State v. Cameron

445 A.2d 75, 184 N.J. Super. 66
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedFebruary 9, 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 445 A.2d 75 (State v. Cameron) 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
State v. Cameron, 445 A.2d 75, 184 N.J. Super. 66 (N.J. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

184 N.J. Super. 66 (1982)
445 A.2d 75

STATE OF NEW JERSEY
v.
ROBERT J. CAMERON, DEFENDANT.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division Somerset County.

Decided February 9, 1982.

*68 Mr. Lawrence J. Supp, for defendant (Stephen S. Weinstein, attorney).

Mr. Stanley Cutler, for the Township of Franklin.

MEREDITH, J.S.C.

This case centers on the question of whether a municipality, in the exercise of its zoning power, may exclude places of worship from zones restricted to single-family dwellings.

I

The Reverend Robert J. Cameron appeared before the Municipal Court of Franklin Township on a charge of having violated a provision of the township's zoning ordinance. The Reverend, a Presbyter of the Reformed Episcopal Church, lives in a single-family home located in a zone of the township in which such *69 dwellings are the only permitted use. The complaint filed against Reverend Cameron is based on the allegation that he regularly held church services in his home. Appearing in the municipal court pro se, the Reverend, who had not sought a variance, attacked the constitutionality of the Ordinance and its application to him. He also claimed that the proceedings initiated against him were defective in various respects. The municipal judge rejected these arguments and found the Reverend guilty as charged. No penalty was assessed but Reverend Cameron was ordered to cease holding services in his home on pain of a $500 fine for each future violation. He then appealed to this court under R. 3:23. Represented by counsel, he acknowledges that his appeal operates as a waiver of defects in the record, see R. 3:23-8(c), but he continues to challenge the constitutionality of the ordinance and its application to him. The arguments he presents in support of his position will be addressed after a brief statement of the salient facts.

II

Reverend Cameron is the minister of a "formative congregation" known as the "Mount Carmel Reformed Episcopal Church." Until sometime in the spring of 1981 the congregation held its advertised Sunday services in a Franklin Township school. Apparently it was an increase in rent that led to the transfer of these services to the Reverend's home at that time. In a sworn affidavit the Reverend stated that despite a diligent search for a permanent location, "the least expensive acceptable" one that he could find, consisting of "1000 square feet of store front space," cost $350 a month, a sum that the congregation "cannot afford to pay." The use of temporary facilities would be a hardship, his affidavit continues, because the congregation's services require the use of religious articles, such as lecturn and pulpit, that are heavy, difficult to transport and subject to accidental damage when stored. In addition, "the solemnity of the service is depreciated by secular surroundings." The Reverend's affidavit concludes with the statement that in *70 his church, as well as in many others, it is a traditional practice for the services of a "fledgling congregation" to be held in the home of its minister or one of its members "until a permanent `church' location can be obtained."

After moving its Sunday services into Reverend Cameron's home, the congregation continued to advertise them in a local newspaper. See The Home News, June 13, 1981, "In the churches," page 5 ("The 11 a.m. service of Mount Carmel Reformed Episcopal Church will take place at [Reverend Cameron's residence], in the Somerset section [of Franklin Township], with the Rev. Robert J. Cameron preaching."). At the hearing the Reverend's wife testified that this advertisement was taken out of the newspaper after a few weeks and that subsequently attendance at services was by invitation only, with invitations extended to "people that we know, we meet [sic]."

Other testimony describing the services held in Reverend Cameron's home may be summarized as follows. Until they were halted by court order, these services were held from 11 a.m. to noon almost every Sunday, first in the Reverend's living room, then in a room that he had recently added to his house "for activities of the owner," to quote his building permit application of April 29, 1981. The services included prayers, singing and preaching, and were regularly attended by a number of people. A neighbor complained that he could hear the sermon and singing in his own home, some 80 feet from the Reverend's, and that cars parked on the street by those attending services hindered the passage of traffic. These statements were supported by the observations of the township's Chief Code Enforcer. He testified that while in the vicinity of the Cameron residence on Sunday, August 30, 1981, between 10:45 and 11:45 a.m., he heard vocal church music emanating from the Reverend's house and saw 14 cars parked in front of it, seven in the driveway and seven in the street. He also testified that the Reverend's house was located in the R-15 residential zone of the township.

*71 Turning now to the Franklin Township zoning ordinance, the zones it establishes, with their pertinent specifications, are as follows:

                                                Minimum
                                                Lot Size        Maximum %
                                             (Interior Lots)      of Lot
           Zones                               (sq. ft.)        Coverage 
R-R  - Rural-Residential           R-R           100,000           10
R-A  - Residential-Agricultural    R-A            50,000           10
R-40 & R-40(1) - Residential       R-40/40(1)     40,000           10
R-20 - Residential                 R-20           20,000           15
R-15 - Residential                 R-15           15,000           20
R-10 - Residential                 R-10           10,000           20
R-7  - Residential                 R-7             7,500           20
B-1  - Regional Business           B-1           5 acres           25
B-2  - General Business            B-2            20,000           40
B-3  - Neighborhood Business       B-3            10,000           30
H-D  - Highway Development         H-D           5 acres           40
OPT  - Office Professional
       Transition                  OPT            10,000           30
ROL  - Research Office Laboratory  ROL           3 acres           40
M-1  - Light Manufacturing         M-1           5 acres           40
M-2  - Light Manufacturing         M-2           1 acre            40
M-3  - Mining and Manufacturing    M-3           1 acre            40

Except for the limitation that churches located in a residential zone must have a minimum lot requirement of two acres (see § 308.2 of the ordinance), "churches and similar places of worship" are permitted without qualification in the RR, RA, R40, R40(1) and OPT zones. They are permitted in the R20 zone only if they have "direct access to a major collector or arterial street," as defined in the township's master plan. In addition to "churches and similar places of worship," the RR, RA, R40, and R40(1) zones permit single-family dwellings, golf courses, certain schools and certain agricultural uses; the OPT zone permits one-and two-family dwellings, certain schools and certain professional offices, and the R20 zone only single-family dwellings and certain schools. Provisions for "accessory" and "conditional" uses in the ordinance need not be discussed here.

The three remaining R zones, the R-15, R-10, and R-7, permit only dwellings.

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Related

Kali Bari Temple v. Board of Adjustment
638 A.2d 839 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1994)
State v. Cameron
498 A.2d 1217 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1985)
St. John's Evangelical Lutheran Church v. City of Hoboken
479 A.2d 935 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1983)
ST. JOHN'S EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CH. v. Hoboken
479 A.2d 935 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1983)
State v. Cameron
460 A.2d 191 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1983)

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Bluebook (online)
445 A.2d 75, 184 N.J. Super. 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cameron-njsuperctappdiv-1982.