In Re I/M/O Route 206 New Amwell Rd.

731 A.2d 56, 322 N.J. Super. 345
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJune 23, 1999
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 731 A.2d 56 (In Re I/M/O Route 206 New Amwell Rd.) 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
In Re I/M/O Route 206 New Amwell Rd., 731 A.2d 56, 322 N.J. Super. 345 (N.J. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

731 A.2d 56 (1999)
322 N.J. Super. 345

In re I/M/O ROUTE 206 AT NEW AMWELL ROAD, BLOCK 161, LOT 13B (HILLSBOROUGH).

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Argued May 10, 1999.
Decided June 23, 1999.

*58 Paul Tannenbaum, for appellant Getty Realty Corporation (Peter J. Zipp, attorney, Jamesburg).

Linda Lasus, Deputy Attorney General, for respondent, State of New Jersey, Department of Transportation (Peter Verniero, Attorney General; Joseph L. Yannotti, Assistant Attorney General, of counsel).

Before Judges PETRELLA and COLLESTER.

*57 The opinion of the court was delivered by PETRELLA, P.J.A.D.

Getty Realty Corporation[1] (Getty) appeals a February 20, 1998 letter decision by the Director of the Division of Design Services (Division) in the New Jersey Department of Transportation (DOT). The decision states it "constitutes the final agency decision" of the DOT modifying State highway access to the Getty-brand service station on Route 206 pursuant to the State Highway Access Management Act, N.J.S.A. 27:7-89 to 27:7-98 (L. 1989, c. 32, § 11, approved February 23, 1989), and its implementing regulations. See N.J.A.C. 16:47-4.33(c).

Getty argues on its appeal that the DOT's decision warrants reversal because it applied the wrong legal standard in reaching its final determination. In addition, Getty argues that the DOT's proposed modification of access does not provide its customers with reasonable and convenient access to Route 206 under the revocation procedures of N.J.S.A. 27:7-94, and that the regulation relied upon by the DOT in support of its determination is ultra vires. Getty also argues that if the DOT desires to modify existing access to Route 206, it must provide the necessary assistance to allow Getty's customers to maintain reasonable access to Route 206. In making its argument, however, Getty "does not dispute that the [DOT's] authority to revoke access includes the authority to modify access."

The property in question is located on the southbound side of Route 206 in Hillsborough, Somerset County, and is improved with a Getty-brand service station with two existing driveways fronting Route 206. The northerly of these two driveways is forty-five feet wide and provides both ingress and egress to the site. The southerly driveway, which is thirty-seven feet wide, is for egress only. A fuel island is located on the property between and parallel to the two driveways on Route 206. There is also a third existing twenty-five foot wide driveway on New Amwell Road that is used for both ingress and egress purposes.

*59 By an August 7, 1997 letter, the DOT advised the property owner that it would be constructing improvements to Route 206 and, as part of the improvements, closing the southerly driveway on Route 206, one of two existing egresses fronting Route 206. The reason given for the closing was that the southerly egress was in violation of an edge clearance regulation, N.J.A.C. 16:47-3.8(c), and a corner clearance at signalized intersection regulation, N.J.A.C. 16:47-3.8(k)3.

The DOT's proposal was to eliminate the southerly driveway on Route 206 that was in violation and widen the northerly driveway on Route 206 to sixty-one feet to make it more suitable for two-way traffic. In addition, the driveway on New Amwell Road would be widened on its north end, but not its south end that meets New Amwell Road. The DOT acknowledged that the proposed widening of the northerly driveway fronting Route 206 would require a waiver of edge clearance regulation, N.J.A.C. 16:47-3.8(c). A copy of the plan that showed the existing and proposed driveway configurations was attached to the DOT letter, as well as information about the appeals process under the regulations if the property owner objected to the proposed plan.

After receiving notice of the DOT's proposed modification, Getty indicated that it would be appealing the DOT's modification project on behalf of itself and the property owner under the appeals process outlined in the DOT's letter. See N.J.A.C. 16:47-4.33(c)4. An informal meeting with the DOT's Manager of the Bureau of Civil Engineering (Manager) was scheduled pursuant to N.J.A.C. 16:47-4.33(c)5. At this meeting Getty was represented by counsel and the DOT indicated that it would be willing to make aesthetic improvements after closing the southerly driveway if allowed to enter onto the property.

After a series of written and oral communications, the DOT was ultimately not given permission to enter the subject property to do the proposed modifications. Despite the lack of permission, the DOT took the position that it could still implement its project. However, as a result of the dispute, the DOT took the intransigent position that it would not implement either the aesthetic improvements to the closed southerly driveway fronting Route 206 or the proposed changes to New Amwell Road.

Getty eventually requested that the proposed modification of access be treated as a revocation of access, or alternatively, that another informal meeting be scheduled in compliance with N.J.A.C. 16:47-4.33(c)5. Both requests were denied by the DOT. Getty then chose the only alternative remaining and requested an informal hearing with the Director pursuant to N.J.A.C. 16:47-4.33(c)6.

On January 22, 1998, at the informal hearing, Getty presented sworn testimony of Daniel Disario, a traffic engineer. Disario described the existing configuration of the service station as a parallel arrangement relative to Route 206. According to Disario, this design was intended to allow a motorist to enter the site from the northerly Route 206 driveway, enter the fueling area, and exit the site on the southerly driveway back to Route 206. Disario testified that if access is modified as planned by the DOT, this traffic pattern will no longer exist. Instead, Disario stated, that motorists who enter the site from the northerly driveway and desire to return to Route 206 will have to make a u-turn movement on the site, which he opined is neither convenient nor safe.

As for the alternate egress that remained at New Amwell Road, Disario opined that the New Amwell Road driveway was not a practical exit for customers wishing to return to Route 206. According to Disario, motorists exiting this driveway will have to cross two lanes of traffic on New Amwell Road in order to return to Route 206.

*60 Disario's remedy was to shift the proposed ingress/egress driveway closer to the intersection, which would run afoul of both corner clearance and exclusive lane access prohibitions, and to redo the entire station to make the fueling pumps perpendicular to the State highway. However, even under Disario's alternate plan, motorists entering the site would have effectively the same two choices to make as with the DOT's proposed plan: either make a u-turn and exit using the northerly State highway driveway or use the New Amwell Road exit.

The Director's "final agency decision" concluded that based on "all of the documents in the Department's files, as well as the testimony" presented at the hearing, "while the proposed modification of access will affect a change to the circulation pattern within the site, the modification will not prevent the continued use of the site as a service station." The DOT's proposed modification was scheduled to proceed.

Generally, an agency regulation is "presumptively valid," and, therefore, the party challenging it bears the burden of proving its invalidity. Medical Soc'y v.

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Bluebook (online)
731 A.2d 56, 322 N.J. Super. 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-imo-route-206-new-amwell-rd-njsuperctappdiv-1999.