ROSEDALE AND ROSEHILL CEMETERY ASSOCIATION v. TOWNSHIP OF READINGTON

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedDecember 30, 2020
Docket3:19-cv-16428
StatusUnknown

This text of ROSEDALE AND ROSEHILL CEMETERY ASSOCIATION v. TOWNSHIP OF READINGTON (ROSEDALE AND ROSEHILL CEMETERY ASSOCIATION v. TOWNSHIP OF READINGTON) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ROSEDALE AND ROSEHILL CEMETERY ASSOCIATION v. TOWNSHIP OF READINGTON, (D.N.J. 2020).

Opinion

*FOR PUBLICATION* UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF NEW JERSEY _______________________________________

ROSEDALE AND ROSEHILL CEMETARY ASSOCIATION,

Plaintiff,

v. Civil Action No.:19-16428 (FLW)

TOWNSHIP OF READING, et. al., OPINION

Defendants,

STATE OF NEW JERSEY,

Intervenor.

WOLFSON, Chief Judge: This matter concerns the constitutionality of the New Jersey Cemetery Act (“the Cemetery Act”), which, inter alia, empowers municipalities to consent to new cemeteries within their borders. See N.J.S.A. § 45:27-25, et seq. Rosedale and Rosehill Cemetery Association (“Plaintiff” or “Rosedale”), a non-profit cemetery company, applied to the Township of Readington and its Township Committee (collectively, “Defendants” or “the Township”) to open a cemetery. After extensive negotiations with the Planning Board, and four days of hearings over the course of a year, the Township denied Rosedale’s application pursuant to its authority under N.J.S.A. § 45:27- 25(a). Presently before the Court are the parties’ Motions for Partial Summary Judgment on Counts Three through Five. Rosedale contends that two provisions of the Cemetery Act, N.J.S.A. § 45:27-25(a) and N.J.S.A. § 45:27-25(d), violate the Due Process Clause, see U.S. CONST. AMEND. XIV, because they give the Township unfettered discretion to establish cemeteries. In its cross- motion, the Township contends that these provisions are a permissible delegation of state legislative power and that it properly denied Rosedale’s application. The State of New Jersey has intervened to defend the constitutionality of the Cemetery Act on similar grounds as the Township.

For the following reasons, I GRANT Rosedale’s partial summary judgment motion and DENY the Township’s cross-motion as follows: subsection (a) of N.J.S.A. § 45:27-25 of the Cemetery Act is unconstitutionally vague under the Due Process Clause of Fourteenth Amendment, and because subsection (a) cannot be severed from the rest of the provisions of § 45:27-25 (b)-(d), the entire N.J.S.A. § 45:27-25 is declared unconstitutional. However, this Order shall be stayed for a period of 30 days before taking effect, to provide the New Jersey Legislature an opportunity to amend the statute. I. BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Rosedale has operated a large cemetery in Linden, New Jersey, for over a century. See Pl. Br., Ex. 5 (Hearing Transcript), at 9:6-12; Pl. SUMF, ¶ 4. Anticipating that it would soon run out of interment space, Rosedale sought to open a new cemetery nearby. See Pl. SUMF, ¶ 5. After a lengthy search for a suitable location, it contracted to purchase 180 acres in Readington Township in 2015 (“Block 12”). Id. ¶¶ 6-7. Among other factors, Block 12 was already zoned for cemetery use. Id. ¶¶ 12-13. Beginning on February 9, 2017, Rosedale dedicated several months to negotiating a site application with the Township’s Planning Board. Id. ¶¶ 8, 10-13. Despite Rosedale’s investment of time and resources in this process,1 and despite seemingly having no obligation to wait, on September 17, 2017, the Board declined to hear Rosedale’s final plan until the Township consented to the cemetery. Id. ¶ 13; Pl. Br., Ex. 9 (Letter from Planning Board

1 For example, Rosedale integrated a twenty-one page comment from a Planning Board engineer into its proposed design for Block 12. Secretary). Rosedale submitted a request for consent on February 20, 2018, see Pl. SUMF, ¶ 14, and the Township held public hearings on May 21, 2018, September 17, 2018, October 15, 2018, and May 6, 2019. Id. ¶ 15; Pl. Br., Exs. 3-6 (Hearing Transcripts). A. The Hearings

