COVENTRY SQUARE, INC. V. WESTWOOD ZONING BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT
Case Date: 12/15/1994
Docket No: SYLLABUS
(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).
COVENTRY SQUARE, INC. V. WESTWOOD ZONING BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT, ET AL. (A-26-94)
Argued October 11, 1994 -- Decided December 15, 1994
GARIBALDI, J., writing for a unanimous Court.
Westwood Development Associates (Associates) planned to build an eighteen building, 216-unit
apartment complex in a zone in which apartments were a conditional use. A conditional use is a use that is
neither prohibited throughout the zone nor permitted in every location in the zone. Rather, it is allowed in
locations in the zone where the use meets the conditions set forth in the zoning ordinance.
At the time Associates made application to build the apartment complex, its property was located in the
O3 zone, in which the permitted uses are office buildings, medical laboratories, and research facilities. One
of the conditional uses permitted in that zone are apartments that comply with the specifications of the AP
zone. The AP zone is primarily a residential zone that allows for, among others, apartments for three or
more families. Associates' proposed apartment complex would meet all but two of the bulk specifications of
the AP zone. Specifically, the plan deviates from the rear-yard and the aggregate side-yard setback
requirements. In the AP zone, the aggregate side-yard setback requirement is thirty percent of frontage,
which would be almost 150 feet. Associates' plan has side yards of thirty-three feet each, for an aggregate of
sixty-six feet. The rear-yard setback minimum is forty percent of lot depth, which would require rear-yard
setback of over 300 feet. Associates' plan has a rear-yard setback of seventy-five feet. In addition, the plan
does not comply with two parking design standards of the zoning ordinance.
Associates applied to the Westwood Zoning Board of Adjustment (the Board) for design waivers for
the deviation from parking standards, and for a variance from the rear-yard and aggregate side-yard setback
requirements. At the public hearings held on the application, Associates' witnesses explained the reasons for
the plan's deviation from the rear- and aggregate-side-yard setback requirements. The witnesses testified
regarding the relatively low density of the proposed complex; how well-suited for apartments the site would
be; the fact that the complex would serve as an appropriate transitional use between the single-family
residence to the north and west of the lot and the more industrial uses to its south and east; and the fact that
the complex would be less intrusive to the existing residences than an office building.
The Board adopted a resolution granting the variance and the design waivers and made findings of fact
in support of the statutory special reasons standard. Coventry Square, Inc. (Coventry), an apartment
complex located near Associates' proposed site, filed an action in lieu of prerogative writ challenging the
validity of the Board's resolution. Coventry contended that Associates' failure to comply with the
conditional-use standards rendered its project a prohibited use within the zone, that Associates failed to meet
the stringent standards for a commercial-use variance establishing Medici v. BPR Co., and that the deviations
from parking specifications required variances, which the Board had no authority to grant on the evidence
presented.
The trial court upheld the Board 's resolution, finding that even a minor deviation from a condition
converted a conditional use into a prohibited use, thereby requiring Associates to satisfy the standards for a
use variance. The court, however, determined that housing is an inherently beneficial use, which satisfies the
special reasons standard for a use variance. The court also found that the Board's findings were sufficient to
meet the negative criteria for a use variance.
On appeal, the Appellate Division found that the apartment complex was not an "inherently beneficial"
use, but nevertheless affirmed the Board's decision. The Appellate Division found special reasons set forth
by the Board to support the grant of the variance and also determined that the record supported the Board's
conclusion that Associates' plan satisfied the negative criteria.
The Supreme Court granted Coventry's petition for certification.
HELD: The proof of special reasons that must be adduced by an applicant for a "d" variance from one or
more conditions imposed by ordinance in respect of the conditional use shall be proof sufficient to
satisfy the board of adjustment that the site proposed for the conditional use, in the context of the
applicant's full site plan, continues to be an appropriate site for the use despite the deviations from
one or more conditions imposed by the ordinance.
1. Generally, courts have treated a conditional use that does not comply with all of the conditions of the
ordinance as if it were a prohibited use, imposing on the applicant the same burden of proving special
reasons as would be applicable to use variances. That standard is inappropriate and does not adequately
reflect the significant differences between prohibited uses and conditional uses that do not comply with one
or more of the conditions imposed by ordinance. A conditional-use applicant's inability to comply with some
of the ordinance's conditions need not materially affect the appropriateness of the site for the conditional
use. The burden of proof required to sustain a use variance is too onerous for a conditional-use variance
and its focus is misplaced. Proofs to support a conditional-use variance need only justify the municipality's
continued permission for a use notwithstanding a deviation from one or more conditions of the ordinance.
