Verona v. Shalit
This text of 222 A.2d 145 (Verona v. Shalit) 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.
Opinion
BOROUGH OF VERONA, PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT,
v.
BENJAMIN SHALIT, DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.
Superior Court of New Jersey, Essex County Court, Law Division Criminal.
*66 Mr. Kenneth R. Stein for appellant (Messrs. Stein & Stein, attorneys).
Mr. Emil E. Mascia for respondent (Messrs. Sarcone & Mascia, attorneys).
KAPP, J.C.C.
This is a trial de novo. Defendant Benjamin Shalit is the owner of two adjoining garden-type apartment buildings on Bloomfield Avenue, Verona, New Jersey, which were constructed at the same time in 1961. Each building contains a built-in incinerator for garbage disposal, supplied by the Sargent Incinerator Company. The complaint in this case is directed solely to the premises referred to as 800 Bloomfield Avenue, which consists of 16 two-room apartments.
Shalit was tried and convicted before the municipal court of the borough upon a complaint which alleges that on May 17, 1965, he
"* * * did permit the escape of gas, smoke and obnoxious odors which were a source of physical distress to others; said gas, smoke, odors emanating from the incinerator chimney owned and maintained by said Benjamin Shalit at 800 Bloomfield Avenue, Verona, New Jersey in violation of the Borough of Verona Board of Health, `Sanitary Code', Section 6, entitled `Nuisances', more particularly, paragraph 11, passed February 15, 1965 * * *."
Section 6 is entitled "Nuisances." Prefatorily it provides that:
"The maintaining of anything whatsoever which is a hazard or a danger to human health, and the following specific acts, conditions or states are, each and every one, declared to be and constitute a nuisance." *67 The pertinent "specific acts" of section 6 upon which the complaint is grounded, read as follows:
"Any chimney, smoke-stack, pipe or flue, or any part thereof, or any connection therewith, that is so defective or out of repair as to allow gas or other noxious fumes to escape into the building and any gas-pipe or other fixture, from which may issue any foul or obnoxious odors or liquids.
* * * * * * * *
The escape of any gas, fumes, smoke, or other odors that may be of a menace to human life, or is by reason of disagreeable or obnoxious odors a source of physical distress to persons in the vicinity."
The Air Pollution Control Act, L. 1954, c. 212, § 1, N.J.S.A. 26:2C-1 et seq., authorized the establishment of an Air Pollution Control Commission within the State Department of Health and invested it with the power to formulate and promulgate a code to regulate, control and prohibit air pollution throughout the State. By virtue of said authority there was adopted the "New Jersey Air Pollution Control Code."
N.J.S.A. 26:2C-22 further provides that:
"* * * Nothing in this act or in any code, rules or regulations promulgated pursuant thereto shall preclude the right of any governing body of a municipality or county or board of health to adopt ordinances or regulations not inconsistent with this act or any code, rules or regulations promulgated pursuant thereto." (Emphasis supplied)
The Code also contains definitions of fuel-burning equipment and of smoke; it provides as well for the grading of the density of smoke according to the Ringelmann Smoke Chart, and specifies the circumstances under which greater amounts of smoke are permissible.
The borough ordinance, however, does not define fuel-burning equipment nor smoke; nor does it indicate the impermissible type of smoke emissions or recognize any allowable exceptions under special circumstances; nor are we advised of any standards of measurement. One portion of section 6 of the ordinance provides that smoke or odor, so generated, becomes illegal when it is a "danger to human *68 health * * * or is by reason of disagreeable or obnoxious odors a source of physical distress to persons in the vicinity."
The state statute has determined that smoke exceeding the density specifications of No. 2 of the Ringelmann Smoke Chart is "injurious to human * * * life," but it contains certain allowable exceptions. The municipal code prohibits smoke when dangerous "to human health," but without exceptions. Obviously, the local ordinance is more restrictive in this critical area. Moreover, the ordinance prohibits "obnoxious odors" when a cause of "physical distress to persons in the vicinity." Also prohibited as nuisances by this ordinance are chimneys, etc., "from which may issue any foul or obnoxious odors." The New Jersey Air Pollution Control Code, however, does not contain any prohibition against odors. The statute defines "air pollution" as "the presence in the outdoor atmosphere of substances * * *" N.J.S.A. 26:2C-2 (emphasis supplied). Such substances, as per the Air Pollution Control Code, may include smoke, fly ash, air contaminants, consisting of "coarse and fine solid particles, liquid particles, vapors or gases which are discharged into the outdoor atmosphere."
Thus, the borough has incorporated within its ordinance a new category which is not to be found in the State Air Pollution Code. In so doing it has enlarged the interdicted area of activity by ordinance where it is not granted the authority to do so by the State Code. The State Sanitary Code, however, N.J.S.A. 26:1A-7 et seq., authorized the adoption of local health ordinances.
While N.J.S.A. 26:1A-9 reads (in part) as follows:
"* * * but such ordinances, rules and regulations shall not be in conflict with the laws of this State or the provisions of the State Sanitary Code, except, however, that such ordinances, rules and regulations may be more restrictive than the provisions of the State Sanitary Code,"
and indicates that, absent the exception, such a more restrictive local sanitary ordinance would be in conflict with *69 the declared pre-emption under state law, yet the enabling provision relating to air pollution control, N.J.S.A. 26:2C-22, with which we are presently concerned, does not contain such an exception as would authorize and validate a more restrictive local air pollution ordinance.
In Shaw v. Byram Tp., 86 N.J. Super. 598 (App. Div. 1965), plaintiff challenged the validity of a local ordinance as one that was incompatible with the State Sanitary Code because it was more restrictive than the state provision. The court struck down this contention and observed that the answer was to be found by reference to the enabling act under which the Code was adopted, which provides that "such ordinances, rules and regulations may be more restrictive than the provisions of the State Sanitary Code." Implicit in this decision is the corollary that where the statute does not confer upon the municipality the right to adopt ordinances that may be more restrictive, it may not do so.
As already stated, we find no such exception in the statute, N.J.S.A. 26:2C-1 et seq., involved here.
Having introduced an unauthorized element into this proscribed area renders section 6 of said municipal ordinance invalid since it is in conflict with the statute, N.J.S.A. 26:2C-1.
Section 6 is invalid for another reason, because it fails to inform those to whom it is addressed of a proscribed standard of conduct, so that men of common intelligence must necessarily guess at its meaning and differ as to its application. State v. New York Central R.R. Co., 37 N.J. Super. 42, 46 (App. Div.
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222 A.2d 145, 92 N.J. Super. 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/verona-v-shalit-njsuperctappdiv-1966.