During the hearings, Rosedale primarily contested the constitutionality of N.J.S.A. §§ 47:27-25(a) and (d). See Pl. Br., Ex. 3 (Hearing Transcript), at 9:24-13:23; Ex. 6 (Hearing Transcript), at 87:16-88:19. The statute provides in full: a. A cemetery shall not be established or enlarged in any municipality without first obtaining the consent of the municipality by resolution. b. No more than five cemeteries may be established in any one municipality, and not more than 3% of the area of any municipality shall be devoted to cemetery purposes. c. A cemetery shall not be established or expanded to exceed 250 acres at any one location. d. The governing body of a municipality, by resolution, may waive the limitations of subsection b. or c. of this section if it finds that there is a public need for additional cemetery lands and that it is in the public interest to waive them. e. A cemetery company shall not dedicate additional land to cemetery purposes without board approval.

N.J.S.A. § 47:27-25. Specifically, Rosedale argued that subsection (a), the consent provision, is unconstitutional because it fails to “specify[] any standards for such consent,” Pl. Br., at 7, and that subsection (d), the waiver provision, likewise lacks a “sufficiently definite standard.” Id. Further, Rosedale argued that it did not need a waiver under subsection (d) because, based on its narrow reading of the Cemetery Act, there are not five cemeteries in the Township—and even if it did need a waiver, “there was a local and regional public need for an additional cemetery.” See Pl. SUMF, ¶¶ 17-18, 21, 23. Rosedale presented expert testimony to this end, which showed that two cemeteries in the Township conduced just “one burial per month” even though “approximately 109 residents” died annually, see Pl. Br., Ex. 5 (Hearing Transcript), at 40:25- 41:19; Ex. 15 (Newell Cemetery Report); Ex. 16 (Rural Hills Cemetery Report), no new cemeteries had opened in the region in decades, id., Ex. 5 (Hearing Transcript), at 31:16-19, and its proposed cemetery was “designed to serve a wide range of interment-related needs, including burial in a memorial park, indoor and outdoor niches, indoor crypts, mausoleums, a veterans area, a scattering garden, and green burial options.”2 Id.; Ex. 10 (Site Plan).

Rosedale also made extensive concessions to the Township over the course of the hearings. See id., Ex. 3 (Hearing Transcript), at 22:13-23, 35:2-22. For example, Rosedale agreed to limit the size of the burial area to 38 acres in perpetuity; establish a designated burial area for veterans, the only one within 50 miles; screen all upright headstones from public view with buffers and setbacks; provide 73 acres to the Township for public space; implement a grass-mowing program to protect bird habitats; not to use herbicides, pesticides, or fertilizers in its operation; not to build a crematorium; and restore rather than raze preexisting buildings to preserve the agricultural character of the property. Id., Ex. 3 (Hearing Transcript), at 20:19-20, 37:8-14, 56:2-23; Ex. 5 (Hearing Transcript), at 38:22-39:2; Ex. 10 (Site Plan); Ex. 14 (Letter Requesting Consent). In all, Rosedale estimated that it would perform three to four burials per day on Block 12 and 50,000

over the lifetime of the cemetery. See Pl. Br., Ex. 5 (Hearing Transcript), at 26:14-16, 65:22-66:18. B. The Township’s Decision

On May 6, 2019, in its final hearing, the Township denied Rosedale’s application. One Commissioner suggested that “if this were an application from a church . . . [it] would be a different story,” see Pl. SUMF, ¶ 27; Pl. Br., Ex. 6 (Hearing Transcript), at 119:18-21, a sentiment with which the Mayor, who sits on the Committee, seemed to agree. Id. ¶ 28; Pl. Br., Ex. 6 (Hearing Transcript), at 120:16-22, 121:16-24. Others indicated a preference for farmland and a desire to

2 Rosedale presented other expert testimony in support of its application, including from a landscape architect, professional engineer, environmental specialist, traffic engineer, and hydrogeologist. See Pl. SUMF, ¶ 16. A nearby property owner opposed Rosedale’s application and cross-examined its witnesses, but otherwise no parties objected. See generally Pl. Br., Exs. 3-6 (Hearing Transcripts).

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ROSEDALE AND ROSEHILL CEMETERY ASSOCIATION v. TOWNSHIP OF READINGTON, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosedale-and-rosehill-cemetery-association-v-township-of-readington-njd-2020.