Court Opinion

ID: 4430181
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-08-20 19:37:05.996373+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:50:57.308557
License: Public Domain

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
                               APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
        This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court." Although it is posted on the
     internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.

                                                         SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
                                                         APPELLATE DIVISION
                                                         DOCKET NO. A-4543-16T1

MARC E. GODLEWSKI, and
THERESA GODLEWSKI,

           Plaintiffs-Appellants,

v.

BOROUGH OF STONE HARBOR,
ZONING BOARD OF STONE HARBOR,
JOANNE MASCIA, and MICHAEL
KOOCHEMBERE,

     Defendants-Respondents.
__________________________________

                    Argued June 26, 2018 – Decided October 29, 2018

                    Before Judges Nugent and Accurso.

                    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
                    Division, Cape May County, Docket No. L-0351-16.

                    Fred S. Dubowsky argued the cause for appellants.

                    Frank Guaracini, III, argued the cause for respondents
                    Borough of Stone Harbor, Joanne Mascia and Michael
                    Koochembere (Blaney & Karavan, PC, attorneys; Frank
                    Guaracini, III, on the brief).

                    Andrew D. Catanese argued the cause for respondent
                    Stone Harbor Zoning Board of Adjustment (Monzo
            Catanese Hillegas, PC, attorneys; Daniel S. Reeves, on
            the brief).

PER CURIAM

      This is an action in lieu of prerogative writs.        Plaintiffs, Marc E.

Godlewski and Theresa Godlewski, owned what was once a nonconforming

duplex located on three lots in the Borough of Stone Harbor. After obtaining

approval of their application and proposal "to expand a nonconforming

structure" to convert it to a single-family residence, they demolished it, leaving

in place only the foundation and a wall. They now appeal a Law Division order

that upheld the action of Borough officials who revoked their zoning permit and

issued a stop work order. Because the Borough's Zoning Board of Adjustment

(the "Board" or the "Zoning Board") granted the variances for the renovation

and expansion of a nonconforming structure, and because the structure for which

the Board granted the variances did not exist after plaintiffs demolished it, we

affirm the Law Division order.

      The structure plaintiffs owned was located on Eighty-eighth Street on

three lots designated as Lots 84, 86.02, and 88.03 in Block 88.03 on the Borough

tax map (collectively, "the Property"). From a bird's-eye view, the Property's

shape resembles a flag atop a flagpole. The "pole" section, lot 84, is twenty-

five feet wide, 110 feet deep, and fronts at the bottom on Eighty-Eighth Street.

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The rear or flag portion of the property, according to the Board's Resolution,

"measures only 34 feet by 70 feet, making any reasonable use of the lot

impossible absent relief from the 25' rear yard setback requirement."

      In September 2010, the Board granted plaintiffs' application for the

variances needed to convert the duplex to a single-family residence. Three

months later, in January 2011, the Board granted plaintiffs' second application

"to expand a nonconforming structure." In their second application, plaintiffs'

described the proposed expansion:

            The Applicant proposes the following: construct an
            entry platform and stairs on the north side of the
            dwelling; construct an addition the width of the
            structure on the east side and the west side; construct a
            second story deck on the east side; and alter the existing
            nonconforming shed so that the setbacks and distance
            to the dwelling are maintained.

Plaintiffs' application included a plot plan, proposed first and second floor plans,

and elevations of the front, rear, and sides of the proposed renovations.

      Following an objector's appeal, Buckley v. Godlewski, No. A-0634-11

(App. Div. Mar. 26, 2013), and a remand hearing before the Board, the Board

determined plaintiff's second application was sufficiently different from the first

so as not to be precluded by the doctrine of res judicata. The Board adopted

Resolution No. 789-2010-Supp "that the Second Approvals granted pursuant to

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Resolution No. 789-2010 remain in full force and effect." Although the same

objector appealed the Board's decision to the Law Division and then to the

Appellate Division, this court dismissed the appeal on March 17, 2015.

