Glassboro v. Gloucester County Board of Chosen Freeholders

488 A.2d 562, 199 N.J. Super. 91, 1985 N.J. Super. LEXIS 1176
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedFebruary 15, 1985
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 488 A.2d 562 (Glassboro v. Gloucester County Board of Chosen Freeholders) 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
Glassboro v. Gloucester County Board of Chosen Freeholders, 488 A.2d 562, 199 N.J. Super. 91, 1985 N.J. Super. LEXIS 1176 (N.J. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

KING, P.J.A.D.

In this case we must decide if a judicial order, based on emergency sanitation concerns, which bars any person or entity located outside the Southern New Jersey tricounty area of Salem, Gloucester and Camden Counties from using a privately-owned, state-regulated landfill (Kinsley) violates the Commerce Clause of the federal constitution. U.S. Const. Art. I, § 8, c. 3.1

We previously denied leave to appeal this interlocutory order of Judge DeSimone of the Law Division and also denied a stay of his November 13, 1984 order. Our Supreme Court and the United States Supreme Court have also denied stays of this order. However, on December 7, 1984 our Supreme Court granted the City of Philadelphia’s motion for leave to appeal, remanded the matter to us for disposition of the appeal on the merits, and ordered that the appeal be accelerated. Glassboro v. Gloucester Cty. Bd. of Chosen Freeholders, 98 N.J. 186 (1984). Upon receipt of the remand order, dated December 7, 1984, we immediately scheduled" and heard oral argument on December 17, 1984. Unfortunately, we did not receive the transcript of the proceedings before Judge DeSimone until February 7, 1985. Thus any more expeditious decision of this appeal was frustrated.

The order for preliminary injunction under appeal, executed by Judge DeSimone on November 13, 1984, provided in substance that

[95]*951. The Counties of Salem, Gloucester and Camden must proceed immediately to designate sites and create landfills within their respective borders which must be operational by November 1985.
2. The Kinsley Landfill in Deptford Township, Gloucester County; must cease accepting solid waste generated within the City of Philadelphia, any other Pennsylvania communities and "other out-of-district [Gloucester County] solid waste not subject to interdistrict agreements.” This provision effectively excluded all solid waste originating outside of Salem, Gloucester and Camden Counties, whether from New Jersey, Pennsylvania or elsewhere.
3. All municipalities within the three counties in New Jersey were ordered to maximize recycling efforts.
4. The Kinsley Landfill was ordered closed when the capacity of an emergency 16-foot vertical expansion allowed by the court was reached. This was anticipated in November 1985.
5. Kinsley Landfill was to be closed for all sludge disposal on March 15, 1985.

Several subsequent applications by Philadelphia for modification of this order were denied. This order implemented the Department of Environmental Protection’s (DEP) recommendation made in early November.

At the outset we note that we are satisfied that the factual underpinnings of Judge DeSimone’s conclusions are well-supported by the testimony in the record and that his findings are consistent with the weight of the evidence. See R. 4:52-1(c); Rova Farms Resort v. Investors Ins. Co., 65 N.J. 474, 483-484 (1974); State v. Johnson, 42 N.J. 146, 161-162 (1964). We are required by our scope of review to accept his factual findings and the reasonable inferences he drew from them.

This is the way the matter developed. On October 11, 1984 defendant Kinsley Landfill, Inc., a state-regulated (N.J.S.A. 48:2-13) but privately-owned sanitary landfill in Gloucester County, notified its customers that it would reach the capacity permitted by its permit issued by the defendant, DEP, and would close on October 28, 1984. On October 18, 1984 the plaintiff, Borough of Glassboro, filed a verified complaint in lieu of prerogative writs and an order to show cause naming as defendants the Gloucester County Board of Chosen Freeholders, the DEP and its Commissioner, Kinsley Landfill, Inc., the [96]*96City of Philadelphia, and the County of Camden. Glassboro, which was a Kinsley customer, sought both to enjoin closure of the landfill and the use of the landfill for solid waste generated in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and Camden County, New Jersey. Thereafter numerous parties who were customers of Kinsley intervened, including private waste haulers which served public and private entities in both New Jersey and Pennsylvania.

Judge DeSimone heard testimony on October 23, 24, 25 and 26 and rendered a decision on October 26, 1984. He found that Kinsley was quickly approaching the end of its useful life. He concluded that imminent closure would cause irreparable harm to many local municipalities dependent upon it. He also found that continued use beyond current design capacity threatened injury to the citizens of Deptford Township where the landfill is located. He concluded that a single 16-foot vertical expansion could extend, as a temporary measure, the landfill’s capacity consistent with legitimate environmental concerns. This 16-foot vertical expansion would buy enough time to permit the three counties to establish new landfill sites and thus solve their impending crisis.

On the judge’s order Kinsley prepared an engineering design for the vertical expansion and a plan for orderly closure which were approved by DEP in early November. In its report DEP stressed most urgently the need for Salem, Gloucester and Camden Counties to develope new landfills. DEP reported that with extraordinary effort this could be done by November 1985. DEP observed that Kinsley would be full within three and one-half months, or the end of February 1985, if the current rate of flow continued. The additional 16-foot lift could extend the life of the landfill for the one-year period needed to develop new landfills in the tricounty area, but only if the solid-waste flow to Kinsley was substantially reduced. - In order to reduce the flow, DEP proposed that use of the landfill be limited to Gloucester County municipalities and to municipalities within the contiguous two counties, Camden and Salem, both of which had executed interdistrict waste flow agreements with Glouces[97]*97ter County.2 Moreover, the DEP report noted that any communities using Kinsley must be ordered to maximize recycling efforts.

We agree with Judge DeSimone that this is the very type of situation which the Legislature foresaw, intended to address and hoped to avoid when it enacted the Solid Waste Management Act, N.J.S.A. 13:1E-1 et seq., L. 1970, c. 39, effective May 6, 1970, and noted that the collection of solid waste was “a matter of grave concern to all citizens.” Id. at § 2. As the record here amply shows, this “grave concern” noted in 1970 had ripened to a potentially imminent catastrophe in the tricounty area by November 1984. Action was necessary. The only available local landfill to the tricounty area was Kinsley which would “reach its design capacity in a matter of days” from the conclusion of the hearing on October 26, that is between November 10 and 14, if nothing was done. The so-called “ten-year plan” originally conceived to permit Kinsley to operate routinely until 1988, when resource recovery technology became available, had collapsed because of increased flow, much of it from outside of New Jersey.

The general background concerning the solid waste problem in this State over the past 15 years was outlined by the Supreme Court in the decision and order denying appellant’s application for a stay in this case. 98 N.J. 186. He said.

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Bluebook (online)
488 A.2d 562, 199 N.J. Super. 91, 1985 N.J. Super. LEXIS 1176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glassboro-v-gloucester-county-board-of-chosen-freeholders-njsuperctappdiv-1985.