Kohlbrenner Recycling v. Burlington Cty.
This text of 550 A.2d 771 (Kohlbrenner Recycling v. Burlington Cty.) 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.
Opinion
KOHLBRENNER RECYCLING ENTERPRISES, INC., PLAINTIFF,
v.
BURLINGTON COUNTY BOARD OF CHOSEN FREEHOLDERS, DEFENDANT.
Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division Burlington County.
*626 Mark J. Molz, Moorestown, for Plaintiff (Francis J. Hartman, Chartered, Attorney).
Michael J. Hogan, Burlington County Sol., for Defendant.
John A. Almeida, Medford, for Intervenor Occupational Training Center.
*627 John E. Harrington, Mount Holly, for Intervenor Delran Township (Schlesinger, Schlosser, Foy & Harrington, Attorney).
HAINES, A.J.S.C.
The County of Burlington adopted Recycling Plan Amendment # 86-3 to its Solid Waste Management Plan on August 13, 1986. The plan was approved by the Department of Environmental Protection ("DEP") on December 5, 1986.
The County's plan is a broad implementation of its Solid Waste Management Plan. It relies in part upon a contract executed on May 28, 1986, with the Occupational Training Center of Burlington County, Inc. ("OTC") for the actual collection and marketing of recycled materials. The agreement includes but is not limited to the recycling of newspapers, glass and cans.
Kohlbrenner, before and after January 1, 1986, has operated a recycling business, dealing with glass, cans, white goods, metals and tires. It serves a substantial number of municipalities through contractual arrangements. This suit, filed on June 11, 1987, seeks an order providing various forms of injunctive relief. Among other things, Kohlbrenner claims the right to be included in the County's recycling plan and requests the court to enjoin completion of the latter's new recycling facility in Delran Township, a facility now about one-third completed. The OTC and the Township of Delran have filed amicus briefs.
Kohlbrenner's principal argument rests upon the provisions of the Mandatory Recycling Program, L. 1987, c. 102 (the "act"), an act which became effective on April 20, 1987. Section 3 of the act requires every county to "accord priority consideration to persons engaging in the business of recycling ... on behalf of a county or municipality on January 1, 1986." Kohlbrenner, in that business on that date, claims correctly that the County's recycling plan fails to provide the required consideration. The County, however, argues that this court lacks jurisdiction, that *628 the suit is time-barred and that Burlington County is exempt from the priority requirement upon which Kohlbrenner relies.
This opinion responds to an order to show cause obtained by Kohlbrenner.
A. Jurisdiction
The County's jurisdictional argument, with which OTC agrees, is correct.
R.2:2-3(a)(2) establishes jurisdiction in the Appellate Division "... to review final decisions or actions of any State administrative agency or office...." The section of the act upon which Kohlbrenner relies provides: "Each district recycling plan ... shall accord priority consideration to persons engaged in the business of recycling...." The claimed consideration therefore must be provided in the plan itself. That plan was adopted by the County August 13, 1986.[1] The DEP approved the plan on December 5, 1986. It is the action of the DEP in approving the plan, which in fact does not give "priority consideration" to Kohlbrenner, that is the object of the present suit. That action cannot be bypassed by suing only the County. A challenge to the DEP is necessary; it has to be filed in the Appellate Division, not here. This court does not have jurisdiction.
A restraint against construction of the Delran Recycling Plant is also sought in this suit. That construction is part of the plan approved by the DEP. Furthermore, acquisition of the Delran property also received DEP approval on May 7, 1985. *629 Both of these DEP actions can be challenged only in the Appellate Division. Jurisdiction is there, not here.
B. The Triple Time Bar
An appeal to the Appellate Division pursuant to R.2:2-3(a)(2) should have been taken within 45 days from December 5, 1986, the date the DEP approved the recycling plan. This suit was not filed until June 11, 1987. N.J.S.A. 13:1E-23(f) requires that the commencement of an action to review the County's plan be brought within 30 days after its adoption in August 1986. This action was commenced long after that deadline had passed. Finally, R.4:69-6 requires a complaint in lieu of prerogative writ to be filed within 45 days from the date of the accrual of the cause of action. The within cause of action accrued either on August 13, 1986, or on December 5, 1986. The present complaint therefore comes much too late under three applicable rules of limitation.
Ordinarily, it would be permissible and proper to transfer this matter to the Appellate Division in order to solve the jurisdictional problem. R.1:13-4. Since the complaint has not been timely filed, however, it can no longer be maintained. Dismissal, not transfer is the proper response.
C. Exemption[2]
The Act provides in pertinent part:
(5) Any county which has prepared and adopted a district recycling plan as an amendment to the district solid waste management plan ... and the district recycling plan has been approved by the department prior to January 1, 1987 shall be exempt from the provisions of Sections 3 and 4 of this ... act. To be eligible for an exemption pursuant to this section, a county shall have established and implemented a county-wide mandatory source separation and recycling *630 program for at least three recyclable materials, in addition to leaves, and shall have demonstrated that it has secured markets for these materials.
Thus the requirement of "priority consideration" upon which Kohlbrenner relies, contained in section 3 of the act, does not apply to Burlington County if it has satisfied the exemption conditions. The County claims that it has. Kohlbrenner and Delran claim it has not. I conclude that they are correct.
The County has adopted a district recycling plan; it was approved by the DEP prior to January 1, 1987. Those requirements for exemption have therefore been met. The argument centers on the requirements remaining and their interpretation.
The intention of the Legislature in adopting the exemption provision seems obvious: to protect those county programs which were in existence before the act was adopted. Such plans could be disrupted if compliance with the provisions of sections 3 and 4 of the act, including "priority consideration," were mandated. A county, for example, bound to recycling contracts executed at an earlier time could be placed in the impossible position of having to comply with the contradictory terms of the contracts and the act. Hence, the exemption proviso, available, however, only to a county which has "established and implemented a ... program ... and ... demonstrated that it has secured markets for [3] ... materials," prior to January 1, 1987.
The County has provided the court with a lengthy history of its efforts looking to the establishment of a recycling plan, efforts which commenced in 1979. It contracted with the OTC in 1982 to collect newspapers, glass and cans. Since then it has been involved in planning for substantial recycling facilities requiring the acquisition of property, the construction of buildings, the purchase of equipment and the defense of extensive litigation.
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550 A.2d 771, 228 N.J. Super. 624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kohlbrenner-recycling-v-burlington-cty-njsuperctappdiv-1987.