      The Board's resolution, No. 789-2010, granted plaintiffs' application for a

"hardship variance . . . pursuant to N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70(c)(1)." According to the

resolution, the Board determined the variance was appropriate due to, among

other things, "the unusual shape and size of the property" and "the location of

the existing home on the lot." Specifically, the Board determined:

            failure to grant the requested relief would result in
            exceptional and undue hardship upon [a]pplicant
            because of the small size and unique shape of the
            subject lot and due to the location of the existing
            structure proposed for expansion, which will not permit
            an addition to reasonably be located in conformance
            with the zoning ordinance.

The resolution referenced plaintiffs' plot plan, which "depict[ed] the

improvements as proposed," and the architectural plans, which depicted the

proposed improvements.

      Meanwhile, plaintiffs had obtained construction and zoning permits.1

Sometime in December 2014, plaintiffs delivered a set of plans for a change to

1
   The construction and zoning permits reference the Board's approval of
plaintiffs' original application in Resolution No. 783-2010.
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the permits. Upon review of the plans, the Borough's zoning official, Joanne

Mascia, learned plaintiffs intended to tear down the walls of the existing

structure. She e-mailed plaintiffs on December 12, 2014, stating that if their

intention was "to demolish the walls or structure be advised you lose your

protected status and you will need to appear before the Zoning [B]oard of

Adjustment for their approval to rebuild a new home in that footprint which is

nonconforming."

      Four days later, on December 16, 2014, following a site inspection in

which she saw that plaintiffs had demolished all but one wall of the structure,

Mascia wrote plaintiffs a letter. In the letter, she notified them she had revoked

their zoning permit, enclosed a stop work order from the Construction Official,

and informed them they had to return to the Board for "relief and approvals."

      Several weeks later, in January 2015, plaintiff, Marc Godlewski, e-mailed

Mascia and said he was "withdrawing my 'proposal' to construct Superior Walls,

since you have interpreted that my intent is to build differently than t he

approvals granted by the Zoning Board. I plan on building the residence as

approved by the Zoning Board . . . ." Mascia promptly replied, informing

plaintiffs their approvals were for a renovation and addition, not a demolition

and new construction. Stating she was "standing firm," she informed plaintiffs

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they must return to the Board for either approvals or an interpretation of her

decision.

      Following plaintiffs' unsuccessful attempts to appeal to the Cape May

County Construction Board of Appeals, which declined jurisdiction because the

disputed issue involved zoning, and to the Law Division, which remanded the

matter to the Zoning Board because plaintiffs had not exhausted their

administrative remedies, the Zoning Board conducted a hearing on August 1,

2016, on plaintiffs' request for an interpretation. The Borough's Zoning Official

and Construction Official testified. Robert Perotti, a self-employed builder,

testified for plaintiffs.

      Mascia testified plaintiffs submitted plans to construct the additions and

renovations after the Board adopted Resolution No. 789-2010-Supp. The plans

showed the existing walls and the "existing things that were to remain in the

nonconforming structure." Based on those plans, she issued the zoning permit.

      In December 2014, "Mr. Godlewski dropped off a set of plans for some

type of a change to the permits that were issued."       The plans were for a

demolition and reconstruction. Mascia inspected the Property and saw that with

the exception of "one little piece" of a wall, the structure was "down." Because

plaintiffs had deviated from the Board approvals and demolished the existing

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structure rather than renovate it, Mascia revoked their zoning permit. She

testified she acted in accordance with the municipal code, which provided:

            67-24. Duties. A zoning officer shall administer and
            enforce Chapter 560, Zoning, of the code of the
            Borough of Stone Harbor. He shall review applications
            for zoning permits and issue and revoke same as the
            circumstances warrant.

