New Jersey Builders Ass'n v. Borough of Mendham

621 A.2d 985, 263 N.J. Super. 88, 1993 N.J. Super. LEXIS 98
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMarch 19, 1993
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 621 A.2d 985 (New Jersey Builders Ass'n v. Borough of Mendham) 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
New Jersey Builders Ass'n v. Borough of Mendham, 621 A.2d 985, 263 N.J. Super. 88, 1993 N.J. Super. LEXIS 98 (N.J. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

COLEMAN, J.H., P.J.A.D.

This case involves an appeal by the Borough of Mendham (Mendham) from a summary judgment requiring it to reimburse five developers $213,000 found to be excessive water connection fees. There is also a cross-appeal. We now reverse the judgment requiring the refunds and remand for further proceedings. We affirm on the cross-appeal.

[91]*91I

Mendham has its own water supply system, which it built about seventy-five years ago and has maintained since. Sometime shortly after January 1984, Mendham’s engineer decided that the water supply system needed certain improvements to service expected increases in demand. He estimated the cost of the improvements at $750,000. At that time Mendham charged new users only a tapping fee, which essentially covered the actual cost of connecting the user to the system.

In late 1985, Pitney Farms Associates (Pitney Farms) and other residential developers in neighboring Mendham Township asked Mendham for permission to connect to its water supply. The developers did not want to pay for improvements in the system, so Mendham declined their request on the basis that the system lacked the capacity to serve them.

In March 1986, Pitney Farms wrote to Mendham that “to the extent legally possible, the applicant will assist the Borough with its needs for capital improvement.” In early 1987, Pitney Farms, Dave Jackson Homes, Inc. (Dave Jackson) and Rural Comforts asked Mendham to reconsider its policy of denying connections to outside developments. They agreed to contribute towards the upgrading of the system in part because that would cost them less than the estimated $6,000 to $7,000 per unit that they otherwise would have had to spend to provide alternative water to the sites.

Those requests prompted Mendham to consider funding the improvements by reversing its long-standing policy of not supplying water outside its borders except for a limited number of customers. Mendham first considered having the developers actually make the improvements, but then it decided to fund them through a “high” connection fee, set “relatively high” so that the estimated 400 new connections which it anticipated would generate enough in connection fees to pay for the improvements and necessary bonding. Mendham set the fee at $3,000, and thought it was reasonable because it was less than [92]*92what developers would have spent on the individual wells or alternative water supply that Mendham Township would otherwise have required of them. Accordingly, on March 3, 1987, Mendham adopted Ordinance 6-87 which amended Section 100-3 of its code to impose a uniform connection fee of $3,000 on residents and nonresidents alike.

On November 2, 1987, Mendham entered into separate water supply contracts with Pitney Farms’ predecessor M.G.S. Associates and with Dave Jackson. A similar contract was made with Commander Development Corp., predecessor to Rural Comforts. Mendham considered the $3,000 figure in Ordinance 6-87 when it set the connection fee for Pitney Farms and Dave Jackson. The contracts set the connection fee as “the same as those charged for connections in the Borough as provided by Section 100-3 of the Borough code.” For each unit, Pitney Farms and Dave Jackson had to pay the connection fee before getting a building permit. In addition, Pitney Farms and Dave Jackson agreed to install water supply and distribution lines at their expense, and to convey the installations and related easements to Mendham for free. On July 26, 1988, Mendham entered into a water supply contract with Rural Comforts under those same terms. Neither Pitney Farms, Dave Jackson nor Rural Comforts ever protested the amount of the fee or indicated an intent to challenge it.

On July 12,1989, Mendham wrote to Dave Jackson and Rural Comforts. It informed them that an unnamed developer’s delay in satisfying Mendham Township’s requirements for allowing construction of a water storage tank, and the threat to Mendham’s timely collection of connection fees that was posed by a lawsuit filed by New Jersey Builders Association two weeks earlier seeking invalidation of the ordinance, could delay construction of the water-supply system improvements. Mend-ham declared that it could not expand water service without those improvements, and as a result would not allow new connections until these difficulties were resolved.

[93]*93Mendham apparently informed Pitney Farms of its concerns as well because on July 27, 1989, Mendham and Pitney Farms supplemented their water supply contract. The addendum added a commitment by Pitney Farms not to challenge the connection fee it had already paid or was about to pay for its first ten connections.

The County and Municipal Water Supply Act (N.J.S.A. 40A:31-1 et seq.) was enacted by L.1989, c. 109, § 1, effective June 29, 1989. N.J.S.A. 40A:31-10 established the requirement that water connection fees payable to a nonutility authority must be uniform and equitable for the same type and class of use or service. On or about October 25, 1989, Mendham retained the services of accountants to study its connection fee policies in light of N.J.S.A. 40A:31-1 et seq. In April 1990, Mendham revised its ordinance by reducing the connection fee from $3,000 to $700.

The New Jersey Builders Association in its amended complaint, the four developers as intervenors and Dave Jackson in its complaint sought to have (1) the $3,000 connection fee contained in the March 3, 1987 Ordinance 6-87, retroactively invalidated, and (2) refunded to them the connection fees and expenses which they paid. A bench trial was conducted on April 11, 1991 to determine whether the method used by Mend-ham to arrive at the $3,000 connection fee was improper under decisional law predating the enactment of N.J.S.A. 40A:31-1 et seq.

On May 1, 1991, the trial judge issued an order declaring Ordinance 6-87 invalid. At the encouragement of the trial judge, the developers filed motions for summary judgment for a refund of connection fees paid by them. The judge granted summary judgment requiring the refunds apparently because he felt that Mendham’s defenses (that the ordinance was valid and there were voluntary payments without protest) were moot in light of his invalidation of Ordinance 6-87, which he thought, [94]*94left the water supply contracts without a price term. This appeal followed.

II

In this appeal Mendham makes three interrelated contentions that (1) its contracts with the five developers were legally binding and enforceable because the reference to Ordinance 6-87 was simply incidental, (2) the developers failed to demonstrate that even if the $3,000 fee was not calculated in accordance with acceptable standards, it was reasonable since it was arrived at through collective negotiations, and (3) the developers would be unjustly enriched by any refunds because they have already passed the costs of the connection fees through to the customers who purchased the homes. Mendham also argues the “volunteer rule” and the basic unfairness of allowing the developers to receive the benefit of their contracts without requiring them to pay in accordance with the contract.

In Meglino v. Township Comm, of Eagleswood, 103 N.J. 144, 152, 510 A.

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Bluebook (online)
621 A.2d 985, 263 N.J. Super. 88, 1993 N.J. Super. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-jersey-builders-assn-v-borough-of-mendham-njsuperctappdiv-1993.