(pp. 10-17)
2. A conditional-use variance applicant must show that the site will accommodate the problems associated
with the use even though the proposal does not comply with the conditions the ordinance established to
address those problems. (pp. 17-18)
3. In respect of the first prong of the negative criteria, that the variance can be granted without substantial
detriment to the public good, the focus is on the effect on surrounding properties of the grant of the variance
for the specific deviations from the conditions imposed by ordinance. In respect of the second prong of the
negative criteria, that the variance will not substantially impair the intent and purpose of the plan and zoning
ordinance, the board of adjustment must be satisfied that the grant of the conditional-use variance is in
accord with the municipality's legislative determination that the condition should be imposed on all
conditional uses in that zoning district. (p. 18-19)
4. The record supports the grant of a conditional-use variance from the aggregate-side-yard and rear-yard
setback requirements for Associates' apartment complex. The proofs satisfy the special-reasons standard by
demonstrating that the apartment use is suited to the proposed site despite its failure to comply with those
conditions. In addition, the record sustains the Board's conclusion that the negative criteria were satisfied
with respect to both variances. Moreover, the Board did not act arbitrarily or capriciously in granting the
requested design waivers. (pp. 19-22)
Judgment of the Appellate Division is AFFIRMED.
CHIEF JUSTICE WILENTZ and JUSTICES CLIFFORD, HANDLER, POLLOCK, O'HERN and
STEIN join in JUSTICE GARIBALDI's opinion.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
COVENTRY SQUARE, INC.,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
WESTWOOD ZONING BOARD OF
Defendant-Respondent,
and
WESTWOOD DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATES,
Defendant.
Argued October ll, l994 -- Decided December 15, 1994
On certification to the Superior Court, Appellate
Division.
Richard J. Allen, Jr., argued the cause for appellant.
Irving C. Evers argued the cause for respondent.
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
GARIBALDI, J.
The applicant, Westwood Development Associates (Associates), planned to build an apartment complex in a zone in which apartments were a conditional use. (Associates defaulted and did not appear in the proceedings.) Because Associates' plan deviated from conditions imposing a minimum rear-yard setback and a minimum aggregate-side-yard setback, Associates applied to defendant Westwood Zoning Board of Adjustment (the Board) for a variance from those conditions. Associates owns an 8.7-acre tract on Old Hook Road, Westwood, Bergen County. The lot is basically rectangular, with a depth of approximately 800 feet and a width of about 500 feet. The southerly lot line fronts on Old Hook Road, a four-lane, two-way county road. A cemetery is opposite the lot. Directly east of the cemetery on Old Hook Road is the apartment complex of plaintiff, Coventry Square. The rear, northerly lot line of Associate's property abuts Pascack Road, across from which are single-family residences. East of the lot is a Red and Tan Bus Garage (a pre-existing, non-conforming use); east of the garage is Pascack Valley Hospital. The property's westerly lot line abuts the rear yards of single family residences fronting on Sand Road, a street that extends north from Old Hook Road to Pascack Road. There are currently pre-existing, non-conforming uses on Associates' lot: a laundromat, a dry cleaner, and a tank from which the public may purchase propane gas.
At the time Associates made its application to build an
eighteen-building, 216-unit apartment complex, its property was
located in the O3 zone, in which the permitted uses are office
buildings, medical laboratories, and research facilities.
Conditional uses in the O3 zone include certain schools,
hospitals, sports facilities, and apartments that comply with the
specifications of the AP zone. The AP zone, primarily a
residential zone, allows single family dwellings, essential
municipal uses, churches, home occupations, professional offices
occupying up to fifty percent of the first floor of residences,
and apartments for three or more families. The bulk
specifications of the AP zone are: minimum lot area of 15,000
square feet; minimum lot frontage of 150 feet; minimum lot depth
of 100 feet; minimum side yards of twenty feet each, with an
aggregate side yard of thirty percent of lot width; front-yard
setback of twenty feet; rear yard of forty percent of lot depth;
maximum building height of three stories and of thirty-five feet;
and maximum building coverage of thirty percent of the lot. The
AP zone also requires a minimum green area of thirty-five percent
of the lot area, and ten-foot buffers on the side and rear of the
lot where it abuts a residential zone. The ordinance does not
specify a maximum unit-per-acre density for the AP zone; however,
the minimum setbacks and maximum building-coverage specifications
presumably serve to prevent excessive density.
