PER CURIAM.
Defendant Danielle Weitz appeals the affirmance by the Law Division of her Municipal Court sentence for operating a kennel without a license in violation of an ordinance of the Borough of Franklin Lakes (Borough). We vacate in part, and remand.
Borough Board of Health Municipal Ordinance § 505-1 provides:
The parties agree that, for purposes of § 505-1, "`[k]ennel' means any establishment wherein or whereupon the business of boarding or selling dogs or breeding dogs for sale is carried on, except a pet shop."
In November 2010, the Borough's animal control officer, Carol Tyler, received a complaint about the number of dogs at defendant's house. When Tyler visited defendant's house, defendant explained that she bred, raised, trained, and showed German Shepherds. Within the house, defendant used bedrooms for female dogs with newborn puppies, and had an area for puppies. She also had several cages on the ground floor, and approximately two dozen cages in her basement. At least fifteen of the cages were occupied by dogs, including at least two unneutered male stud dogs and about seven unneutered females available for breeding. Tyler later testified that a German Shepherd female could breed up to twice a year, producing a litter of one to twelve puppies in about sixty-three days.
Defendant told Tyler she was breeding the dogs, and would keep the best one or two puppies for showing, but would sell the other puppies. Defendant explained that she had "a following" of people who come to her for puppies, and that she advertised on the Internet.
Tyler and Majorie Vanacore, a Bergen County Environmental Health Specialist, found that defendant was advertising on the Internet, including the websites of the American Kennel Club (AKC), and the German Shepherd Dog Club (GSDC). Tyler later testified that defendant must have registered herself on the AKC website to advertise her available puppies. On the GSDC website, defendant invited viewers to contact her by phone and email for information on litters and the availability of older puppies.
The AKC's "Online Breeder Classifieds" website listed defendant as one of the "breeders [who] are members of AKC-licensed or member clubs who have AKC-registerable puppies available." That website indicated that defendant had three male and eight female German Shepherds as of February 18, 2011. The AKC website also contained a "Breeder's Profile" for defendant, in which defendant stated that she had been breeding for six to ten years, and would "provide a written bill of sale detailing responsibilities for the buyer and the seller." Defendant also stated that she provides a health guarantee for "the puppies I sell," that she provides the "puppy buyer" with AKC registration applications and other information, and that she would take a puppy back if "the puppy buyer cannot keep a puppy purchased from" her.
On February 20, 2011, Tyler and Vanacore had an appointment to inspect the house. Defendant told Vanacore that she had fifteen adult dogs and eleven puppies in the house. Tyler observed approximately eighteen dogs, not including puppies. Defendant mentioned that two dogs were pregnant, and that she was planning on breeding again. Defendant told Vanacore that she sold dogs.
Within days of the inspection, the Borough issued a complaint-summons to defendant because she had "failed to obtain a license to operate a kennel." On November 30, 2011, apparently waiting to see if the Borough would enact an ordinance limiting the number of dogs in a residence, the Municipal Court held the matter in abeyance for six months, on the condition that defendant was to notify Tyler when two pregnant dogs produced litters so Tyler could count the total number of dogs. Defendant gave oral notice when the litters were produced, but refused to allow Tyler to enter her house to count the dogs.
On July 26, 2012, the Municipal Court clarified that its condition had meant that Tyler could enter defendant's house to count the dogs. The court reserved the Borough's request to hold defendant in contempt, scheduled the matter for trial, and warned that if she was found guilty the sentence would "include an inspection" and, if necessary, "another host of inspections."
At the two-day trial in Municipal Court, Tyler and Vanacore testified and were credited by the court. On October 23, 2012, the court found that "defendant admitted unequivocally that she does sell dogs," and that "she's not breeding to keep dogs," but "to show them [and] to sell them." The court found the evidence was "overwhelming that this is a kennel operation," and imposed a $250 fine and $30 in court costs. The court ordered an inspection to inventory the dogs, ensure they were properly licensed, and determine if any were pregnant.
The Municipal Court additionally ordered that defendant could not "breed dogs until you get a kennel license," and gave defendant ninety days to get the license. When defendant said she might decline to get the license, the court responded that if defendant failed to get a license within ninety days, "then every 30 days thereafter I'm going to have the inspections continue to make sure that you're not breeding [dogs]. And this can go on forever and ever[.]" The court added that it did not need a report on the inspections unless there was a violation.
Defendant sought a trial de novo in the Law Division, Criminal Part, which heard argument on February 25, 2013. Defense counsel stated that defendant would not apply for a kennel license, and objected to the no-breeding order and monthly inspections. The court agreed that defendant was guilty of operating a kennel without a license, and reimposed the sentence. In particular, the court's February 25 order stated: "Defendant is to cease breeding dogs unless she first obtains a license to operate the kennel. If Defendant fails to obtain a license to operate a kennel within ninety days, the Board of Health shall inspect Defendant's residence every thirty days to make sure she is not breeding dogs."
