number of units did not exceed a density of 0.9 units per acre. Since the plan called for 414 units on 478 acres, the yield of .866 units per acre fell within the permitted density allowance. On the eastern portion of the development, access to the “Reed” parcel was to be through the “Puglia” piece which fronted on Petticoat Bridge Road directly across from the “Carty” farm.

Before granting approval of the GDP, the Board conducted four hearings. During those hearings the Board expressed several concerns. Among them was the suggested single access between the eastern and western portions of the development. The Board desired a second access. Centex, however, informed the Board that environmental concerns about wetlands prohibited a second access at the suggested point. As part of the GDP, Centex submitted eight plans: (a) a land use and open space plan; (b) a circulation plan; (c) an open space plan; (d) a conceptual utility plan; (e) a drainage plan; (f) an environmental inventory; (g) a housing plan; and (h) a community impact report. N.J.S.A. 40:55D-45.2. Among other proposals in the GDP, the project was to be served by public water and sewer via an agreement with the owners of an existing development known as “Homestead.” That agreement also provided that 200 existing homes in the Old Village of Columbus would have access to sewer connections. Centex agreed to contribute $1,000 per unit to Mansfield to be dedicated to the construction of a sewer line to the village. The development was to have 216 acres of open space divided between [191]*191the eastern and western tracts. Centex would contribute $120,000 to the Township’s affordable housing trust fund and contribute its fair share of the cost and improvement of local roads impacted by the development. Centex also agreed to make a cash contribution in lieu of sidewalks along Petticoat Bridge Road as well as $204,000 to the Township’s recreation trust fund along with twenty-five acres of “upland open space.” The resolution made clear that the GDP was only “a conceptual approval” and that “before any construction begins the Applicant must seek and obtain preliminary and final major subdivision approval for each section and phase of development----”

On October 26, 1998, the Board granted GDP approval to Centex and adopted resolution 1998-9-12 for 413 lots, one less than contemplated in the original GDP. Of those, 232 lots were approved for the “Puglia” and “Reed” parcels and 181 for the “Carty” piece. In January, 1999, the Board granted final subdivision approval for section 1 to allow for construction of houses on thirty-six lots on the “Puglia” parcel. Then, in June 1999 Centex received final approval for Sections 7 and 8 on the “Carty” parcel. No further submissions to the Board were made until February 2003 when Centex submitted for approval a plan for sections 9 and 10 on the “Carty” parcel consisting of an additional eighty-nine lots.

Following the January 1999, final approval of section 1 on the “Puglia” tract, Centex engineers received a letter of interpretation (LOI) dated February 3, 1999 from the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP). This LOI referred to a previous LOI of September 3, 1997, in which the DEP found the wetlands on the “Puglia” tract to be of “intermediate and ordinary resource value.” However, as the result of a site visit on February 1, 1999, the DEP advised that the “state endangered, federally threatened bog turtle (Clemmys Muhlenbergi)” had been located on the tract and that the DEP Principal Environmental Specialist who wrote the letter “will be recommending that the wetlands ... be reclassified as being an exceptional resource value ... and that a standard 150 [192]*192foot buffer be required adjacent to these wetlands” rather than the fifty feet suggested in the September 3, 1997, LOI. Centex interpreted the LOI to be a mandated change to the project pursuant to N.J.S.A. 40:55D-45.5(b), and terminated all proposed development on the tract including the access road to the “Reed” parcel. This meant that the “Reed” parcel no longer had a direct connection to the “Carty” farm through the “Puglia” tract and across Petticoat Bridge Road. Following receipt of the LOI, Centex representatives met with representatives from the DEP in February and April 1999 at Joint Process Permitting (JPP) Meetings in which Centex alleges that the DEP “made it clear” that any Centex application for a road crossing through the “Puglia” tract would not be approved even though no formal decision on that issue was ever forthcoming from the DEP.

In early November, 2002, the “Puglia” farm which had been under contract of sale to Centex, was purchased by Burlington County pursuant to its Farmland Preservation Program. Development on the tract was thereafter forbidden pursuant to the deed of easement. On February 21,2003, at a meeting between Centex and Township representatives concerning performance bonds and the application for approval of sections 9 and 10, among other items, Centex informed the Township that the “Reed” parcel would be developed with only forty-nine lots instead of 196 lots with private well and septic rather than public water and sewer.

On March 14, 2003, in reaction to that meeting, counsel for Mansfield prepared a memorandum to the Committee stating that the loss of the “Puglia” farm to the County, the elimination of access to the “Reed” parcel and the changes in development on the “Reed” tract expressed at the February 21, 2003, meeting had substantially altered the original GDP. He recommended notifying Centex that it would have “ten (10) days in which to give evidence that it is fulfilling its obligations pursuant to the Approved General Development Plan.” The memorandum described the necessity for a hearing as outlined in N.J.S.A. 40:55D-7. A letter was thereafter sent to counsel for Centex on the same day incorporat[193]

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857 A.2d 649, 372 N.J. Super. 186, 2004 N.J. Super. LEXIS 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/centex-homes-llc-v-township-committee-njsuperctappdiv-2004.