Specifically, the plan deviates from the rear-yard and the
aggregate side-yard setback requirements. The aggregate side
yard setback requirement is thirty percent of frontage, which
would be almost 150 feet. Associates' plan has side yards of
thirty-three feet each, for an aggregate of sixty-six feet. The
rear-yard setback minimum is forty percent of lot depth, which
would require a rear- yard setback of over 300 feet. The plan
has a rear-yard setback of seventy-five feet. Associates' witnesses explained the reasons for the plan's deviation from the rear- and aggregate-side-yard setback requirements. First, they explained that the lot is so deep that a forty-percent-of-depth rear-yard minimum would require a rear-yard setback the length of a football field. Second, they noted that the plan places all parking in the interior of the project. If parking were on the perimeter, the side-yard and rear-yard setbacks would be measured from the lot lines to the beginning of the dwellings, and the setbacks would include the parking mews. The experts explained that, by placing the parking within the complex and the dwelling units closer to the perimeter, Associates reduced the yard measurements but also provided a landscaped, more aesthetic buffer for the neighboring residents than would exterior parking. Moreover, they explained that because the rear and side yards are entirely landscaped, the plan would readily comply with the ten-foot buffer requirements on the north and west sides of the lot, which abut residential zones. Third, the experts noted that the plan's side-yard design is much less intrusive to the Sand Road neighbors than the ordinance mandates. The ordinance requires side yards of at least twenty feet each, and aggregate side yards of at least thirty percent of the frontage. The witnesses observed that if a side yard abuts residences, the ten-foot-buffer requirement prohibits parking within the ten feet of the side yard closest to the residences. Hence, they noted that a plan that meets all the ordinances' conditions could have aggregate side yards of 150 feet, with a
130-foot easterly side yard abutting the bus garage, and merely a
twenty-foot westerly side yard abutting the residences on Sand
Road. Within that twenty-foot side yard, a complying plan could
have parking ten feet from the lot line, so that the neighboring
single-family residences would have cars from the complex as
close as ten feet from their property lines. Associates' plan
provides a thirty-three-foot landscaped buffer on each side, with
no parking in the buffer.
(a) that the granting of the variance would
eliminate a pre-existing non-conforming use
and would replace the use with one more in
keeping with the Zone Plan;
(g) that the proposed use would promote the
general welfare because the site is
particularly suitable for the use intended.
capricious, the Appellate Division stated that "the special
reasons set forth by the Board support the grant of the
variances." The Appellate Division also found that the record
supported the Board's conclusion that the applicant had satisfied
the negative criteria. We granted Coventry Square's petition for
certification, l
36 N.J. 30 (l994), and now affirm the judgment of
the Appellate Division, but for reasons different from those
relied on by that court. Conditional uses were not authorized prior to the enactment of the MLUL, but the Municipal Planning Act, N.J.S.A. 40:55-39b (repealed l975), authorized special-exception uses, the predecessor to conditional uses. That statute authorized only the board of adjustment to approve special-exception uses, and the board retained considerable discretion in the exercise of its authority. See Swimming River Golf & Country Club v. Borough of New Shrewsbury, 30 N.J. 132, 135-36 (1959); Saddle River Country Day Sch. v. Borough of Saddle River, 51 N.J. Super. 589, 604 (App. Div. 1958), aff'd, 29 N.J. 468 (1959). Although special-exception uses were "neither non-conforming nor akin to a variance," Tullo v. Township of Millburn, 54 N.J. Super. 483, 491 (App. Div. 1959), the Municipal Planning Act established both affirmative and negative criteria for granting special exception uses. The affirmative criteria required the board to determine only that the project complied with the ordinance's requirements for the special-exception use. See
Verona, Inc. v. Mayor of West Caldwell,
49 N.J. 274, 284 (1967).
Hence, "[t]he basic difference between a use which is a special
exception and one which requires a variance is that the former is
legislatively permitted in a zone subject to controls whereas the
latter is legislatively prohibited but may be allowed for special
reasons." Id. at 282.
The MLUL defines a conditional use as
Hence, the MLUL shifted jurisdiction over fully complying
conditional uses from the board of adjustment to the planning
board, reflecting the MLUL's recognition that a fully complying
conditional use is essentially equivalent to a permitted use.
meeting the negative criteria." Harvard Enters., Inc. v. Board
of Adjustment,
56 N.J. 362, 370 (1970) (Hall, J., concurring).
meaning into the 'special reasons' standard * * * ." Medici,
supra, 107 N.J. at 11. "Because of the nature of the subject no
precise formula is feasible and each case therefore must turn on
its own circumstances." Kohl v. Mayor of Fair Lawn,
50 N.J. 268,
276 (1967).
formulation of special reasons as requiring proof that "the
subject property was particularly suitable for the proposed
[prohibited] use").
bulk variance." Id. at 171. The court concluded that the
synagogue was an inherently beneficial use, and affirmed the
board's grant of the variance on the basis that the board had
correctly applied the standard for inherently beneficial use
variances established in Sica v. Board of Adjustment, 127 N.J.
l52, 164 (l992). Sugarman, supra, 272 N.J. Super. at 172.
of special reasons to support a variance from one or more
conditions imposed on a conditional use should be relevant to the
nature of the deviation from the ordinance. The burden of proof
required to sustain a use variance not only is too onerous for a
conditional-use variance; in addition, its focus is misplaced.
