Northeast Towers, Inc. v. ZONING BD. OF ADJUST.

744 A.2d 190, 327 N.J. Super. 476
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJanuary 24, 2000
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 744 A.2d 190 (Northeast Towers, Inc. v. ZONING BD. OF ADJUST.) 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
Northeast Towers, Inc. v. ZONING BD. OF ADJUST., 744 A.2d 190, 327 N.J. Super. 476 (N.J. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

744 A.2d 190 (2000)

NORTHEAST TOWERS, INC., Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
ZONING BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT OF the BOROUGH OF WEST PATERSON, Defendant-Appellant.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Argued December 13, 1999.
Decided January 24, 2000.

*191 Richard Brigliadoro, Parsippany, for defendant-appellant (Weiner Lesniak, attorneys; Mr. Brigliadoro, on the brief).

Remo A. Caputo, Denville, for plaintiff-respondent.

Before Judges PETRELLA, CONLEY and BRAITHWAITE.

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

After the Law Division overturned the denial of a variance to Northeast Towers, *192 Inc. (Northeast), the Zoning Board of Adjustment of the Borough of West Paterson (the Board) appealed. The Board had denied Northeast's variance application to construct a 95-foot lattice communications tower next to an existing home on property in a residential zone. A 97-foot monopole had existed illegally on the property for a number of years and was proposed to be replaced.

On its appeal the Board argues that the decision of the Law Division Judge was erroneous because the Board's decision was neither arbitrary, capricious nor unreasonable. The trial judge reversed the Board's denial of Northeast's variance application to replace an illegal communications tower in a residential zone with a higher tower to be placed closer to the residence. The Board further argues that its denial of a variance for the proposed tower did not violate the Telecommunications Act of 1996.[1]

Northeast owned a three-quarter-acre property at 2 Oak Ridge Road on Garret Mountain in West Paterson in a Residential A Zone. The property contained a three-bedroom ranch house with a two-car garage. About twenty-five years ago a 97-foot high steel monopole communications tower had been erected in the middle of the backyard about forty or fifty feet from the residence. Under the zoning ordinance this was a non-permitted use and thus was illegal. The house was rented to tenants who had no relationship to the operation of the tower.

Northeast's President, George Stites, acquired the property in January 1993. Before that he managed it for four years for the previous owners. Stites's management of the property involved obtaining contracts to lease rights to place a broadcasting antenna on the tower by various individuals or entities who could transmit and receive signals at the site. Stites had about forty "tower accounts" for radio common carriers that put an antenna on the tower to transmit for the carriers' communications systems. The leases were long-term and involved several thousand dollars per year. According to the record, Stites had tower accounts in various locations. He had four companies with antennae on his West Paterson tower: Page Net of New York, Page Net of New Jersey, Tel-Air Communications (Tel-Air), and Message Center Beepers. Transmitters for each of the different companies were located inside a shed on the property. These companies were all in the business of offering paging communications for profit and rented an antenna connection to provide transmitting capabilities for "tens of thousands" of their accounts. Fees for the right to transmit from the tower were unregulated.

Stites and his wife were sole owners of Tel-Air, which owned nineteen other transmitting sites. In addition to the tower accounts, Tel-Air serviced 20,000 "paging accounts" for individuals with billings of approximately $10 to $15 per month.

In response to an inquiry by Stites to add additional antennae to the tower, West Paterson's code enforcement officer informed him on April 6, 1993, that the installation of radio antennae for the purpose of renting them to business entities in this district violated the borough's zoning ordinance. Accordingly, the code enforcement officer directed Stites to stop installing antennae and remove all antennae installed since he purchased the property. On June 9, 1993, the code enforcement officer denied a permit to an electrical contractor who sought to install a sub-panel in the shed to increase the electrical service for the tower's antennae. The reason for the denial was that the tower violated Section 22.5.1 of the borough's ordinance, operating a business in a residential zone. The code enforcement officer, as a result of these inquiries, investigated whether the tower was an approved use in the zone and sought the municipal attorney's opinion. After concluding that the *193 use was impermissible, the mayor and council were notified. Other properties with operating antennae for business were notified to stop doing business immediately.

Northeast applied for a use variance in November 1993, indicating that the first antenna was added in 1989 and the "last activity" on the site was October 30, 1994. The variance application sought (1) permission to allow replacement of the current tower with a 95-foot tower on a base elevation 10 feet higher than the existing tower's; (2) allowance of expansion of a nonconforming use; (3) setback and side yard variances; and (4) relief from height restrictions in a residential zone. There had been no prior application for a use variance or for construction of the shed and the electrical services.

Plaintiff argued that the communications tower was an inherently beneficial use. The residential use of the property was to be continued, and maintenance of the tower would not require the presence of employees or deliveries by commercial vehicles. The site would be serviced once a year under normal circumstances. Although the precise role and extent of the Federal Communications Commission's (FCC) regulation of the tower's function are not clear from the record, Stites indicated that a common carrier had exclusive territory granted by the FCC on the particular frequency allotted to the carrier. He also indicated that paging companies establish a pattern of site locations to cover with their transmissions so that coverage would be complete and no pages would be lost. He stated that moving his location might require two or three other locations to cover the same pattern and that FCC permission would be needed to move an antenna, a "station license." He indicated the new tower would have the potential to support cellular communications, but he did not presently have the opportunity to use the tower for that purpose.

The record indicates that there were at least three communication towers within a tenth of a mile from the Oak Ridge tower. Stites had not inquired as to whether he could place Tel-Air's antennae and transmitters on those towers.

Northeast's structural engineering expert reviewed design plans, including the structural integrity of the proposed tower. Because soil borings had not yet been taken, he was not clear as to the design of the concrete pad for anchoring and how the tower was to be anchored to the ground. The new tower was designed to hold fifty-two antennae which could weigh from 900 to 4,000 pounds. A real estate appraiser testified on Northeast's case before the Board and described the area surrounding the tower as "a fully developed residential neighborhood" with twenty-five or thirty-five-year-old, well-maintained homes on one-third to one acre sites. The area was said to be a stable community with a good reputation for preserving property values and containing some of the largest zoning in the municipality.

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Bluebook (online)
744 A.2d 190, 327 N.J. Super. 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northeast-towers-inc-v-zoning-bd-of-adjust-njsuperctappdiv-2000.