Toll Bros. v. West Windsor Tp.

712 A.2d 266, 312 N.J. Super. 540
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJune 22, 1998
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 712 A.2d 266 (Toll Bros. v. West Windsor 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
Toll Bros. v. West Windsor Tp., 712 A.2d 266, 312 N.J. Super. 540 (N.J. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

712 A.2d 266 (1998)

TOLL BROTHERS, INC., a Delaware Corporation, Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
WEST WINDSOR TOWNSHIP, a Municipal Corporation of the State of New Jersey, located in Mercer County, New Jersey, Mayor and Council of West Windsor Township, Defendants-Appellants, and
West Windsor Township Planning Board, Intervenor-Defendant-Appellant.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Argued May 28, 1998.
Decided June 22, 1998.

*267 Daniel S. Bernstein, Scotch Plains, for defendants-appellants West Windsor Township and Mayor and Council of West Windsor Township (Bernstein & Hoffman, attorneys; Mr. Bernstein, of counsel and on the brief).

Henry A. Hill, Princeton, for plaintiff-respondent (Hill Wallack, attorneys; Mr. Hill and Thomas F. Carroll, III, on the brief).

Gerald J. Muller, Chicago, IL, for intervenor-defendant-appellant West Windsor Township Planning Board (Miller, Porter & Muller, attorneys; Mr. Muller, of counsel and on the brief).

Roger W. Thomas, Newton, for amicus curiae New Jersey Planning Officials (Dolan and Dolan, attorneys; Donald M. Ross, on the brief).

Peter A. Buchsbaum, Woodbridge, for amici curiae the New Jersey Builders Association and the National Association of Homebuilders (Greenbaum, Rowe, Smith, Ravin, Davis & Himmel, attorneys; Mr. Buchsbaum and Arthur M. Greenbaum, of counsel, Mr. Greenbaum and Jessica L. Kyle, on the brief).

Before Judges SHEBELL, D'ANNUNZIO and COBURN.

The opinion of the court was delivered by D'ANNUNZIO, J.A.D.

West Windsor Township and the West Windsor Township Planning Board[1] appeal *268 from a judgment invalidating "Timed Growth Controls" contained in its zoning ordinance.

The township consists of twenty-seven square miles located in Mercer County. It is experiencing rapid residential development. The township's 1990 population was 16,021, almost triple its 1970 population of 6,431. Another indication of its growth is the increase in its public school population from 2,477 in 1987 to 4,488 in 1997.

The township contends that its roadway system lacks the capacity to serve the existing population and future development. To address this problem it has adopted a capital improvement program to increase roadway capacity. The time frame for completion of the program is approximately fifty years, ending in the year 2045.

As a result of the perceived inadequacies in its roadway system, and as a corollary to the capital improvement program, the township adopted "timed growth controls" as Article III of its zoning ordinance. One of the legislative findings in Article III defines their purpose. It states:

It is also necessary to control the rate of growth so that the township, county, and state have the opportunity to implement a program of road network improvements before development for which they are designed to create capacity is constructed. The most reasonable way of doing so is by deferring development until the time when road improvements designed to accommodate traffic from it are scheduled to be built and phasing development during the times scheduled for construction of such improvements.

To fulfill this purpose, the ordinance recognizes "basic rights" and "additional rights." A "basic right" is the right to develop immediately a certain percentage of the dwelling units permitted to a particular tract under the zoning ordinance. The percentage of dwelling units permitted immediately as a basic right varies within each timed growth district. There are ten such districts. The percentage of dwelling units constituting basic rights varies from twenty percent in two of the districts to fifty percent in one of the districts.

Section 22-3.1 defines "basic rights:"

The zoning rights for each lot in a timed growth district shall be divided into basic rights and additional rights. Basic rights shall constitute the percentage of the dwelling units (but not less than one unit) or nonresidential floor area permitted under the zoning. Basic rights for tracts which are zoned to include low- and moderate-income housing and basic rights for public uses shall be one hundred (100%) percent. Basic rights for all other lots shall be as follows:
      Timed Growth District                    Percentage of
                                               Zoning Rights
      1D and 2A                                20%
      2B                                       25%
      1A & C and 2C & D                        30%
      1B and 3                                 40%
      4                                        50%

Section 22-3.2 provides that "[b]asic rights shall be exercisable at any time."

Section 22-3.2.2 deals with the exercise of "additional rights." It provides, in part:

Additional Rights. Additional rights may be exercised for each property within each timed growth district only in accordance with the following:
      Timed           Date When           Percentage of
      Growth          Additional          Additional
      District        Rights May          Rights Which
                      First Be            May Be Exercised
                      Exercised           Per Year
      1A              2011                10%
      1B              2021                10%
      1C              2006                10%
      1D              1996                10%
      2A              1996                10%
      2B              2001                10%
      2C & D          2011                6.67%
      3               2021                10%
      4               2031                6.67%

Plaintiff in this case, Toll Brothers, Inc., is the contract purchaser of a tract in timed growth district 2D. The basic rights for that district constitute thirty percent of the permitted units under the zoning ordinance. As an example, if a tract in district 2D would yield sixty dwelling units under the zoning ordinance, the developer would have the basic right to build immediately eighteen of *269 those units, i.e., thirty percent of sixty. The developer, however, would have to defer development of the balance of its project. The right of deferred development is the "additional right."

In district 2D the developer may begin exercising its additional rights in the year 2011. Thus, in that year the developer may begin to construct the balance of the forty-two dwelling units. The ordinance, however, restricts the number of dwelling units, additional rights, which may be constructed in any year. In district 2D the developer may exercise 6.67 percent of its additional rights per year beginning in the year 2011. Thus, a developer with additional rights to forty-two additional dwelling units would be permitted to construct three units in the year 2011 and three units each year thereafter.

The ordinance gives a developer the option of limiting its development to sixty percent of the total units permitted under the zoning ordinance. If the developer accepts that option, the developer may develop sixty percent of the entire project immediately, but it gives up any additional development rights on that tract. Additionally, under Section 22-3.3b, a developer may accelerate the exercise of its additional rights "in their entirety by constructing or causing to be constructed ... all of the municipal, state, or county road improvements located within their timed growth district or outside that district but necessary to service traffic from their district...." But cf. New Jersey Builders Ass'n v.

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Bluebook (online)
712 A.2d 266, 312 N.J. Super. 540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toll-bros-v-west-windsor-tp-njsuperctappdiv-1998.