E & J Equities v. Board of Adjustment of the Township of Franklin(075207)

146 A.3d 623, 226 N.J. 549, 2016 N.J. LEXIS 890
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedSeptember 15, 2016
DocketA-40-14
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 146 A.3d 623 (E & J Equities v. Board of Adjustment of the Township of Franklin(075207)) 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
E & J Equities v. Board of Adjustment of the Township of Franklin(075207), 146 A.3d 623, 226 N.J. 549, 2016 N.J. LEXIS 890 (N.J. 2016).

Opinion

JUDGE CUFF

(temporarily assigned) delivered the opinion of the Court.

In 2010, the Township of Franklin (the Township) adopted an ordinance revising its regulation of signs, including billboards. The ordinance permits billboards, subject to multiple conditions, in a zoning district proximate to an interstate highway but expressly prohibits digital billboards anywhere in the municipality.

A company seeking to install a digital billboard challenged the constitutionality of the ordinance. The Law Division declared unconstitutional that portion of the ordinance barring digital billboards. The trial court viewed the Township’s treatment of such devices as a total ban on a mode of communication. In a reported opinion, the Appellate Division reversed. Applying the Central Hudson 1 commercial speech standard and the Clark/Ward 2 time, place, and manner standard to content-neutral regulations affecting speech, the appellate panel determined that the ban on digital billboards passed constitutional muster.

We acknowledge that aesthetics and public safety are generally considered to be substantial governmental interests, particularly in the context of regulations affecting billboards. Nevertheless, billboards generally or specific types of billboards are a medium of communication, and any regulation of that medium may not trans *557 gress the United States Constitution or the Constitution of this State. Thus, simply invoking aesthetics and public safety to ban a type of sign, without more, does not carry the day.

Here, the Township, citing aesthetic and public safety concerns, permitted billboards to be installed in a single zoning district proximate to a heavily travelled interstate highway but prohibited digital billboards in the same zone. The Township did so on the basis of information gathered by its Director of Planning, Planning Board, and a Land Use Committee of the municipal governing body. Nevertheless, the record provides scant support for several propositions that informed the Township’s decision and no support for the decision that the aesthetics of three billboards are more palatable than the aesthetics of a single digital billboard. Although we do not consider the digital billboard ban equivalent to a total ban on a medium of communication, it is a form of communication that is subject to the protection of the First Amendment. To that end, the record must support, to some degree, the interests that the municipality seeks to protect or advance. The record fails to support this restriction. We therefore declare that the 2010 ban on digital billboards is unconstitutional and reverse the judgment of the Appellate Division.

I.

The Township is the second-largest municipality in Somerset County, covering forty-seven square miles. Sixty-two thousand persons reside in the Township. A former planner for the Township described it “as a mosaic of various development patterns.”

Some sections of the Township are rural, and some sections contain historic villages. A road that passes through the Township has been designated a national scenic byway. Other portions of the Township are highly developed. Interstate Route 287 (1-287), a highway that carries over 100,000 cars and trucks daily, passes through the Township. The 1-287 corridor is bordered by an M-2 *558 Light Manufacturing zoning district (hereinafter the M-2 zone), 3 which permits various industrial and corporate uses. The Township has aggressively sought to preserve farmland and open space. To that end, it has preserved thirty-four percent of the real property in the Township.

In 2008, the Township commenced a review of its ordinance governing signs and billboards. The Township did so at the suggestion of its insurance company, which noticed some inconsistencies in the existing ordinance. At the time, billboards were permitted in the Township’s General Business zoning district as a conditional use. The ordinance, however, failed to define a billboard and did not identify any conditions for approval of an application to construct a billboard. The Township also prohibited signs with electronic script or electronic bulletin boards.

Upon notice to the public, the Township Council and the Planning Board commenced a two-year review of the Township’s sign ordinance. During the course of the review, the Planning Board conducted a survey of existing billboards 4 and identified potentially acceptable locations for billboards on two highways in the Township — State Highway 27 and 1-287.

The discussions of the Planning Board were followed closely by plaintiff E&J Equities, LLC (E & J), which owns property along 1-287 in the M-2 zone. E&J made a presentation to the Planning Board about the features and benefits of digital billboards, and it submitted a proposed ordinance prepared by its attorney as well as other material prepared by a professional engineer and planner it retained. The ordinance proposed by E & J permitted billboards *559 with changing imagery and the use of LED or equivalent technology-

In January 2009, the Director of Planning forwarded a memorandum to the Planning Board identifying potentially acceptable billboard locations and suggesting billboard bulk and design requirements. The Director of Planning recommended limiting billboards to the M-2 and General Business zoning districts, and prohibiting signs that moved or gave the illusion of movement, rotated, or produced noise or smoke. The Director of Planning also recommended that neither signs nor billboards should display videos or other changing imagery. The Director of Planning also suggested standards for illumination of any billboards and a ban on words or symbols, such as “STOP” or “DANGER,” that might be interpreted by a passerby as a command issued by a public authority.

On April 7, 2009, the Planning Board forwarded a draft ordinance to the Township Council. The accompanying memorandum from the Planning Board outlined the process it had employed and advised that it “determined that permitting billboards along 1-287 would be the most prudent means of addressing potential First Amendment claims on the part of billboard companies.” The memorandum also stated that the draft ordinance “was carefully crafted to minimize impact to the character of Franklin, particularly to the residential properties on the north side of 1-287.” Finally, the Planning Board reported that it had decided to recommend barring “LED billboards” because “the Board felt that it did not have enough information or sufficient expertise to craft ordinance language to appropriately address LED billboards.”

Notably, the Planning Board suggested that the question whether such LED billboards would be appropriate was best addressed by an application by a billboard company before the Zoning Board of Adjustment. Later, in defense of the ordinance adopted by the Township Council, the Director of Planning added that the Planning Board and the Land Use Committee of the Township Council *560

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Bluebook (online)
146 A.3d 623, 226 N.J. 549, 2016 N.J. LEXIS 890, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-j-equities-v-board-of-adjustment-of-the-township-of-franklin075207-nj-2016.