      Mascia asked the Construction Official, Michael Koochembere, to

photograph the property and the demolished structure.       He did.    He also

determined "that it was no longer a renovation and it was a demolition." He

revoked the building permit. Koochembere also testified Mr. Godlewski asked

if he could use "'Superior Walls' to construct the housework." In Koochembere's

opinion, that would mean Godlewski "was going to demolish what he had and

construct it with Superior Walls," so he told Godlewski that because his permit

was approved for a renovation only, he would have to resubmit plans and

resubmit a permit update.

      Plaintiffs' witness, Robert Perotti, a self-employed builder for nearly

thirty years, had observed the structure on the Property before and after the

demolition. He testified that though he knew the point could be argued, "there's

no way for those east and west walls to remain in spite of what everyone may

be looking at on the plans." He also testified the plans were "probably some of

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the most ambiguous architectural drawings that I've ever seen." According to

Perotti, in order to leave the walls intact, "one wall would actually sit in bedroom

one and two a little more than three feet off of the exterior wall that was proposed

as a new one." He said "[t]he easterly wall would have run through the master

bedroom and through the master bath, too."

      The Board upheld the actions of the Zoning Officer and Construction

Code official.    In its memorializing resolution, No. 844-2016, the Board

determined the resolution granting the variance, No. 789-2010, was for a

renovation and expansion, not demolition and reconstruction. The Board further

determined "the fact that the existing home was being renovated in its existing

location was a critical fact that went directly to the core of the Board's finding

that the Applicant satisfied the hardship criteria pursuant to N.J.S.A. 40:55D -

70(c)(1)."

      Based on the photographic evidence, the Board concluded the Godlewskis'

actions "have . . . resulted in a quantity of destruction that goes well beyond

partial demolition of the Structure and has resulted in total destruction of the

Structure." The Board further concluded that though the approval granted in

Resolution No. 789-2010 "has never been rescinded or otherwise invalidated,

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the demolition of the Structure which previously existed on the Property renders

that approval moot."

     Plaintiffs filed an action in lieu of prerogative writs, challenging the

Board's decision. In a comprehensive written decision, Judge Julio L. Mendez

upheld the Board's, the Zoning Officer's, and the Construction Official's

decisions. Judge Mendez agreed with the "Zoning Board's position that because

demolition was unanticipated when the Zoning Board approved plaintiffs'

application for renovation and expansion, and because there currently exists no

property to renovate, plaintiffs' actions rendered those approvals moot."

      Judge Mendez recounted the evidence that demonstrated plaintiffs sought

variances to renovate and expand an existing structure, not to demolish and

reconstruct a new one. The judge pointed out that when plaintiffs applied for

their variance, their expert testified the "standard [for a variance] was met by

the location of the existing home on the lot." After reviewing the transcripts of

the hearings before the Board, the judge concluded that the fact the structure on

the property would remain was significant to the Board's decision.

      Addressing the issue of whether the house had been destroyed, Judge

Mendez noted the photographic evidence of the structure made clear "there is

no house left." Moreover, the judge determined that the plans plaintiffs dropped

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off at the Zoning Officer's office "substantially exceeded Resolution 789-2010,

effectively eliminating the structure existing thereon." Noting the undisputed

fact that the structure was non-conforming "because it was situated on an

undersized flag lot and failed to meet minimum side yard and rear yard

setbacks," and relying on common law defining partial and total destruction,

Judge Mendez held plaintiffs had totally demolished the property.

      Because plaintiffs had demolished the property, and because they could

not rebuild it without returning for further zoning approvals, Judge Mendez

found the Borough's officials reasonably revoked plaintiffs' zoning permit and

issued a stop work order. Judge Mendez also concluded the Zoning Board did

not act unreasonably, arbitrarily, or capriciously by upholding the officials'

actions.

      On appeal, plaintiff argues the following points:

            POINT I
            NO AUTHORITY EMPOWERS INVALIDATION OF
            A LEGALL [sic] GRANTED AND JUDICIALLY
            VETTED VARIANCE.

