Source: https://www.ecode360.com/29496787
Timestamp: 2018-08-17 05:27:51
Document Index: 658302293

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 432', '§ 432', '§ 432', '§ 432', '§ 432', '§ 432', '§ 432', '§ 432', '§ 432', '§ 432', '§ 432']

Township of Bloomfield, NJ Rental Property Good Neighbor Act
§ 432-1 Purpose.
§ 432-2 Definitions.
§ 432-3 Hearing and bonding requirements.
§ 432-4 Forfeiture, extension of period for which security required, increase in amount of security; proceedings.
Chapter 432: Rental Property Good Neighbor Act
[HISTORY: Adopted by the Bloomfield Council 12-1-2014 by Ord. No. 14-50. Amendments noted where applicable.]
Affordable housing — See Ch. 112.
Rental property registration — See Ch. 431.
Heating requirements for dwellings (BOH) — See Ch. 652, Art. II.
Chapter 432 : Rental Property Good Neighbor Act
The Township hereby enacts this ordinance under the power of N.J.S.A. 40:48-2.12n et seq., holding landlords to standards of responsibility in the selection of tenants and supervision of the rental premises, requiring that under certain circumstances, as hereinafter in described, such landlords may be required to post adequate bond against the consequences of disorderly behavior of their tenants, and in the case of subsequent violations forfeit such bond, in whole or part, in compensation for the consequences of such behavior.
To assure impartiality in the administration of this ordinance, hearings of any alleged violation of this ordinance shall be prosecuted by a duly appointed Township Prosecutor, and one of the Township's Municipal Court Judges shall act as hearing officer, or any other licensed attorney of this state who shall not be an owner or lessee of any real property within the municipality, nor hold any interest in the assets of or profits arising from the ownership or lease of such property may act as hearing officer if properly appointed by resolution of the Mayor and Council to so provide hearing officer services.
A person designated pursuant to § 432-1B of this ordinance as allowed under N.J.S.A 40:48-2.12p to hear and determine proceedings.
The person or persons who own or purport to own a building in which there is rented or offered for rent housing space for living or dwelling under either a written or oral lease, which building contains no more than four dwelling units. In the case of a mobile home park, "landlord" shall mean the owner of an individual dwelling unit within the mobile home park.
A complaint which may form the basis for proceedings in accordance with § 432-3A (see also N.J.S.A.40:48-2.12q).
If in any twelve-month period two complaints, on separate occasions, of conduct upon or in proximity to any rental premises, and attributable to the acts or incitements of any of the tenants of those premises, have been substantiated by prosecution and conviction in any court of competent jurisdiction as a violation of any provision of Title 2C of the New Jersey Statutes or any municipal ordinance governing disorderly conduct, the Director of Community Development and Inspections may institute proceedings to require the landlord of those premises to post a bond against the consequences of future incidents of the same character. However, the Director of Community Development and Inspections must provide the landlord at least 30 days' written notice after the first complaint for the second complaint to be considered a second incident under this ordinance.
In the event a tenant is convicted of any of the conduct described in Subsection A of this section, the Director of Community Development and Inspections shall cause notice advising that the conduct specified has occurred to be served on the landlord, in person or by registered mail, at the address appearing on the tax records of the municipality; and
The Director of Community Development and Inspections shall cause to be served upon the landlord, in person or by registered mail to the address appearing on the tax records of the municipality, notice advising of the institution of such proceedings, together with particulars of the substantiated complaints upon which those proceedings are based, and of the time and place at which a hearing will be held in the matter, which shall be in the Municipal Building, Municipal Court or other public place within the municipality, and which shall be no sooner than 30 days from the date upon which the notice is served or mailed.
At the hearing convened pursuant to Subsection B of this section, the hearing officer shall give full hearing to both the complaint of the municipality and to any evidence in contradiction or mitigation that the landlord, if present or represented and offering such evidence, may present. The hearing officer may consider, to the extent deemed relevant by the hearing officer, prior complaints about the residents of the property, even if those complaints did not result in a conviction. At the conclusion of the hearing, the hearing officer shall determine whether the landlord shall be required to post a bond in accordance with the terms of the ordinance.
Any bond required to be posted shall be in accordance with the judgment of the hearing officer, in light of the nature and extent of the offenses indicated in the substantiated complaints upon which the proceedings are based, to be adequate in the case of subsequent offenses to make reparation for (1) damages likely to be caused to public or private property and damages consequent upon disruption of affected residents' rights of fair use and quiet possession of their premises; (2) securing the payment of fines and penalties likely to be levied for such offenses; and (3) compensating the municipality for the costs of repressing and prosecuting such incidents of disorderly behavior; but no such bond shall be in an amount less than $500 or more than $5,000. The municipality may enforce the bond thus required by action in the Superior Court and shall be entitled to an injunction prohibiting the landlord from making or renewing any lease of the affected premises for residential purposes until that bond or equivalent security, in satisfactory form and amount, has been deposited with the municipality.
A bond or other security deposited in compliance with Subsection D of this section shall remain in force for a period of not less than two or more than four years as determined by the hearing officer. Upon the lapse of the specified period, the landlord shall be entitled to the discharge thereof, unless prior thereto further proceedings leading to a forfeiture or partial forfeiture of the bond or other security shall have been had under Section 5 of P.L. 1993, c. 127, in which case the security shall be renewed, in an amount and for a period that shall be specified by the hearing officer.
If, during the period for which a landlord is required to give security pursuant to § 432-3, a substantiated complaint is recorded against the property in question, the Director of Community Development and Inspections may institute proceedings against the landlord for the forfeiture or partial forfeiture of the security, for an extension as provided in § 432-3E, of the period for which such security is required, or for an increase in the amount of security required, or for any or all of those purposes.
Any forfeiture or partial forfeiture of security shall be determined by the hearing officer solely in accordance with the amount deemed necessary to provide for the compensatory purposes set forth in § 432-3D. Any decision by the hearing officer to increase the amount or extend the period of the required security shall be determined in light of the same factors set forth in subsection § 432-3D and shall be taken only to the extent that the nature of the substantiated complaint or complaints out of which proceedings arise under this section indicates the appropriateness of such change in order to carry out the purposes of this act effectually. The decision of the hearing officer in such circumstances shall be enforceable in the same manner as provided in subsection § 432-3D.