Enforcement Action Against Rating Agency Allowed To Proceed

        by: Peter J. Gallagher (@pjsgallagher)

In an interesting decision issued today, Judge Katz (Essex County) denied a motion to dismiss filed by the ratings agency Standard & Poor's ("S&P") in an enforcement action brought against S&P by the New Jersey Attorney General. In Hoffman v. McGraw-Hill Financial, Inc., the Attorney General alleged that S&P violated the Consumer Fraud Act ("CFA") by misrepresenting to New Jersey consumers that S&P's analysis and rating of structured finance securities was independent and objective. The opinion contains decisions on both procedural personal jurisdiction issues and substantive CFA issues that all litigators should find interesting.

[Lawsuits against ratings agencies are nothing new. Several years ago, I wrote an article about these lawsuits and, at the time, the relative success the rating agencies had defending against them. (If you did not save your copy of the article, click here for another copy.) Historically, the rating agencies argued that their ratings were proetced under the First Amendment, but at least one court rejected this argument in the context of a motion to dismiss in a lawsuit that eventually settled.]

 

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New Jersey Supreme Court Refuses To Hear Challenge To Waiver Rule

by:  Peter J. Gallagher

The New Jersey Supreme Court has denied a request by a group of challengers to the so-called Waiver Rule (N.J.A.C. 7:1B-1.1, et seq.) — which allows the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (”DEP”) to waive certain environmental regulations on a case-by-case basis — to review an Appellate Division decision upholding the rule.  On behalf of amicus New Jersey Business and Industry Association, Porzio helped to defend the Waiver Rule before the Appellate Division.     

As we previously reported here, the Waiver Rule is not a blanket waiver of all regulations. Instead, a waiver will only be available when one of four criteria are met: (1) a public emergency has been formally declared; (2) conflicting rules between Federal and State agencies or between State agencies are adversely impacting a project or preventing an activity from proceeding; (3) a net environmental benefit would be achieved; and/or (4) undue hardship is being imposed by the rule requirements. N.J.A.C. 7:1B-2.1.  Moreover, the Waiver Rule identifies 13 rules and requirements that cannot be waived under any circumstances.

A group of Appellants challenged the Waiver Rule on several grounds, but the Appellate Division rejected the challenge and held that the Waiver Rule was a proper exercise of the DEP's rule-making authority.  The New Jersey Supreme Court has now refused to hear the case, which leaves intact the Appellate Division's decision. 

Appellate Division Endorses “Waiver Rule:” DEP Allowed To Waive Regulations In Limited Circumstances

  by: Peter J. Gallagher

On March 21, 2013, the Appellate Division rejected a challenge to the so-called Waiver Rule (N.J.A.C. 7:1B-1.1, et seq.), which allows the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (”DEP”) to waive certain environmental regulations on a case-by-case basis. On behalf of amicus New Jersey Business and Industry Association, Porzio had argued that the Waiver Rule represents a common sense and measured approach to regulation. In its decision, the Appellate Division appears to have agreed.

The history of the Waiver Rule is not long. On January 20, 2010, Governor Christie issued Executive Order No. 2, which sought to better leverage New Jersey’s “enormously valuable assets” by, among other things, “establishing ‘Common Sense Principles’ for State rules and regulations that will give this State the opportunity to energize and encourage a competitive economy to benefit businesses and ordinary citizens.” One of these “Common Sense Principles” required State agencies to “[a]dopt rules for ‘waivers’ which recognize that rules can be conflicting or unduly burdensome,” and further required these agencies to “adopt regulations that allow for waivers from the strict compliance with agency regulations,” provided that “such waivers shall not be inconsistent with the core missions of the agency.”

Although it did not identify Executive Order No. 2 as the source of its authority to do so, shortly after Governor Christie issued the Order, the DEP began developing rules and regulations designed to address the concerns regarding the impact of excessive regulation on New Jersey’s economy. The result was the Waiver Rule, which was only adopted after the DEP solicited public comments to the proposed Waiver Rule through an open public comment period, during which DEP received comments from more than 500 interested parties, and during a public hearing.

Notwithstanding its name, the Waiver Rule is not a blanket waiver of all regulations. Instead, a waiver will only be available when one of four criteria are met: (1) a public emergency has been formally declared; (2) conflicting rules between Federal and State agencies or between State agencies are adversely impacting a project or preventing an activity from proceeding; (3) a net environmental benefit would be achieved; and/or (4) undue hardship is being imposed by the rule requirements. N.J.A.C. 7:1B-2.1.  Moreover, the Waiver Rule identifies 13 rules and requirements that cannot be waived under any circumstances.

