PER CURIAM.
Plaintiffs appeal the Law Division's dismissal of their action in lieu of prerogative writs against defendants Frances Mehnert and the Bradley Beach Board of Adjustment. We affirm.
We discern the following facts and procedural history from the record on appeal.
Mehnert owns a lot with a two-family residence on the corner of Ocean Avenue and Cliff Avenue. The property is in the Residential Beachfront Zone, which allows single— and two-family houses, garden apartments, and townhouses. The lot is irregularly shaped and undersized.
In January 2010, Mehnert sought permission from the Board to demolish the existing two-family residence and construct a single-family house. She also sought the bulk variances necessary to build the new house.
The Board considered Mehnert's variances on February 18, March 18, April 22, and June 2, 2010. She revised her plan several times to address the concerns expressed by the public and the Board at the hearings. On July 15, the Board approved the application by a vote of five to two.
The Board passed a resolution memorializing the grant of the variances on August 19. Variances were granted as followed:
Variances were also granted for the driveway, which was to be sixteen feet wide with an eighteen-foot curb cut, in contrast to the zoning ordinance's maximum of ten-foot-wide driveways with twelve-foot curb cuts. The proposed driveway was also only seven feet long whereas the zoning ordinance requires driveways to be at least twenty feet.
The Board granted the variances subject to several conditions, including a deed restriction that the property would remain a single-family dwelling, installation of a pedestrian sensor system on the driveway, replacement of a curb and sidewalk, relocation of a retaining wall, installation of drywells, the pushing back of a bay window, location of the air conditioning units on the north side of the property, relocation of the fireplace vent, lowering of the roofline, and starting construction within two years of approval.
Plaintiffs filed their complaint in lieu of prerogative writs on October 8. After a pretrial conference, the trial judge remanded the matter to the Board for a public hearing with respect to the proposed pedestrian sensor system.
The Board held the remand hearing on February 17, 2011. After the hearing, the Board voted to approve the application without the pedestrian sensor system. The application was approved by a vote of six to one. Vice Chairman Michael Conoscenti changed his vote to "yes," explaining that,
The resolution memorializing the decision contained additional changes that were not discussed at the hearing. Although the minimum front yard requirement was maintained at twenty-five feet with only 2.25 feet provided, the resolution added that "[t]he bumpout on the north side of building on Cliff Avenue front yard was reduced... so that the front yard increases to 3.75 [feet]." The maximum building coverage of the lot was also increased, from 50.5% to 62.7%.
The parties returned to the trial judge for further argument on August 2. On August 30, the judge issued a written opinion in which he rejected most of plaintiffs' procedural arguments. However, the judge held that the Board's resolution was legally insufficient because it did not make findings regarding the positive and negative criteria for granting a variance. He ordered "a remand to the Board for reconsideration and specific factual findings." In his order, the judge required the Board to "hold a hearing with notice to all parties to prepare and adopt a new Resolution within forty-five (45) days."
The Board held the second remand hearing on October 20. The Board's counsel advised the Board that plaintiffs' counsel should be permitted to speak, but should not be "allowed to suggest that [Board members] should be able to change their vote once they've approved the resolution." He explained that the remand vote was confined to whether the proposed resolution memorializing the Board's most recent decision accurately reflected the reasons for its actions. He specifically told the members that "they can't change their vote" on the merits of the variances.
At the conclusion of the hearing, the Board voted to approve the resolution prepared by counsel, as amended at the hearing. Conoscenti, who had become chairman, expressed some concern regarding the resolution because he did not agree with the requirement for two on-site parking spaces. He went on to say "I'm approving something even though I don't agree." The Board's counsel responded "I would rather not talk about it.... [T]he only thing that happens here tonight is to memorialize the resolution as drafted." All members present who had previously voted in favor of the application voted to approve the resolution.
The resolution stated that the application advanced the purposes of zoning, based on the following:
The resolution also found that the negative criteria for bulk variance relief had been met:
The parties then returned to court. Plaintiffs challenged the Board's action on the remand, arguing that they should have been allowed to reargue the merits of the decision and that the Board members should not have been precluded from changing their votes. They also challenged the grant of the variance application as arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable.
The trial judge heard oral arguments on May 9, 2012. In a July 6 written opinion, the judge rejected plaintiffs' arguments concerning the conduct of the remand hearing.
The judge also explained his reasons for upholding the variance and dismissing plaintiffs' complaint. This appeal followed.
On appeal, plaintiffs argue that the judge erred in upholding the Board's action at the second remand hearing and in finding that the Board's approval of the variance was not arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable.
With respect to the first issue, the law is clear that objectors to a zoning decision are entitled to "a fair hearing consistent with fundamental standards of due process."
The core purpose of the last remand was for the Board to adopt a resolution setting forth the reasons for its action. Under
The Supreme Court has noted that "the key to sound municipal decision-making is a clear statement of reasons for the grant or denial of a variance."
The resolution takes precedence over comments by individual board members:
Although Conoscenti expressed some hesitation because he disagreed with the aspect of the Board's decision concerning on-site parking, neither he nor any other member of the Board expressed a desire to change the vote on the overall issue. And, even if Conoscenti had changed back to his original "no" vote, the variance would have been approved.
Because we see no sign of a due process violation or other fundamental unfairness in the remand procedure, we defer to the trial judge's ultimate conclusion that, although perhaps flawed, the conduct of the final remand hearing was not so inconsistent with his directions that the results should be invalidated. The remand required the Board to adopt a resolution articulating its findings and conclusions, and it did so.
We now turn to plaintiffs' argument that the Board's action was arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable.
"It is well-settled that a decision of a zoning board may be set aside only when it is `arbitrary, capricious or unreasonable.'"
Under
This provision, which was added in 1984 to broaden the subsection (c) variance, allows for "a very narrow band of cases in which the standard would fall somewhere between the traditional standards of `hardship,' on the one hand, and `special reasons,' on the other."
The grant of a c(2) variance "must be rooted in the purposes of zoning and planning itself and must advance the purposes of the [Municipal Land Use Law (MLUL)]."
We reject plaintiffs' argument that the Board's actions were arbitrary, capricious, and unreasonable (1) because the Board members who voted in favor of approval did not specifically voice the reasons reflected in the resolution memorializing their decision and (2) because some of the statements by members of the Board were insufficient or not appropriate reasons for granting a variance. As outlined above, we look to the Board's resolution rather than the statements of individual members in reviewing the Board's action.
On the merits, we affirm the Law Division's dismissal of plaintiffs' action essentially for the reasons stated by Judge Lawrence M. Lawson in his thoughtful, comprehensive written opinion of July 6, 2012, adding only the following.
The applicable standard of review is not whether we believe the Board reached the right decision, but only whether the decision reached by the Board finds support in the record and is consistent with applicable law. That reasonable minds could differ on the merits is also not determinative, especially in light of the deference owed by us to the Board's extensive knowledge of local conditions.
Mehnert's expert testified before the Board that the master plan sought to encourage year-round single-family homes and to maintain the single-family nature of the neighborhood. He also testified that the Master Plan "identifies the provision of off-street parking as a paramount concern," which was confirmed by plaintiffs' expert. The master plan also encouraged aesthetically pleasing development, which is identified as a purpose of the MLUL.
With respect to the negative criteria, the Board also relied on the testimony of Mehnert's expert, which the Board had every right to do.
Judge Lawson determined, supported in the record.
Affirmed.