Holgate Property Associates v. Township of Howell
Case Date: 07/29/1996
Docket No: SYLLABUS
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(This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for
the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please
note that, in the interests of brevity, portions of any opinion may not have been summarized).
HOLGATE PROPERTY ASSOCIATES V. TOWNSHIP OF HOWELL, ET AL. (A-127-95)
Argued March 12, 1996 -- Decided July 29, 1996
HANDLER, J., writing for a unanimous Court.
The issue on this appeal is whether use of property involving a sludge-derived product (SDP) is
eligible for exemption by the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) from the formal permitting
requirements of the Solid Waste Management Act (SWMA). A related issue is whether the SWMA, in its
application to SDPs, preempts local zoning and other police power laws, and thus bars the exercise of
municipal authority over activities involving SDPs.
Holgate Property Associates (Holgate) owned property in Howell Township that had been used as a
sand and gravel quarry since 1930. Holgate operated the property for over ten years pursuant to a township
soil-removal permit, issued in accordance with the local soil-removal ordinance. Holgate had used the
property for both soil removal and clay and topsoil mixing, and had made large distributions of soil to a
landfill in Monmouth County.
In 1989, Holgate transported composted sludge to its quarry from Philadelphia to use as soil
conditioner to reclaim the land on a part of its property. The DEP authorized an NJPDES permit
exemption for that activity. The DEP provided Howell Township with a copy of that exemption. The
Township did not object at that time.
The Middlesex County Utilities Authority (MCUA) operates a sludge-processing facility. On
February 26, 1991, the DEP issued a NJPDES permit authorizing the MCUA to process sludge and to
distribute the resulting SDP. The DEP also issued a separate permit authorizing the MCUA to "Produce
and Store Sludge-Derived Product Mixtures" at the Holgate property "for the Distribution to Landscapers
and Other End Users." Pursuant to those permits, Holgate began to transport SDP from the MCUA facility
to its quarry for use in mixing with sand and topsoil.
In July 1993, local residents complained of strong odors and contended that SDP-runoff was finding
its way into nearby streams. Howell Township scheduled a meeting with Holgate to discuss its operations at
the quarry. Immediately before the meeting was to begin, Howell Township served Holgate with a Stop
Work Order that required Holgate to apply to the Zoning Board of Adjustment (Board) for an
interpretation and/or use variance for this procedure within ten days. On August 18, 1993, Holgate filed an
interpretation application with the Board, and a hearing was scheduled for September 21, 1993.
A day before the hearing was scheduled, Holgate filed a complaint in support of an Order to Show
Cause, seeking to enjoin enforcement of the Stop Work Order and to obtain a declaration that the SWMA
preempted Howell Township from enforcing its zoning and soil removal ordinance. After a hearing on the
preemption issue, the court held that the SWMA generally preempts other local government regulations
because it presents a comprehensive statutory and regulatory scheme that completely occupies the field of
solid waste management, even though general statutory authority exists for local regulation of health and
safety issues. The court then ruled that the Stop Work Order was an attempt to regulate sludge
management that conflicted with the legislative scheme and obstructed the legislative objective of a
comprehensive statewide approach to sludge management and, therefore, was preempted. The court
restrained enforcement of the Stop Work Order and Howell Township appealed.
The Appellate Division reversed, framing the issues in terms of the procedural requirements that the
DEP must fulfill for its decisions to have preemptive effect over municipal zoning laws in respect of the site
used for the processing and distribution of SDPs. The Appellate Division essentially held that the SWMA
does not by itself preempt local regulation; rather, it is the adoption of the district plan under the SWMA
that gives the SWMA preemptive effect. Therefore, the court concluded that the DEP, though having the
interim or transitional power, in the absence of a district plan, to approve a site for SDP processing, does not
thereby preempt local authority over such activities unless it complies with the "basic planning procedures
and criteria of the SWMA before approving a facility." Applying that interpretation to the facts, the court
concluded that the DEP failed to conform with the SWMA because the MCUA's permit exemption
application did not provide adequate information for the DEP to consider local concerns, and the DEP did
not consult with Howell Township or the district's Advisory Solid Waste Council, or hold a public hearing as
otherwise required under the SWMA.
The Supreme Court granted Holgate's petition for certification, which the DEP joined.
HELD: The approval of the permit exemption for the operation of a sludge-derived product (SDP) site does
not require the public-notice procedures, under the Solid Waste Management Act, applicable to the
approval of a solid waste facility. However, the DEP should give notice to affected municipalities
and consider their public health and safety concerns and zoning and land-use regulations when
deciding whether a facility using SDPs will be exempt from permitting requirements.
