Cortesini v. Hamilton Tp. Plan.
This text of 9 A.3d 185 (Cortesini v. Hamilton Tp. Plan.) 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.
Opinion
Paul CORTESINI and Thomas Zola, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
HAMILTON TOWNSHIP PLANNING BOARD and Wal-Mart Real Estate Business Trust, Defendants-Respondents.
Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.
Jeffrey I. Baron argued the cause for appellants (Baron, Riefberg & Brennan, attorneys; Mr. Baron, of counsel; Jeffrey M. Brennan, Voorhees, on the brief). Leo R. Zamparelli, Trenton, argued the cause for respondent Hamilton Township Planning Board.
Gary T. Hall argued the cause for respondent Wal-Mart Real Estate Business Trust (McCarter & English, attorneys; Mr. Hall, of counsel and on the brief; Donald M. Pepe, Newark, on the brief).
*186 Before Judges SKILLMAN, PARRILLO and ESPINOSA.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
SKILLMAN, P.J.A.D.
This appeal involves the grant by defendant Hamilton Township Planning Board (Board) to defendant Wal-Mart Real Estate Business Trust (Wal-Mart) of land use approvals for the proposed renovation of an existing Wal-Mart store. The primary argument presented by plaintiffs, who are property owners in Hamilton Township, is that the Board's resolution authorizing this renovation is invalid because the approvals did not include a bulk variance authorizing the nonconformity of parts of the existing Wal-Mart parking lot with the parking area setback requirement of the Hamilton Township zoning ordinance. We reject this argument because the nonconformity with the parking area setback requirement is a feature of the existing Wal-Mart parking lot that was authorized by the subdivision and site plan approvals granted by the Board in 2001 and 2002, and the proposed renovation will not increase or otherwise affect that nonconformity. Therefore, plaintiffs' challenge to the land use approvals granted by the Board for this renovation constitutes an untimely collateral attack upon the land use approvals the Board granted in 2001 and 2002 for construction of the original Wal-Mart store.
In 2001, a developer, JDN Construction, applied for site plan approval and associated bulk variances for a large commercial development known as Hamilton Marketplace, located near the intersection of Routes 130 and I-195 in Hamilton Township, which would contain offices, retail stores, and restaurants. After the Board granted this application, the developer also applied for a subdivision approval to enable major retailers who planned to construct stores on the site to own the properties on which their stores would be located.
In establishing the boundaries of the individual retailers' properties within the larger shopping center, the developer drew lot lines that went directly through the proposed parking lot. Although the developer applied for certain bulk variances in connection with its application for subdivision approval, it failed to apply for a variance from a provision of the zoning ordinance that requires parking spaces to be set back fifty feet from lot lines. The Board failed to note this omission and granted the developer's application.
After the developer conveyed the property on which the proposed Wal-Mart store was to be constructed, Wal-Mart was granted an amended site plan approval on June 13, 2002 for the purpose of relocating the entrance, garden center, and loading ramps for its store. This amendment had no effect upon the layout of the parking lot, for which the developer had already obtained subdivision approval without a variance from the parking area setback requirement. Wal-Mart subsequently constructed its existing store in accordance with these approvals.
In early 2009, Wal-Mart decided to renovate its store, which required a new site plan approval by the Board. Consequently, Wal-Mart applied to the Board for site plan approval to demolish 17,701 square feet of the existing building and improvements and to construct a 20,224 square foot addition and 3146 square foot outdoor garden center. This proposed renovation would result in a net increase of 5669 square feet of store space, from the present 156,963 square feet to 162,632 square feet, which would be a 3.61% increase in area. The footprint of the proposed renovated store will closely track the footprint of the existing store. The small areas *187 where the footprint of the renovated store will be expanded are located a significant distance from the areas of the parking lot that fail to conform with the parking area setback requirement.
Wal-Mart's site plan for the proposed renovated store will add forty-six parking spaces. All of these new parking spaces will conform with the parking area setback requirement. Therefore, no variance is required with respect to those parking spaces.
Although Wal-Mart applied for various variances and waivers in connection with the site plan approval required for its proposed renovations, it failed, as in 2001, to apply for a variance from the parking area setback requirement with respect to the existing parking spaces. However, an unidentified person noted during the course of the hearings that the zero setback in parts of the parking lot was "an existing condition approved previously."
The Board granted Wal-Mart's application for site plan approval with associated variances and waivers. The Board's memorializing resolution contained the following statement regarding the nonconformity of some parking spaces in the existing parking lot with the parking area setback requirement:
The Board concludes that the request to allow a zero setback for parking from the property line where fifty (50) feet is required is an acknowledgment of an existing condition that is functioning well and will not have any detrimental impact to the zone plan.
Plaintiffs then brought this action challenging the Board's grant of the site plan and other approvals sought by Wal-Mart for the renovation of its Hamilton Township store. Most of the arguments plaintiffs presented in support of their challenge have not been pursued on appeal and thus do not need to be set forth here. The only arguments plaintiffs presented to the trial court that are also raised on appeal are that (1) the Board's approvals for Wal-Mart's renovations are invalid because they did not include a bulk variance authorizing the nonconformity of part of the existing Wal-Mart parking lot with the fifty-foot parking area setback requirement of the zoning ordinance, and (2) the Board's decision must be reversed because one of Wal-Mart's witnesses, Allen Schectel, previously worked for the Board as its planner.
The trial court issued a lengthy written opinion that rejected these arguments as well as plaintiffs' other arguments and affirmed the resolution granting the land use approvals for Wal-Mart's proposed store renovation. In rejecting plaintiffs' argument that Wal-Mart was required to obtain a variance for the nonconformity of part of the existing parking lot with the parking area setback requirement, the court stated:
[I]n the Board's 2001 Resolution, it took into account both the effect that a zero setback would have on parking as well as the justifications warranting a zero setback, and thereby effectively satisfied the criteria for a variance allowing a zero setback.
I.
An ordinance authorizing a planning board to grant subdivision or site plan approval must include "[p]rovisions ensuring... [c]onsistency of the layout or arrangement of the subdivision or land development with the requirements of the zoning ordinance[.]" N.J.S.A. 40:55D-38(b)(1).
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
9 A.3d 185, 417 N.J. Super. 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cortesini-v-hamilton-tp-plan-njsuperctappdiv-2010.