            POINT II
            THE ZONING OFFICIAL'S INVALIDATION OF
            THE VARIANCE AND DIRECTION TO THE
            CONSTRUCTION OFFICIAL TO STOP THE ONSET
            OF CONSTRUCTION WAS UNSUPPORTED.

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            POINT III
            THE    TRIAL  COURT'S  DECISION  AND
            SUBSEQUENT     BOARD    ACTION   ARE
            CONFLICTING AND CONFUSING BECAUSE NO
            JURISDICTION EXISTS FOR THE DIRECTED
            RESULT.

      "There is no question but that the total destruction of a non-conforming

use, whether by design or accident, terminates the use." Cox & Koenig, New

Jersey Zoning and Land Use Administration (2018) (citing Hay v. Bd. of

Adjustment of Fort Lee, 37 N.J. Super. 461 (App. Div. 1955); Barbarisi v. Bd.

of Adjustment, Patterson, 30 N.J. Super. 11 (App. Div. 1954); D'Agostino v.

Jaguar Realty Co., 22 N.J. Super. 74 (Ch. Div. 1952); Devito v. Pearsall, 115
N.J.L. 323 (Sup. Ct. 1935)). Regardless of whether total destruction occurs "by

the owner's design or by accident," the non-conforming use is terminated as is

"the owner's right to continue that use." Motley v. Seaside Park Zoning Bd.,

430 N.J. Super. 132, 144 (App. Div. 2013) (quoting S & S Auto Sales, Inc. v.

Zoning Bd. of Adjustment, 373 N.J. Super. 603, 619-20 (App. Div. 2004)).

      Indisputably, these legal principles apply to a non-conforming structure

as well as a non-conforming use. The current relevant statute, N.J.S.A. 40:55D-

68, provides that "[a]ny non-conforming use or structure . . . may be restored or

repaired in the event of partial destruction thereof." (Emphasis added).

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      We have previously explained that "the test of whether a non-conforming

use or structure may be restored or repaired is whether there has been some

quantity of destruction that surpasses mere partial destruction." Motley, 430
N.J. Super. 144-45. On the record before us, the evidence that plaintiffs totally

destroyed the structure on their property is unassailable. By the time the Zoning

Officer revoked the zoning permit and the Construction Official issued the stop

work order, only the structure's original foundation and a wall, or partial wall,

remained. Consequently, plaintiffs must do more than construct the renovation

for which they received the variance from the Board. They now must reconstruct

the entire structure. Plaintiffs' right to continue the non-conforming use having

ceased, the variance to expand that non-conforming use is moot.

      Plaintiffs' three points on appeal are based on faulty premises. Contrary

to plaintiffs' arguments in their first two points, neither the Zoning Officer nor

the Construction Official invalidated the variance the Board had granted.

Rather, they took appropriate action after plaintiffs submitted new plans that far

exceeded the scope of the variance granted by the Board.

      Similarly, in their third point, plaintiffs assert "[t]he Zoning Officer

declared the variance void and revoked their zoning permit before [construction]

could be begun." Once again, plaintiffs mischaracterize the Zoning Officer's

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action. She did not declare the variance void. Rather, she acted within her

authority, as did the Construction Official when he issued the stop work order.

See N.J.S.A. 40:55D-18 (authorizing "the proper local authorities of the

municipality or an interested party, in addition to other remedies, [to] institute

any appropriate action or proceedings to prevent such unlawful erection,

construction, reconstruction, alteration, repair, conversion, maintenance, or use,

to restrain, correct, or abate" violations of the Municipal Land Use Law,

N.J.S.A. 40:55D-1 to -163); Motley, 430 N.J. Super. at 136 ("revers[ing] the

trial court's decision to nullify the stop work order because N.J.S.A. 40:55D-68

allows a non-conforming structure to be rebuilt only if it has been 'partially'

destroyed." )

      Plaintiffs' arguments are without sufficient merit to warrant further

discussion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).

      Affirmed.

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