Newark Adams Associates, LLC v. Sumo Enterprises, Inc.

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedApril 9, 2025
DocketA-3685-22
StatusUnpublished

This text of Newark Adams Associates, LLC v. Sumo Enterprises, Inc. (Newark Adams Associates, LLC v. Sumo Enterprises, Inc.) 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
Newark Adams Associates, LLC v. Sumo Enterprises, Inc., (N.J. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.

SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-3685-22

NEWARK ADAMS ASSOCIATES, LLC,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

SUMO ENTERPRISES, INC., UNDERGROUND UTILITIES CORP., a/k/a UNDERGROUND UTILITIES, INC., and CITY OF NEWARK,

Defendants-Respondents. ____________________________

Submitted November 19, 2024 – Decided April 9, 2025

Before Judges Gilson, Bishop-Thompson, and Augostini.

On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division, Essex County, Docket No. C-000059-22.

Cole Schotz, PC, attorneys for appellant (Mitchell W. Abrahams, Lauren M. Manduke, and Gianna L. Zapata, of counsel and on the briefs). Michael A. Armstrong & Associates, LLC, attorneys for respondent City of Newark (Morrison Kent Fairbairn, Cristal Holmes-Bowie, and Alexis A. Cotsalas, on the brief).

Hill Wallack, LLP, attorneys for respondents Sumo Enterprises, Inc. and Underground Utilities Corp. (Eric I. Abraham, of counsel and on the brief).

PER CURIAM

This appeal arises from a dispute regarding the building of a multi-level

parking garage in the City of Newark (City). Plaintiff Newark Adams

Associates, L.L.C., appeals from a June 21, 2023, order granting summary

judgment in favor of defendants Sumo Enterprises, Inc. (Sumo), Underground

Utilities Corporation a/k/a Underground Utilities, Inc. (UUC), and the City

(collectively, defendants) and dismissing its complaint. We affirm.

I.

We glean the facts from the summary judgment record, viewing the facts

in the light most favorable to plaintiff as the non-moving party. Statewide Ins.

Fund v. Star Ins. Co., 253 N.J. 119, 125 (2023). In 1986, plaintiff purchased

commercial property from the City known as the Newark Adams Center, a

fourteen-store retail shopping center, located at 64-88 Adams Street. The rear

of plaintiff's property directly abuts 85-101 Jackson Street (Property), which is

co-owned by UUC and Sumo. Plaintiff and Sumo are parties to a lease that

A-3685-22 2 permits plaintiff to open three doors of its shopping center out onto the Property,

avoiding the need to construct expensive fire-related egress from plaintiff's

building. The lease also allows Sumo to terminate the lease on ninety days'

written notice.

The Property is in the boundaries of the 2001 Redevelopment Plan, which

permits commercial and retail use. The plan also provided for a "multi-tier

public parking structure and office space as permitted under the applicable

existing Federal and State regulations . . . and as allowed in the B2 Zoning

Districts." No parking decking was mandated.

In August 2004, the City passed an ordinance approving the "Amended

Jackson-Downing Redevelopment Plan," which provided that "[z]oning for this

area shall permit a multi-tier public parking structure and office space facility

as permitted under applicable existing Federal and State regulations . . . Zoning

for this area shall also permit commercial/reuse consistent with that allowed in

BS Zoning Districts."

Thereafter, the City and UUC entered an "Agreement for Sale of Land and

Redevelopment of Jackson-Downing (2004 Agreement)," which contain three

sections relevant to this appeal. Section 101(1) – IMPROVEMENTS, provided

that UUC can "construct a multi-level parking garage with the capacity of

A-3685-22 3 approximately 375 cars, all in conformance with [City's] Site Plan Ordinance,

except as otherwise approved by City and/or the Central Planning Board or

Board of Adjustment . . . ." Section 1101(E) – EVENTS OF DEFAULT BY

REDEVELOPER; NOTICE; REMEDIES, states, in relevant part, the City had

the "right to re-enter and take possession and to terminate the estate" in the event

of default by UUC. Lastly, Section 1310 – NO THIRD[-]PARTY RIGHTS,

stated that "nothing contained in this [2004] Agreement [was] intended to nor

shall [] be construed to create any rights" to persons not a party to this

Agreement.

In September 2005, the Municipal Council passed a resolution authorizing

the 2004 Agreement between the City and the UUC. Thereafter, in November

2005, the deed (2005 Deed), conveying a portion of the property from the City

to UUC, expressly stated the conveyance was "[s]ubject to the terms and

conditions set forth in the [2004 Agreement]" and "subject further to the [2004]

Amended Jackson[-]Downing Redevelopment Plan as adopted by the Municipal

Council pursuant to Ordinance 6S [and] FJ, dated August 4, 2004." The 2005

Deed made no reference to a right of reentry and possession in the event UUC

defaulted.

A-3685-22 4 The City's Central Planning Board (CPB) adopted a new master plan in

September 2012, to address, among other issues, zoning, development, and

redevelopment. The plan sought to "[r]evise parking standards to encourage the

redevelopment of surface parking lots" by "[d]iscouraging new surface parking

lots as a matter of right in certain areas of downtown," "[r]evising downtown

parking standards to promote shared parking," and "[r]educing downtown

parking ratio requirements." Two years later, the City released a Newark

Redevelopment Boundary Map.

Thereafter, in February 2015, the City determined that many previously

existing redevelopment plans did not align with the 2012 Master Plan's

objectives. The Municipal Council subsequently passed Ordinance 6PFSF-C,

which repealed prior redevelopment plans, including the 2001 Redevelopment

Plan upon which the 2004 Agreement was based.

As of June 2021, UUC had not constructed the multi-level parking garage

on the Property. Rather, UUC and Sumo applied to the CPB to construct a multi-

level, mixed-use commercial and residential building.

On October 15, 2021, the City notified UUC that it had defaulted on the

2004 Agreement by not moving forward with the parking garage and that the

A-3685-22 5 City would "enforce" its rights under the [2004] [A]greement "to re-enter and

take possession" of the Property.

In January 2022, plaintiff objected to the mixed-use project, arguing that

UUC and Sumo were required to build the parking garage under the 2004

Agreement. Plaintiff also requested the City to re-enter or re-take possession of

the Property, contending UUC and Sumo had defaulted on the 2004 Agreement.

That same month, the CPB approved the preliminary and final site plans

for UUC and Sumo's application for its mixed-use project subject to the City's

2020 Redevelopment Plan and memorialized its approval in a resolution.

Regarding the parking for the mixed-use site, the resolution stated, "[t]here is a

20-foot-wide driveway" on the property that would "provide[] access to seven

(7) surface parking spaces and one (1) . . . load space." The resolution also

provided the Property "is in the [2020] Jackson and Ferry Redevelopment Area

where mixed-use development is permitted."

In February 2022, UUC and Sumo replied to the City's letter regarding the

defaulted 2004 Agreement because the parking garage had yet to be constructed.

According to defendants, the project had "transformed over time with the City's

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