A group of Appellants, led by the American Littoral Society Association of New Jersey challenged the Waiver Rule on several grounds.  Today, the Appellate Division rejected that challenge.  First, the court held that the Waiver Rule was a proper exercise of the DEP's rule-making authority.  Specifically, the court held:

"[T]he power to promulgate a regulation implies the incidental authority to suspend or waive its application on certain limited, well-defined circumstances provided such exemption does not circumvent any legislative enactment or purpose, or federal law, is consistent with the agency's statutory core mission and objectives, is accomplished through a properly adopted regulation pursuant to the [Administrative Procedures Act], and establishes appropriate and clear standards for the exercise of agency discretion . . ."

Second, the court held that the Waiver Rule satisfied all of the caveats set forth above — it was limited in its application, was based on well-defined standards, and was not inconsistent with the DEP's core mission. 

The court did agree with Appellants that certain "guidance documents" posted by the DEP on its website in connection with the Waiver Rule were improper.  The court held that these documents went beyond “merely facilitating administrative  implementation of the rules . . . and actually, to some extent, announce[d] new substantive requirements.” As a result, they amounted to the DEP effectively announcing new rules without following the procedures set forth in the Administrative Procedures Act.  Accordingly, the “guidance” documents were struck down.  But, the court was careful to explain that this did not in any way change its conclusion that the Waiver Rule was proper.

You Got A Better Idea?!? Government Opens Suggestion Box For Ideas On How To Rent Out Foreclosed Properties

by:  Peter J. Gallagher

  The New York Times is reporting that the government is soliciting ideas for turning its glut of vacant, foreclosed houses into rental units that could be managed by private parties or sold in bulk  ("U.S. Seeks Ideas On Renting Out Foreclosed Property").  The goal of the program would be to "stabilize neighborhoods where large supplies of empty, foreclosed properties have hurt property values" and "clear the nation’s balance sheet of real estate holdings that, because they have been difficult to sell individually, have hung over the housing market and stunted sales of existing homes and new construction."  The request for ideas comes from the Federal Housing Finance Agency, the Department of Housing and Urban Development, and the Treasury Department, and you can click here to submit your ideas.

As the article notes, the percentage of homes owned by the government that are currently in foreclosure is somewhat staggering:

Of the 248,000 homes owned by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the F.H.A. at the end of June, 70,000 were listed for sale, said Corinne Russell, a housing finance agency spokeswoman. The remainder were not yet on the market or the agencies had already received an offer from a prospective buyer.

But it is possible that hundreds of thousands of more homes that are now in the foreclosure process could come into the possession of the federal government in the next few years, housing experts say.

The government is now looking for a few good men ideas for how to deal with this crisis.  Among those already proposed are "rent-to-own programs, in which previous homeowners or current renters could lease properties as a path to ownership, and ways in which the properties can be used to support affordable housing."

If you have any thoughts, be sure to let us know when you let the government know.

“Put Your Makeup On, Fix Your Hair Up Pretty, And Meet Me Tonight In Atlantic City.”

by:  Peter J. Gallagher

Apparently there is more than fist bumping (pumping?) going on "down the Shore."  The PropertyProf Blog has an interesting story about what it calls "A Non-Taking On The Jersey Shore."  If nothing else, the story gives me a work-related reason to go down to Atlantic City.  I don't really want to go down to the casinos, I have to do it for the sake of the blog . . .

The article tells the story of a tiny lot sandwiched in between Trump Plaza and Cesar's Palace.  It is zoned for gambling, which the post notes "doesn't exactly seem like the highest and best use."  But, the lot has some history, as it was at the center of a high-profile takings case from the early days of the once booming (now not really booming) gambling mecca:

Vera Coling and her husband bought the property in 1961, when Atlantic City was still a thriving beachtown. A decade later, as the city fell into decline, it made the drastic decision to legalize gambling and welcome big-time casino development.  The prime location of Coking's three-story house quickly attracted the interest of the real estate industry. In 1983, for example, Bob Guccione (the founder of Penthouse), offered to purchase the house for $1 million to build a casino. Coking said no.

Soon enough, the property attracted the attention of another tycoon – Donald Trump.  Unlike Guccione, Trump had the local redevelopment agency attempt to acquire the property through eminent domain for $250,000, a much reduced price.  Coking sued Trump and the redevelopment agency, claiming that the taking was not for a public purpose.  The Superior Court in New Jersey agreed with Coking.  It ruled that because there were few restrictions on what Trump could do with the property, there were "no assurances that the public interest will be protected."

The post notes that the arguments raised in the case are "[o]f historical interest for property profs" and other folks interested in takings, because it was "the Institute for Justice's first test case for the theories it later advanced in Kelo [v. City of New London]," the controversial eminent domain/takings case decided by the U.S. Supreme Court a few years back.

Also of historical interest is the interview with Donald Trump embedded in the post, which presents a much younger, pre-Apprentice, less coiffed, but no less pompous, version of the Donald. 

Finally, in case you are interested, the property is for sale.  Here is the listing.  It can be yours for only $5 million, or slightly less than what this guy took from the Tropicana in a marathon gamling session a few weeks ago.