1. In passing the SWMA, the Legislature understood that the management of solid waste affects matters of
public policy and important concerns relating to the public health, safety and welfare. The Legislature
recognized that the management of solid waste should be coordinated as a statewide system but that it
entails a degree of expertise beyond the capacities and interests of local government. Nevertheless, because
of the significant impact that state-level decisions would have throughout the State, the management of solid
waste was required to be effectuated at the local level and to involve maximum government and public
participation at that level. The Legislature's scheme for sludge management contemplates that an SDP that
meets certain requirements is essentially a beneficial product and, therefore, is not subject to extensive
regulation. However, to protect ground and surface water, sites where SDPs are handled, stored or disposed
are required to obtain a NJPDES permit. (pp. 7-10)
2. The Appellate Division misapprehended the critical difference between sludge and sludge-derived
products. As a result, the court failed to stress the policies underlying the SWMA's treatment of sludge, and,
particularly, the importance of SDPs as the means through which sludge can be effectively managed and
ultimately disposed. The approval of the permit exemption for the operation of an SDP site does not require
the public-notice procedures applicable to the approval of a solid waste facility. Under the SWMA, the
individual-site approvals of SDP sites do not invoke, and should not be hampered by, the procedural
requirements otherwise applicable to solid-waste facilities. Consistent with the legislative scheme of the
SWMA, there should be substantial deference afforded to the DEP as the administrative agency charged with
the regulation of the operations of the entities disposing of SDPs. The DEP's regulations are within its
delegated authority under the statute and, thus, are to be afforded deference. (pp. 10-13) 3. Although the statute and regulations do not require formal public notice or participation in the approval process by local government and the public, there is an implied duty on the part of the DEP to consider local concerns that will be affected by the operation at the proposed site. An implied duty of the state administrative agency to give notice to the public may be recognized where the exercise of that agency's powers has a distinctive impact on a particular locality and its citizens. The statement of public policy by the Legislature in passing the SWMA places a burden on the DEP to consider local concerns in deciding whether to exempt a certain SDP-using facility from formal permitting requirements. The failure to give notice to affected municipalities raises the risk that the DEP's ultimate decision will not give sufficient weight to relevant matters affecting appropriate land uses in public health and safety. Such a decision would
constitute an abuse of discretion. That requirement does not necessitate a plenary or general public hearing.
It is sufficient that the local government and the public are duly notified and given the opportunity to express
their views on a proposed use of the site. (pp. 13-17)
4. Because this opinion announces a new administrative rule that could potentially require DEP to revisit all
outstanding permit exemptions, it shall not be given retroactive effect. (p. 17)
Judgment of the Appellate Division is REVERSED.
JUSTICE O'HERN, concurring in the judgment and the opinion of the Court, writes separately
simply to observe that the opinion does not suggest that the DEP's exclusive authority to regulate the sale
and distribution of SDPs would enable it to convert a residential neighborhood into a gravel pit, quarry or
nursery. Rather, if such uses exist in the community, it would not be an abuse of discretion for the DEP to
authorize a related use; and conversely, if such uses are barred, the community may interpose legitimate
objections to the site, and any decision authorizing such use would be an abuse of discretion.
JUSTICES POLLOCK, GARIBALDI, STEIN and COLEMAN join in JUSTICE HANDLER's
opinion. JUSTICE O'HERN filed a separate concurring opinion.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
HOLGATE PROPERTY ASSOCIATES, a New
Jersey partnership,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
TOWNSHIP OF HOWELL and THOMAS
SAVINO, ENGINEERING COORDINATOR,
Defendants-Respondents,
and
ZONING BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT OF
HOWELL TOWNSHIP,
Defendant.
Argued March 12, 1996 -- Decided July 29, 1996
On certification to the Superior Court,
Appellate Division, whose opinion is reported
at
283 N.J. Super. 311 (1995).
Nancy G. Wright argued the cause for
appellant (Bathgate, Wegener & Wolf,
attorneys).
Dennis M. Crawford argued the cause for
respondents (McLaughlin, Bennett, Gelson &
Cramer, attorneys; William P. Gilroy, on the
brief).
Judeth Piccinini Yeany, Deputy Attorney
General, argued the cause for amicus curiae,
State of New Jersey, Department of
Environmental Protection (Deborah T. Poritz,
Attorney General of New Jersey, attorney;
Mary C. Jacobson, Assistant Attorney General,
of counsel).
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
In this case, the Department of Environmental Protection
authorized a property owner to use a sludge-derived product to
make topsoil at a site that had long been used for soil removal.
