Brendan
Judge Wins Appeal for
Client Market Street
Mission to
Open
Jersey
Shore
Rescue Mission in Asbury Park
ROSELAND, N.J., October 20, 2010
---
After
five years of litigation, Connelly Foley partner
Brendan Judge won a
crucial decision from the New Jersey Appellate Division that
will permit Judge’s client, the
Market Street
Mission, to open its Jersey Shore
Rescue Mission on
Memorial Drive
in Asbury Park.
On
October 1, 2010 the Appellate Division issued its
long-awaited ruling in the lawsuit filed by the Market
Street Mission against the City of Asbury Park’s Zoning
Board of Adjustment stemming from the Board’s denial of the
Mission’s January 2005 application for four use variances
that would permit it to open and operate the Jersey Shore
Rescue Mission in Asbury Park.
The
Market Street Mission,
is a nonprofit, nondenominational Christian mission that has
been administering to the poor, homeless and addicted in
Morristown,
New Jersey, for 120 years.
By its application before the Asbury Park Zoning
Board, the Mission
sought to bring its program to serve the needy in the Asbury Park area.
The services that the Mission envisions for Asbury Park involve providing a hot meal each
night to as many as 100 needy men, women and children and
emergency shelter for up to 27 homeless men.
The Mission’s program also involves residential and
non-residential, drug and alcohol addiction counseling and
job skills training program for another 10 men through the
Mission’s Life Change Program.
The services are to be provided to members of the
public of all faiths, and are free of charge.
The Mission’s application has
a tortured history.
After almost a year of hearings, the Zoning Board
initially denied the Mission’s
application finding that the
Mission’s proposed use was not
inherently beneficial.
The Mission
appealed that ruling to the Superior Court, and the Hon.
Alfred Lehrer remanded the matter back to the Board after
finding the Board’s ruling to be arbitrary and capricious.
After conducting additional hearings, the Board found
the Mission’s
use to be inherently beneficial, and granted the application
after imposing 15 special conditions.
A group
of citizens calling themselves “Stand Up for
Asbury Park” filed a Complaint in Superior Court
seeking reversal of that decision, and the City of
Asbury Park
joined that lawsuit on the side of the citizens’ group. The
Superior Court remanded the matter to the Zoning Board,
which conducted extensive additional hearings on the
Mission’s application, and voted once
again to deny the application in its entirety.
The Mission
appealed that decision to the Superior Court, and the Hon.
Lawrence Lawson affirmed that decision after conducting a
bench trial.
The Mission then appealed that
decision to the Appellate Division, which on October 1st
reversed the Zoning Board’s denial of the four use
variances, finding the Board’s denial to be arbitrary,
capricious and unreasonable.
In so doing, the Court addressed and rejected each of
the concerns raised by the citizens’ group and the City. The
Court ruled that there is no credible evidence to support
the Citizen Group’s objections.
Such concerns, the Court found, were based on “pure
speculation.”
In
conclusion the Court found that “the evidence before the
Board demonstrated that there was a substantial need in the
City for the services as proposed by the
Mission.”
The Court reversed the denial of the four variances
and remanded the matter to the Board to set reasonable
conditions.
The Mission’s Executive Director David Scott said: “We are very
pleased that the appellate court has recognized the value of
the vital services the Mission
provides to the needy, and we look forward to working with
the Asbury Park
officials to serve the people of the
Asbury Park community.”
Brendan Judge
agreed: “This was a hard-fought victory for the Jersey Shore
Rescue Mission, but it’s actually a win for all parties
involved. Once
the Mission is up and running,
the City officials and the citizens will see that there was
nothing to fear.
The Mission will be a great asset to the entire
community.”
While
this was the first time Mr. Judge represented the Market Street Mission,
he is no stranger to charitable causes or public service.
He and his wife, Beth, have been active in the Fresh
Air Fund for years hosting inner city children during the
summer. He sits
on the Board of Directors of the Samaritan Center At The
Jersey Shore, which was recently created to provide
counseling, education and spiritual enrichment for families
and individuals in the greater Monmouth County area.
Mr. Judge also serves on the Board of Directors of
the Notre Dame Law School Association, which advises the law
school Dean on strategic planning, curriculum, finances,
management, operations and resources.
He is the founding President of the Board of Trustees
of the Spring Lake Educational Foundation,
a non-profit foundation
incorporated in 2007 to enhance the educational experience
for the students of H.W. Mountz
School by providing
another source for funds for educational programs,
activities and facilities.
He also served for
nine years as the Spring Lake Municipal Prosecutor.