Clean Earth Dredging Technologies, Inc. v. Hudson County Improvement Authority

877 A.2d 363, 379 N.J. Super. 261, 2005 N.J. Super. LEXIS 235
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJuly 21, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 877 A.2d 363 (Clean Earth Dredging Technologies, Inc. v. Hudson County Improvement Authority) 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
Clean Earth Dredging Technologies, Inc. v. Hudson County Improvement Authority, 877 A.2d 363, 379 N.J. Super. 261, 2005 N.J. Super. LEXIS 235 (N.J. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

WEFING, P.J.A.D.

Plaintiffs Clean Earth Dredging Technologies, Inc. and Resources Warehousing Consolidation Services, Inc. appeal from trial court orders denying their request for a preliminary injunction and granting summary judgment to defendants Hudson County Improvement Authority and Great Lakes Dredge and Dock Company. After reviewing the record in light of the contentions advanced on appeal, we affirm.

The dispute between the parties revolves around one portion of an approximately one-hundred-seventy-five-acre parcel of land in Kearny owned by defendant Improvement Authority, which is referred to generally as the Koppers Seaboard Site. Efforts have been underway to remediate this land since the closing of the [264]*264Koppers Seaboard Coke plant, whose operations left the property significantly contaminated. In 1986, the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection and Beazer East, the ■ successor to Koppers, entered into an Administrative Consent Order for such remediation. For reasons that are not contained in the record before us, the terms of that Administrative Consent Order were not complied with, and the Improvement Authority purchased the site to continue the remediation process.

The property abuts the Hackensack River and includes a deep-water dock. The Improvement Authority began to explore the possibility of leasing a portion of the tract, including the docking facility, to a dredge processing company, with the idea that this would achieve two objectives: provide an income stream from the rental payments and provide a source of processed dredge material that could be used in the remediation efforts.

In December 2003, the Improvement Authority published its initial Request for Expressions of Interest in which it solicited proposals to lease an area of five to ten acres to be used for dredge materials management. In this original Request, the Improvement Authority included the following statement.

The [Improvement Authority] may choose to purchase up to 200,000 cubic yards of processed dredge materials from the selected Proposer for use at the Site. As an option, the Proposer shall provide its price per cubic yard for supplying, placing and compacting processed dredge materials at locations on the site, directed by [the Improvement Authority].

According to this Request, the Improvement Authority expected, as a financial consideration, “a payment, paid in monthly installments, for the area leased to the Proposer. In addition, the [Improvement Authority] would receive a royalty fee in dollars per cubic yard, paid in monthly installments, for the processed dredge materials received or processed by the Proposer at the Leased Area.”

The Improvement Authority then conducted a meeting with interested parties, at which it learned that its Request had not been drafted to reflect the manner in which dredging companies conducted their operations. Specifically, their dredging opera[265]*265tions left them with materials to be deposited elsewhere and the companies, rather than selling that dredged material, would pay others to accept it. The Improvement Authority then realized that rather than a transaction which would produce two income streams and one accompanying expenditure, the transaction could be structured to provide it with three sources of income: monthly rental payments for use of the particular portion of the site, monthly royalty payments based upon the quantity of dredged material processed at the site, and payment for its acceptance of processed dredge materials. The Improvement Authority revised its Request to reflect this economic framework.

Ultimately, the Improvement Authority received proposals from four companies, including plaintiff Clean Earth and defendant Great Lakes. One was rejected as non-responsive, and the Improvement Authority then set up meetings with representatives of the remaining ones, inviting each to submit its best offer. At the conclusion of these meetings, the Improvement Authority decided to enter into final negotiations with defendant Great Lakes. The Improvement Authority and Great Lakes executed a lease in June 2004.

Clean Earth then commenced this action, complaining that the terms of the lease between the Improvement Authority and Great Lakes differed materially from the terms set forth in the Improvement Authority’s several Requests and was thus a violation of the Local Lands and Buildings Law, N.J.S.A. 40A:12-1 to -30, and the principles of competitive bidding.

The changes pointed out by Clean Earth can be summarized as follows. The revised Request the Improvement Authority issued on January 6, 2004, increased the Authority’s option to buy 200,000 cubic yards of processed dredge materials from a maximum to a minimum, granted the Authority a minimum monthly royalty based on receipt of 50,000 cubic yards of processed dredge material, increased the area to be leased from five to ten acres to up to twenty acres, including rights to use the northerly dock, required processed dredge materials be removed from the site [266]*266within forty-eight hours, changed the term of the lease from five years to three years with two optional one-year extensions, and required the operations to begin within three to six months of contract execution. After Great Lakes asked for an extension of the deadline within which time to respond to the request, the Improvement Authority again revised the Request, extended the deadline from January 21 to February 4, and increased the amount of time afforded the lessor to remove the processed dredge material from forty-eight to ninety-six hours.

The lease executed by the Improvement Authority and Great Lakes differed from the final Request in that the Improvement Authority agreed to accept a minimum of 400,000 cubic yards of processed dredge material instead of a minimum of 200,000. The lease also required Great Lakes to pay a base rent of $198,000 per year, instead of the $120,000 Great Lakes had proposed to pay, and replaced the $6.75 per cubic yard royalty Great Lakes had proposed to pay to place processed dredge material on the Koppers Seaboard site with a staggered placement fee based on the amount of processed dredge material Great Lakes processed and placed at the site.1 The lease incorporated Great Lakes’ proposed royalty of $1 per cubic yard of dredge material processed at the leasehold site but transported off-site.

Clean Earth was joined in the action by plaintiff Resources Warehousing, a corporation located in North Bergen and a Hudson County taxpayer. The trial court entered an order to show cause, without temporary restraints. Defendants then promptly moved for summary judgment. After briefing and oral argument, the trial court granted those motions. This appeal followed.

Plaintiffs make three arguments on appeal: 1) that the contract was subject to the competitive bidding requirements of the Local [267]*267Public Contracts Law, 2) that the Improvement Authority could not award a contract to Great Lakes on materially different terms than it had advertised in its Requests, and 3) that the lease was subject to the Local Lands and Buildings Law.

I

Before proceeding to analyze these claims in detail, we set forth certain established principles. “New Jersey has a long tradition of requiring open and free competitive bidding for public contracts.” Borough of Princeton v. Mercer County, 333

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877 A.2d 363, 379 N.J. Super. 261, 2005 N.J. Super. LEXIS 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clean-earth-dredging-technologies-inc-v-hudson-county-improvement-njsuperctappdiv-2005.