As a result of complaints by neighbors regarding the smell and
concerns expressed about contamination of the water supply, the
municipality in which the site was located issued an order
prohibiting the owner from further use of the sludge-derived
product. It also required the owner to apply for authorization
for that use of its property under the local zoning laws. Holgate Property Associates ("Holgate") owned property in Howell Township ("the Township), which had been used as a sand and gravel quarry since 1930. Holgate operated the property for over ten years pursuant to a township soil-removal permit, issued in accordance with the local soil-removal ordinance, which allowed such activity as a permitted non-conforming use. Holgate had used the property for both soil removal and clay and topsoil mixing, and had made large distributions of soil to the Lone Pine Landfill in Monmouth County. In 1989, Holgate transported composted sludge to its quarry from Philadelphia to use as a soil conditioner to reclaim the land on a part of its property. The Department of Environmental Protection ("DEP") authorized a permit exemption for that activity, denominated as "NJPDES Permit Exemption to Utilize Compost Generated by the City of Philadelphia at the Holgate Property Associates Sand and Gravel Pit as a Soil Amendment for Reclamation and Revegetation." The DEP provided the Township with a copy of the exemption. The Township apparently made no objection at the time. The Middlesex County Utilities Authority ("MCUA"), operates a sludge-processing facility. On February 26, 1991, the DEP issued a NJPDES permit authorizing the MCUA to process sludge and to distribute the resulting sludge-derived product ("SDP"). The DEP also issued a separate permit authorizing the MCUA to "Produce and Store Sludge-Derived Product Mixtures" at the
Holgate property "for the Distribution to Landscapers and Other
End Users."
enforcement of the Stop Work Order and to obtain a declaration
that the Solid Waste Management Act, N.J.S.A. 13:1E-1 to 207,
("SWMA") preempted the Township from enforcing its zoning and
soil removal ordinances. The court held a hearing on the
preemption issue on October 4, 1993.
comprehensive statutory and regulatory scheme that completely
occupies the field of solid waste management, even though general
statutory authority exists for local regulation of health and
safety issues. The court cited numerous cases holding SWMA
preemptive of local attempts to regulate solid waste facilities
and concluded:
The court then ruled that the Stop Work Order was an attempt to
regulate sludge management that conflicted with the legislative
scheme and obstructed the legislative objective of a
comprehensive statewide approach to sludge management, and
therefore was preempted. The court restrained enforcement of the
Stop Work Order, and the Township appealed.
The essential holding of the Appellate Division is that the
SWMA does not by itself preempt local regulation; rather, it is
the adoption of the district plan (including the mandated public
hearings and comment period) under the SWMA that gives the SWMA
preemptive effect. Id. at 319. Therefore, the court concluded
that the DEP, though having the interim or transitional power, in
the absence of a district plan, to approve a site for SDP
processing, does not thereby preempt local authority over such
activities unless it complies with the "basic planning procedures
and criteria of the SWMA before approving a facility." Id. at
321. The court believed that its interpretation would reduce the
risk that interim approval of a site would conflict with the
district plan. Ibid. Applying that interpretation to the facts,
the court concluded that the DEP failed to conform with the SWMA
because the MCUA's permit exemption application did not provide
adequate information for the DEP to consider local concerns, and
the DEP did not consult with the Township or the district's
advisory solid waste council, or hold a public hearing as
otherwise required under the SWMA. Id. at 322; see also N.J.S.A.
13:1E-2b(1), 13:1E-20b(2)(c), 13:1E-23c, 13:1E-45c.
It is clear that in passing the SWMA, the Legislature understood that the management of solid waste affects matters of
public policy and important concerns relating to the public
health, safety and welfare. A.A. Mastrangelo, Inc. v. Dep't of
Envtl. Protection,
90 N.J. 666, 670 (1982). It recognized that
the management of solid waste should be coordinated as a
statewide system and that it entails a degree of expertise that
transcends the capacities and interests of local government.
N.J.S.A. 13:1E-2a. Nevertheless, the Legislature appreciated the
significant impact that state-level decisions governing the
management of solid waste would have throughout the state. It
therefore required that the management of solid waste must be
effectuated at the local level and must involve maximum
government and public participation at that level. N.J.S.A.
13:1E-2b. The SWMA contemplates local participation in
management decisions through local solid waste districts, which
are charged with the responsibility to develop a solid waste
management plan. N.J.S.A. 13:1E-2b(2). The Act also mandates
public participation to be accomplished by public notice and
public hearings and comment periods, as well as consultation with
district councils consisting of water and waste agency members,
mayors and environmentalists. N.J.S.A. 13:1E-2b(3), 13:1E-7,
13:1E-20, 13:1E-23. It also envisions the inclusion of the solid
waste industry in the decisional process in recognition of the
relevance of marketing concerns and market dynamics in the
management and disposition of solid waste. N.J.S.A. 13:1E-2b(5),
13:1E-20b(1).