The use-variance proofs attempt to justify the board of
adjustment's grant of permission for a use that the municipality
has prohibited. Proofs to support a conditional-use variance
need only justify the municipality's continued permission for a
use notwithstanding a deviation from one or more conditions of
the ordinance. The course of judicial development of variance standards reflects the need for criteria that are appropriate for specific types of variances. See Sica, supra, 127 N.J. at 155 (holding that enhanced standard of proofs for use variances does not apply where use is inherently beneficial); Burbridge v. Mine Hill Township, 117 N.J. 376, 387-89 (1990) (justifying less restrictive standard for proving special reasons to support expansion of existing non-conforming use than for new prohibited use); Medici, supra, 107 N.J. at 4 & n.1 (delineating acceptable special reasons for commercial-use variance). Accordingly, we here establish a standard for conditional-use variances that is appropriate for the purposes and characteristics of conditional uses.
We hold that the proof of special reasons that must be
adduced by an applicant for a "d" variance from one or more
conditions imposed by ordinance in respect of a conditional use
shall be proof sufficient to satisfy the board of adjustment that
the site proposed for the conditional use, in the context of the
applicant's proposed site plan, continues to be an appropriate
site for the conditional use notwithstanding the deviations from
one or more conditions imposed by the ordinance. That standard
of proof will focus both the applicant's and the board's
attention on the specific deviation from conditions imposed by
the ordinance, and will permit the board to find special reasons
to support the variance only if it is persuaded that the non-compliance with conditions does not affect the suitability of the
site for the conditional use. Thus, a conditional-use variance
applicant must show that the site will accommodate the problems
associated with the use even though the proposal does not comply
with the conditions the ordinance established to address those
problems.
determine whether or not it will cause such damage to the
character of the neighborhood as to constitute "`substantial
detriment to the public good.'" Medici, supra, l07 N.J. at 22
n.l2 (quoting Yahnel, supra, 79 N.J. Super. at 5l9 (explaining
weighing function of board of adjustment in respect of negative
criteria)). In respect of the second prong, that the variance
will not "substantially impair the intent and purpose of the zone
plan and zoning ordinance," N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70(d), the board of
adjustment must be satisfied that the grant of the conditional-use variance for the specific project at the designated site is
reconciliable with the municipality's legislative determination
that the condition should be imposed on all conditional uses in
that zoning district. We are persuaded that the record supports the grant of a conditional-use variance from the aggregate-side-yard and rear-yard setback requirements for Associates' apartment complex. Associates' site plan complied with the minimum side-yard requirement of twenty feet, but not the aggregate side-yard minimum of thirty percent of lot width, or 150 feet. Associates' proofs satisfy the special-reasons standard by demonstrating that the apartment use was suited to the proposed site despite its failure to comply with those conditions. As noted, ante at ___ (slip op. at 3), although the property's easterly lot line abuts property containing a non-conforming bus garage, the property's westerly lot line abuts the
rear yards of residences fronting on Sand Road. Accordingly, a
plan complying with both individual and aggregate-side-yard
setback requirements could have provided a twenty-foot westerly
side yard and a l30 foot easterly side yard, affording less of a
buffer for the Sand Road residences but requiring no variances.
In addition, although the proposed site plan provides a thirty-three-foot landscaped buffer along the westerly lot line, the
ordinance permits parking within ten feet of the line.
Accordingly, the record provides ample support for the board's
finding that the proposed site plan, although requiring an
aggregate-side-yard setback variance, permits the applicant to
provide a larger buffer area than might have been provided by a
fully complying plan. Moreover, because the aggregate-side-yard
setback variance does not result in any less protection for
adjacent residential properties than would a complying plan, the
record supports a finding of special reasons to sustain that
variance: in the context of Associates' site plan, the site
continues to be appropriate for the conditional use
notwithstanding the deviation from the aggregate-side-yard
setback requirement. Supra at ___ (slip op. at ___).
are amply supported by the record, which demonstrates that the
property's rear lot line abuts Pascack Road, and the nearest
residential dwellings are located across Pascack Road.
Accordingly, the record sustains the board's conclusion that the
seventy-five-foot rear-yard setback affords an adequate buffer
for the residences north of Pascack Road, and would also sustain
a finding that the deviation from the rear-yard setback
requirement renders the site no less appropriate for the
conditional use than would have been the case if the rear-yard
setback complied with the ordinance.
prohibited use, not a conditional use, in the zone. Any issues
raised by those amendments are not before us and we do not
address them. The judgment of the Appellate Division is affirmed.
Chief Justice Wilentz and Justices Clifford, Handler,
Pollock, O'Hern, and Stein join in this opinion.
NO. A-26 SEPTEMBER TERM 1994
DECIDED December 15, 1994
Chief Justice Wilentz PRESIDING
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