Defendant appeals, challenging the quoted no-breeding and monthly-inspections portions of the order. She raises the following argument:
"A trial court's interpretation of the law and the legal consequences that flow from established facts are not entitled to any special deference."
To determine the penalty for violating § 505-1, we look to Borough Board of Health Ordinance § 505-20, which provides that "[t]he penalties for the violation of any of the provisions of this chapter . . . shall be the same as recited and set forth in Chapter 500, Article IV." In that Article, Borough Board of Health Ordinance § 500-20 provides:
Those provisions do not authorize the no-breeding and monthly-inspections portions of the order. Nor are such sanctions mentioned in the statutes authorizing local boards of health to prescribe penalties for such ordinances.
The Criminal Part believed that the Municipal Court "went one step further, and found that this Municipality, under its police power, has the right to subject this kennel to an inspection by the Board of Health, under their Municipal Ordinance 500-23[]." Borough Board of Health Ordinance § 500-23 provides that "[t]he granting of any license, permit or certificate may be withheld, at the direction of the Board, pending examination, investigation or inspection of the person who, or the premises which, may be the subject matter of the license, permit or certificate under consideration."
Even assuming that § 500-23 can be invoked by a Municipal Court sentencing a defendant for a violation of § 505-1, § 500-23 does not itself authorize the challenged portions of the order. First, § 500-23(A) applies only if a person applies for a license. Second, § 500-23(B)(1) explicitly applies only to licensed establishments. Neither subsection authorizes monthly inspections of a home for which the homeowner has neither applied for nor received a kennel license. Third, § 500-23 does not provide for injunctive relief such as the order's no-breeding provision.
The Borough argues that the no-breeding order and monthly inspections requirements are authorized by the Borough's general police power. This misapprehends the nature of the police power. "`The central feature of plenary state legislative authority is the "police power," which justifies legislation to further the public health, safety, welfare, and morals.'"
The police power statute,
This statute thus "permits municipalities to enact ordinances in support of the police power."
We have stated that "[a] municipal body also has a common-law right to abate a public nuisance by summary proceedings."
"[A]n ordinance violation, commenced on municipal court summons and in which the State acknowledged its burden beyond a reasonable doubt, is a quasi-criminal matter."
Nor have the parties brought to our attention any authority showing that the Municipal Court has the inherent power to enter such an order. "[T]he municipal court is a statutory court and can exercise only the jurisdiction conveyed by statute."
Enforcement of the no-breeding and monthly-inspections provisions is troubling for additional reasons. First, under § 505-1, defendant is barred from operating without a kennel license an establishment where she carries on the business of "breeding dogs for sale,"
Second, the Criminal Part's order requires that "the Board of Health shall inspect Defendant's residence every thirty days." As our Supreme Court has recently reaffirmed, "[t]he Fourth Amendment and the New Jersey Constitution assure the `highest degree of protection to privacy interests within the home.'"
Third, the Criminal Part's order requiring defendant's home to be searched "every thirty days to make sure she is not breeding dogs" authorizes such searches in perpetuity. The Borough asserts that monthly inspections would cease when defendant obtained a kennel license or "stopped operating a kennel." However, as the Municipal Court made clear, the monthly searches "can go on forever and ever" if defendant declines to obtain a kennel license. Nothing in the order stops the monthly inspections if defendant is not "operating a kennel" by breeding dogs for sale, or even if she has stopped breeding dogs entirely. Indeed, the Municipal Court instructed that it did not need to be informed of inspections showing compliance, only an inspection showing a violation.
We recognize the impetus behind the court's order. Defendant set up her home to operate as a substantial dog-breeding facility, which she apparently has conducted for some time. She admitted breeding dogs for sale, and had advertised dogs for sale both by word of mouth and on the Internet. After receiving the complaint, defendant refused to allow Tyler to enter her home to count the dogs, and declined to obtain a kennel license. Although defense counsel represented that defendant would no longer breed dogs for sale, the Borough after lengthy and often bitter litigation was unwilling to take defendant's word that she had ceased selling dogs or breeding dogs for sale. The no-breeding and monthly-inspection provisions of the court's order reflect that lack of trust.
The Borough defends those provisions of the sentence as the only way to ensure that defendant does not breed dogs for sale in violation of the ordinance. We, however, have greater confidence in the Borough's ability to detect and prevent such violations by utilizing civil and administrative remedies, or through the investigatory and prosecutorial tools of criminal law enforcement. Indeed, deterrence of future offenses is one of "`the general purposes of sentencing.'"
The Municipal Court rejected the Borough's request for a maximum sentence and instead imposed the no-breeding and monthly-inspections provisions as part of the sentence. Because we vacate those provisions, we remand to the Municipal Court for resentencing. We do not retain jurisdiction.