The DEP is primarily responsible for the regulation of solid
waste management, through development of a statewide plan, and
through regulatory and supervisory control of new and existing
facilities. N.J.S.A. 13:1E-4, 13:1E-6. Most regulation is
accomplished through the registration and permit system. See
ibid. The DEP has exempted certain types of facilities, however,
including those engaging in the land application of certain non-hazardous wastes, including some SDPs, because they pose little
or no threat to human health or the environment. N.J.A.C. 7:26-1.8; see also N.J.S.A. 13:1E-4a. Those facilities are still
required to obtain a NJPDES permit, however. N.J.A.C. 7:26-1.8;
see also N.J.A.C. 7:14A.
sludge -- contamination of the ground and surface water -- the
Legislature required that sludge that meets DEP criteria for land
application "shall be of sufficient quality to be disposed of in
a land-based manner without degrading the environment or posing a
threat to human health." N.J.S.A. 58:10A-40.
As a result, the appellate court failed to stress the policies
underlying the SWMA's treatment of sludge, and, particularly, the
importance of SDPs as the means through which sludge can be
effectively managed and ultimately disposed. The Appellate
Division thus underemphasized the technologies designed to
encourage and provide beneficial, useful and safe ways to dispose
sludge. The court similarly failed to appreciate the legislative
and administrative policies of facilitating free-market methods
to address solid-waste management difficulties through the
conversion of sludge into SDPs that have commercial value.
sites, the inclusion of which would be required. N.J.S.A. 13:1E-45a; 13:1E-45c.
distribution centers, severely interfering with the disposition
of SDPs and, ultimately, with the handling and disposition of
sludge itself. It would have the potential, as observed by the
DEP, to lead to disastrous results because over one hundred SDP
disposal sites around the state would become subject to heavy
regulation entailing extensive local participation.
The question may fairly be raised, however, whether the failure to consider municipal zoning and land-use regulations applicable to the proposed SDP-distribution site and other local health and safety concerns related to the proposed use of such a site can constitute a sound exercise of administrative discretion. Although the statute and regulations do not require formal public notice or participation in the approval process by local government and the public, we find that there is an implied
duty on the part of the DEP to consider local concerns that will
be affected by the operation at the proposed site.
adoption of the new regulations. Affording claimant such notice
is a matter of fairness." Id. at 398.
We find the reasoning of those cases instructive in our consideration of whether there is an implied duty on the part of
the DEP to consider and weigh local concerns in the permit
exemption process. We consider that issue in light of our
conclusion that the SWMA has preempted the area of solid waste
management, including the regulation of sludge and sludge-derived
products. See A.A. Mastrangelo, Inc., supra, 90 N.J. at 670.
given the opportunity to express their views on the proposed use
of the site. See, e.g., High Horizons Dev. Co. v. Dep't of
Transp.,
120 N.J. 40, 52-53 (1990).
The judgment of the Appellate Division is reversed.
JUSTICES POLLOCK, GARIBALDI, STEIN and COLEMAN join in
JUSTICE HANDLER's opinion. JUSTICE O'HERN filed a separate
concurring opinion.
HOLGATE PROPERTY ASSOCIATES, a New
Jersey partnership,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
TOWNSHIP OF HOWELL and THOMAS
SAVINO, ENGINEERING COORDINATOR,
Defendants-Respondents,
and
ZONING BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT OF
HOWELL TOWNSHIP,
Defendant.
O'HERN, J., concurring. I concur in the opinion and judgment of the Court. I write separately simply to observe that the opinion does not suggest or intimate that the Department of Environmental Protection's exclusive authority to regulate the sale and distribution of soil-derived products (SDPs) would enable it to convert a residential neighborhood into a gravel pit, quarry, or nursery. Rather, the effect of the legislative scheme is that if such uses exist in a community, it would not be an abuse of discretion for the DEP to authorize a related SDP use; and, conversely, if such uses are barred, the community could interpose strong and legitimate objections to the introduction of a site for SDPs, and a decision authorizing such a use would be an abuse of discretion.
NO. A-127 SEPTEMBER TERM 1995
HOLGATE PROPERTY ASSOCIATES,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
TOWNSHIP OF HOWELL and THOMAS
Defendants-Respondents,
and
ZONING BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT OF
Defendant.
DECIDED July 29, 1996
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