Donald Whiteman v. Township Council of Berkeley Township

CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJuly 10, 2025
DocketA-40-24
StatusPublished

This text of Donald Whiteman v. Township Council of Berkeley Township (Donald Whiteman v. Township Council of Berkeley Township) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donald Whiteman v. Township Council of Berkeley Township, (N.J. 2025).

Opinion

SYLLABUS

This syllabus is not part of the Court’s opinion. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Court and may not summarize all portions of the opinion.

Donald Whiteman v. Township Council of Berkeley Township (A-40-24) (089641)

Argued April 29, 2025 -- Decided July 10, 2025

PATTERSON, J., writing for a unanimous Court.

In this appeal, the Court considers a petition filed by residents of South Seaside Park to deannex their barrier island community from the Township of Berkeley and to annex it to the Borough of Seaside Park, an adjoining municipality.

To reach the mainland section of the Township, a resident of South Seaside Park must drive between 13 and 16 miles across 7 other municipalities. South Seaside Park’s municipal facilities consist of a basketball court and White Sands Beach, a public beach with restrooms and a water fountain. The Township provides emergency and police patrol services to South Seaside Park. South Seaside Park shares a border and a zip code with the municipality it seeks to join, Seaside Park. Plaintiffs presented evidence that South Seaside Park residents rely more on Seaside Park than the Township for emergency services and engage more with the residents and businesses of Seaside Park than with the Township’s mainland community.

In September 2014, plaintiffs submitted to the Township Council a petition “seeking annexation by Seaside Park Borough and deannexation from Berkeley Township.” Beginning in January 2015, and ending in February 2019, the Planning Board conducted thirty-eight hearings.

The Planning Board retained a professional planner who did not impartially analyze the evidence as N.J.S.A. 40A:7-12 envisions, but instead worked with the Township on its strategy for opposing deannexation and participated in the preparation of the Township’s witnesses for their testimony before the Board. In addition, one Planning Board member is alleged to have publicly opposed plaintiffs’ petition while the matter was pending, telling a group of senior citizens that they should “start going to the meetings, because if South Seaside Park becomes Seaside Park, your taxes are going to go up,” while another Board member allegedly disparaged plaintiffs’ deannexation effort as “an elitist section moving.”

During the hearings, plaintiffs presented the expert opinion of a professional planner, who testified that the Township had provided deficient services to South 1 Seaside Park residents and had otherwise disregarded their needs. The planner opined that approval of the proposed deannexation would benefit the majority of South Seaside Park residents; that refusal to allow deannexation would be detrimental to the economic and social well-being of a majority of South Seaside Park residents; that deannexation would not cause a significant injury to the economic and social well-being of the Township; and that deannexation would not have a detrimental negative impact on the Township’s master plan, zone plan, affordable housing plan, or 2020 Vision Statement. Plaintiffs’ financial expert witness explained that the Township’s loss of taxes through deannexation would be offset, in part or in whole, by the Township’s savings on police services.

The Township’s expert witness on planning disputed the contention that the Township would suffer no harm if South Seaside Park were deannexed, and its Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer opined that deannexation would give rise to a tax increase of $147.63 for the average single-family home in the Township. In rebuttal, plaintiffs presented the testimony of a second professional planner, who testified that deannexation of South Seaside Park would not harm the Township, but that South Seaside Park’s residents would be harmed if deannexation were denied.

In August 2020, the Planning Board adopted a resolution recommending that the Township should deny the petition. By resolution dated September 21, 2020, the Township Council denied the petition, “relying on the well-supported findings” stated by the Planning Board in its resolution.

Plaintiffs filed this action, seeking judicial review of the Council’s denial of their petition. The trial court found that plaintiffs had met their burden of proof with respect to all three of N.J.S.A. 40A:7-12.1’s deannexation factors. The Appellate Division affirmed. The Court granted certification. 260 N.J. 125 (2025).

HELD: The Court views N.J.S.A. 40A:7-12 to require a planning board to independently evaluate the merits of a deannexation petition and make an objective recommendation to the municipality’s governing body. That did not occur in this case. Plaintiffs met their burden of proof with respect to all three prongs of N.J.S.A. 40A:7-12.1, and the trial court properly ordered deannexation.

1. The Court reviews the history of the statutes governing deannexation. N.J.S.A. 40A:7-12 prescribes requirements and procedures for petitions for deannexation, and N.J.S.A. 40A:7-12.1 provides that, to challenge the denial of a petition, “the petitioners have the burden of establishing [1] that the refusal to consent to the petition was arbitrary or unreasonable, [2] that refusal to consent to the annexation is detrimental to the economic and social well-being of a majority of the residents of the affected land, and [3] that the annexation will not cause a significant injury to the well-being of the municipality in which the land is located.” (pp. 17-21) 2 2. Case law explains each of N.J.S.A. 40A:7-12.1’s three prongs, as the Court reviews in detail. If a court determines that the petitioners have met their burden of proof as to all three prongs of that statutory test, it orders the municipality to grant deannexation in accordance with N.J.S.A. 40A:7-12. (pp. 21-28)

3. In any proceeding before it, the Planning Board must conduct itself fairly and impartially. Here, the Planning Board did not act in accordance with that standard. The trial court’s factual findings regarding the first prong of N.J.S.A. 40A:7-12.1 were supported by competent, relevant and reasonably credible evidence in the record, and plaintiffs met their burden with respect to that factor in the statutory test. (pp. 29-31)

4. As to the second factor, the Township does not appear to contest the findings of the trial court and the Appellate Division that the denial of plaintiffs’ petition would be “detrimental to the economic and social well-being” of a majority of South Seaside Park’s residents. Both courts’ findings are substantially premised on the most compelling factors in plaintiffs’ favor: the geographic distance between South Seaside Park and the Township’s mainland section and the time and effort required for residents to traverse seven municipalities and reach the mainland, where virtually all municipal facilities are located. The Court concurs that plaintiffs met their burden with respect to N.J.S.A. 40A:7-12.1’s second prong. (pp. 31-32)

5. Finally, with regard to N.J.S.A. 40A:7-12.1’s third prong, the evidence presented to the Board supports the conclusion that any economic loss to the Township through lost tax revenue would be offset to some degree by cost savings, and that deannexation would not cause substantial economic harm to the Township. The record also supports the findings that the deannexation of South Seaside Park would not cause significant social harm to the Township’s remaining residents, given the limited contact between South Seaside Park residents and their counterparts in the Township’s mainland section, and that the loss of White Sands Beach -- only 5.4% of the Township’s 28 miles of shoreline -- would have a minimal impact on the Township. Plaintiffs have thus proved that the proposed deannexation would not cause a significant injury to the Township’s well-being.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Donald Whiteman v. Township Council of Berkeley Township, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donald-whiteman-v-township-council-of-berkeley-township-nj-2025.