Oughton v. BD. OF FIRE COMM'RS, FIRE DIST NO. 1, MOORESTOWN TP.

403 A.2d 69, 168 N.J. Super. 434
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMay 7, 1979
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 403 A.2d 69 (Oughton v. BD. OF FIRE COMM'RS, FIRE DIST NO. 1, MOORESTOWN TP.) 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
Oughton v. BD. OF FIRE COMM'RS, FIRE DIST NO. 1, MOORESTOWN TP., 403 A.2d 69, 168 N.J. Super. 434 (N.J. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

168 N.J. Super. 434 (1979)
403 A.2d 69

SAMUEL E. OUGHTON AND JEANNETTA W. KEYSER, PLAINTIFFS,
v.
BOARD OF FIRE COMMISSIONERS, FIRE DISTRICT NO. 1, MOORESTOWN TOWNSHIP, COUNTY OF BURLINGTON, GEORGE W. HUMPFER, JR., ARTHUR J. COLLINS, III, EDWIN R. JONES, C. BAREY MIDDLETON AND EDWIN L. PLASKETT, MEMBERS OF THE BOARD, DEFENDANTS, AND DOVER TOWNSHIP FIRE COMMISSIONERS, INTERVENOR.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division.

Decided May 7, 1979.

*437 Ms. Mary Anne Polk O'Meara and Mr. John A. Rank, III, for plaintiffs.

*438 Mr. Richard E. Gehret for defendant Moorestown Township, Board of Fire Commissioners, Fire District No. 1 (Messrs. Parker, McCay & Criscuolo, attorneys).

Mr. Laurence A. Hecker for intervenor Dover Township Fire Commissioners and for New Jersey State Association of Fire Districts, appearing amici curiae.

Mr. Richard M. Braslow for Board of Fire Commissioners, No. 2, Jackson Twp., Ocean County, appearing amicus curiae (Messrs. Campbell, Sachs & Campbell, attorneys).

HAINES, J.S.C.

The central question raised in this litigation is whether paid fire departments may be created by fire commissioners in fire districts or whether such power resides exclusively in municipal governing bodies. The issue is one of state-wide interest and first impression. It requires the interpretation of statutes covering fire departments, as to which legislative intent is far from clear. The suit also raises a number of peripheral issues involving fire department meetings and expenditures.

The complaint names Moorestown Township Fire District No. 1 and its commissioners as defendants. Injunctive relief is sought to restrain the payment of compensation to various persons and to prevent alleged violations of the Open Public Meetings Law. The Dover Township Fire Commissioners were permitted to intervene; they seek declaratory relief as to their right to pay compensation to fire department personnel. The New Jersey State Association of Fire Districts and the Jackson Township Board of Fire Commissioners No. 2 have filed amicus curiae briefs.

The entire Township of Moorestown is composed of two fire districts, defendant District No. 1 being created in 1886. Its board of fire commissioners controls fire protection and prevention activities within the district through its fire department, composed of the members of two volunteer fire companies, using buildings and equipment owned by the district. *439 The officers of its department who receive compensation, and the annual amounts sought to be paid to them are: Chief — $2,000; Assistant Chief — $1,500; Deputy Chief — $250; Captains — $200; Engineers — $1,170, and Custodians — $1,170. The fire commissioners seek total salaries of $2,700. In the coming year the commissioners propose the employment of an administrator whose salary and related expenses would total $15,265.

The minutes of the fire department indicate that District No. 1 has paid compensation to some officers for many years; in 1893 it paid a Superintendent of Alarms $12 a year, and in 1950 salaries were paid to the Chief, Custodians and Engineers. Moorestown's governing body has never adopted an ordinance creating a paid or part paid fire department or establishing paid positions in the fire department. Past salary appropriations have been included in the fire district's annual budget, submitted to and approved by its voters, not as a separate line item but lumped with other expenses under the title "administration."

The intervenor, Dover Township Fire Commissioners, is composed of all of the commissioners of the two fire districts which encompass Dover Township in Ocean County. They operate under a Mutual Services Agreement authorized by N.J.S.A. 40A:11-10 and pay salaries to four full-time fire dispatchers, eight part-time fire dispatchers, two secretaries, five CETA employees, an auditor, an attorney and certain fire inspectors. Each fire district also retains an auditor and an attorney.

Numerous fire department personnel from other municipalities testified to practices in their fire districts, providing information as to practical interpretation of fire district statutes. It is apparent that practices are far from uniform. Franklin Township pays only for clerical services. Cherry Hill Fire District No. 3 pays a fire marshal, a clerk and six persons, who jointly perform maintenance, administrative and firefighting assignments. The clerk is paid by the fire commissioners, all others by the volunteer fire company in *440 the district which owns the firefighting equipment and contracts with the commissioners to provide fire protection, its budget this year being $275,000. Cherry Hill Fire District No. 4 pays two attorneys, one stenotypist, five persons for general work, a fire marshal and a deputy fire marshal; some are paid by fire commissioners and some by the volunteer company which owns all of the firefighting equipment except one ladder truck owned by the commissioners and leased to the company. The fire marshal is paid an annual salary of $18,000. Cherry Hill Fire District No. 5 has four full-time employees who handle fire prevention, equipment maintenance and clerical chores, all being paid by the fire commissioners. Hamilton Township Fire District No. 3 employs four drivers; they are paid by the commissioners, who also own the equipment and building. The chief of the department performs its clerical work without compensation. In the Oldbridge Fire District the building and equipment are owned by its volunteer companies, while the equipment on the fire trucks is owned by the commissioners. The district has a fire marshal, paid by the township, and two three-man maintenance committees paid by the commissioners. In some years the commissioners pay the companies for janitorial services. In Gloucester Township Fire District No. 2, there is only one volunteer company. The fire commissioners own five vehicles and the company three which are leased to the commissioners. who pay an apparatus engineer, an assistant engineer and a clerk. In Delran Fire District No. 1 a clerk, a fire marshal, two assistants and a treasurer receive compensation.

A. What Is a Paid Fire Department?

References to "paid" and "part-paid" fire departments appear throughout the statutes, e.g., N.J.S.A. 40A:14-7, 9.1, 41, 42. No definitions are provided. The defense argues that the statutes relating to "paid" departments apply only to those which pay persons for fighting fires, and claims *441 that all compensation paid to personnel of their departments is paid for administrative work only. The statutes do not make the distinction for which defendants contend. Furthermore, the activities of their paid personnel are not so readily categorized. In Moorestown, for example, the chief is responsible for overall tactical direction relating to the prevention and extinguishment of fires; he attends almost all drills. The assistant chief undertakes special assignments for the chief and supervises the engineers, who inspect, clean and keep fire-ready all apparatus. The captains are responsible for the operation of the fire companies. Custodians maintain the firehouses. Most of these persons are involved as well in direct firefighting activities. Any effort to define "firefighting", without express statutory direction, must fail.

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403 A.2d 69, 168 N.J. Super. 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oughton-v-bd-of-fire-commrs-fire-dist-no-1-moorest-njsuperctappdiv-1979.