In the Matter of the Adoption of N.J.A.C. 5:96 and 5:97 by the New Jersey Council on Affordable Housing

110 A.3d 31, 221 N.J. 1, 2015 N.J. LEXIS 269
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 10, 2015
DocketM-392-14
StatusPublished
Cited by75 cases

This text of 110 A.3d 31 (In the Matter of the Adoption of N.J.A.C. 5:96 and 5:97 by the New Jersey Council on Affordable Housing) 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
In the Matter of the Adoption of N.J.A.C. 5:96 and 5:97 by the New Jersey Council on Affordable Housing, 110 A.3d 31, 221 N.J. 1, 2015 N.J. LEXIS 269 (N.J. 2015).

Opinion

Justice LaVECCHIA

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Mount Laurel series of cases 1 recognized that the power to zone carries a constitutional obligation to do so in a manner that creates a realistic opportunity for producing a fair share of the *4 regional present and prospective need for housing low- and moderate-income families. The Legislature enacted the Fair Housing Act of 1985 (FHA or the Act), N.J.S.A. 52:27D-301 to -829, to assist in municipal compliance with that constitutional obligation. The FHA created the Council on Affordable Housing (COAH), which was designed to provide an optional administrative alternative to litigating constitutional compliance through civil exclusionary zoning actions. Under the FHA, towns are free to remain in the judicial forum should they prefer it as the means to resolve any disputes over their constitutional obligations.

That said, the FHA clearly prefers the administrative forum, and its special processes, for addressing constitutional affordable housing obligations. Generally stated, the FHA encourages and rewards voluntary municipal compliance. The Act encourages compliance by compelling COAH to establish and periodically update presumptive constitutional housing obligations for each municipality and to identify the permissible means by which a town’s proposed affordable housing plan, housing element, and implementing ordinances can satisfy its obligation. The Act rewards compliance in two ways: (1) by providing a period of immunity from civil lawsuits to towns participating in the administrative process for demonstrating constitutional compliance (the exhaustion-of-administrative-remedies requirement); and, (2) for a town whose fair share housing plan secures substantive certification from COAH, by providing a period during which the municipality’s implementing ordinances enjoy a presumption of validity in any ensuing exclusionary zoning litigation. The continued viability of both rewards is subject to COAH’s required updating of municipal housing obligations and corresponding substantive and procedural rules.

COAH’s rules governing the last round of municipal housing obligations expired in 1999 (Second Round Rules). Since then COAH has failed twice to adopt updated regulations — Third Round Rules — for the present period of municipal housing obligations. The history of the state of affairs leading to our Order *5 dated March 14, 2014, is summarized hereafter. That Order required COAH to take specific rule-promulgation steps, culminating in adoption of the required Third Round Rules by November 17, 2014. In the event COAH did not comply, parties were told they could return to this Court for relief, including lifting the FHA’s administrative-exhaustion requirements.

Fair Share Housing Center (FSHC) filed the present motion in aid of litigants’ rights because COAH failed to promulgate the Third Round Rules. We thus are in the exceptional situation in which the administrative process has become nonfunctioning, rendering futile the FHA’s administrative remedy. The FHA’s exhaustion-of-administrative-remedies requirement, which staves off civil actions, is premised on the existence of a functioning agency, not a moribund one.

Due to COAH’s inaction, we agree that there no longer exists a legitimate basis to block access to the courts. Parties concerned about municipal compliance with constitutional affordable housing obligations are entitled to such access, and municipalities that believe they are constitutionally compliant or that are ready and willing to demonstrate such compliance should be able to secure declarations that their housing plans and implementing ordinances are presumptively valid in the event they later must defend against exclusionary zoning litigation. It is necessary for this Court to establish an orderly means for such proceedings to commence.

We will establish a transitional process and not immediately allow exclusionary zoning actions to proceed in recognition of the various stages of municipal preparation that exist as a result of the long period of uncertainty attributable to COAH’s failure to promulgate Third Round Rules. During the first thirty days following the effective date of our implementing order, the only actions that will be entertained by the courts will be declaratory judgment actions filed by any town that either (1) had achieved substantive certification from COAH under prior iterations of Third Round Rules before they were invalidated, or (2) had *6 “participating” status before COAH. Assuming any such town waits and does not file a declaratory judgment action during that thirty-day period, an action may thereafter be brought by a party against that town, provided the action’s sole focus is on whether the town’s housing plan meets its Mount Laurel obligations (a constitutional compliance challenge). The court’s evaluation of a town’s plan that had received substantive certification, or that will be submitted to the court as proof of constitutional compliance, may result in the town’s receipt of the judicial equivalent of substantive certification and accompanying protection as provided under the FHA.

In sum, the judicial processes authorized herein reflect as closely as possible the FHA’s processes and provide the means for a town transitioned from COAH’s jurisdiction to judicial actions to demonstrate that its housing plan satisfies Mount Laurel obligations. Our decision today sets forth in detail the manner in which civil actions may proceed, following a ninety-day delay in the effective date of the implementing order accompanying this opinion. The delay allows all parties to prepare for the actions that are authorized pursuant to that order.

Importantly, nothing herein should be understood to prevent COAH from fulfilling its statutory mission to adopt constitutional rules to govern municipalities’ Third Round obligations in compliance with the FHA. Nor should the action taken by this Court, in the face of COAH’s failure to fulfill its statutory mission, be regarded as impeding the Legislature from considering alternative statutory remedies to the present FHA. See In re Adoption of N.J.A.C. 5:96 & 5:97, 215 N.J. 578, 612, 616-17, 74 A.3d 893 (2013).

Our order effectively dissolves, until further order, the FHA’s exhaustion-of-administrative-remedies requirement. Further, as directed, the order allows resort to the courts, in the first instance, to resolve municipalities’ constitutional obligations under Mount Laurel.

*7 I.

In 1975, this Court prohibited the discriminatory use of zoning powers and mandated that each developing municipality “must, by its land use regulations, make realistically possible the opportunity for an appropriate variety and choice of housing for all categories of people who may desire to live there, of course including those of low and moderate income.” S. Burlington Cnty. NAACP v. Twp. of Mount Laurel (Mount Laurel I), 67 N.J.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 A.3d 31, 221 N.J. 1, 2015 N.J. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-the-adoption-of-njac-596-and-597-by-the-new-jersey-nj-2015.