Lead Opinion
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The issue presented by this appeal is whether the Anti-Eviction Act (“Act”), N.J.S. A 2A:18-61.1 to -61.12, as amended by L. 1986, c. 138, protects tenants from eviction by foreclosing mortgagees unable to establish any of the statutory grounds for which eviction is authorized. See N.J.S.A 2A:18-61.1. More specifically, we consider whether the 1986 amendment to N.J.S.A 2A:18-61.3, which extended the' Act’s anti-eviction restrictions to “an owner’s or landlord’s successors in possession or ownership,” superseded this Court’s decision in Guttenberg Savings & Loan Ass’n v. Rivera, 85 N.J. 617,
The Appellate Division agreed with Chase’s contention and affirmed the Chancery Division. 261 N.J.Super. 428,
We granted the tenants’ petition for certification, 133 N.J. 439,
I
A summary of the facts underlying the litigation will provide a context for resolution of the issues. In April 1973, defendants Marion and Seymour Josephson, a married couple, moved into a single-family home in West Orange that was located on property owned by the Carteret School for Boys. The Josephsons had entered into a one-year written lease, which they had renewed annually, until 1978, after which they continued their tenancy pursuant to an oral agreement to pay the same rent on a month-to-month basis.
In 1987, the Carteret School for Boys sold the property, including the Josephsons’ residence, to Saul and Grace Werner. The Werners financed the purchase in part with a loan from Chase Manhattan Bank, secured by a mortgage and an assignment of rents and leases. The deed and mortgage contained a standard clause providing that the mortgagee would be entitled to possession on default by the mortgagor.
The Werners subsequently defaulted on the loan, and Chase filed a complaint in June 1990 to foreclose the mortgage. In March 1991 the Werners settled with Chase by conveying a deed for the property in lieu of foreclosure. Thus, Chase obtained not only the possessory interest to which it had been entitled on the Werners’ default, but also became the owner of the property by virtue of the deed from the Werners.
Because the three single-family homes on the property were occupied by tenants paying from $550 to $560 monthly, rents described by Chase as far below fair market value, Chase obtained
Approximately one month later, in January 1992, the Chancery Division granted Chase’s motion for summary judgment. Chase continued to forbear in collecting rental income from the Joseph-sons and permitted them additional time to relocate. Subsequently, in February 1992, the Public Advocate, acting on behalf of the Josephsons and other defendants, filed a motion in the Chancery Division seeking reconsideration of its judgment pursuant to Rule 4:49-2 or, alternatively, relief from its judgment under Rule 4:50-1(f). (Chase’s complaint originally sought the eviction of other tenants as well as the Josephsons. The Appellate Division dismissed the appeal with regard to those other tenants because they had voluntarily surrendered possession of the premises. 261 N.J.Super. at 433,
The court denied the Josephsons’ motion, finding first that the fact that their oral month-to-month tenancy predated the mortgage did not exempt them from our holding in Guttenberg, and also that the 1986 amendments to the Act were not sufficiently
Affirming the judgment of the Chancery Division, the Appellate Division first determined that Guttenberg did not afford an exemption under the Act to tenants without a lease whose possession predated the mortgage. 261 N.J.Super. at 433-35,
II
A review of the law regarding the respective rights of mortgagees and tenants informs our consideration of the Anti-Eviction Act’s application to foreclosing mortgagees. That review encompasses the common law prior to the Act, the changes effected by the Act, interpretation of the Act by this Court in Guttenberg, and the amendment of the Act in 1986.
A
The common law in New Jersey holds that a mortgagee is entitled to possession of mortgaged premises on default of the lоan secured by the mortgage. See Guttenberg, supra, 85 N.J. at 626,
The scope of the possessory and ownership interests obtained by the foreclosing mortgagee is determined by the mortgagor’s interests at the time the mortgage was executed. See Sears, Roebuck, supra, 124 N.J.Eq. at 410,
At common law, thе terms of the tenancy controlled the right of the owner or landlord to eject the tenant, whether that tenancy was a term of years or a periodic tenancy. Once the tenancy expired and the tenant received proper notice, the tenant’s right
That general principle was reflected in N.J.SA 2A:18-53a, which, prior to passage of the Anti-Eviction Act in 1974, established a summary action for possession that could be brought to remove a tenant who held over and continued in possession of premises after the expiration of the tenant’s term. Therefore, if the mortgagor’s interest in the property was subject to a tenancy at the time the mortgage was executed, the foreclosing mortgagee could eject the tenant at the termination of the ténancy. Guttenberg, supra, 85 N.J. at 626-27,
B
The Anti-Eviction Act, L.1974, c. 49, dramatically changed the rights of landlords and owners by prohibiting the ejectment of residential tenants or lessees simply because their tenancies or leases had expired. See Moynihan, supra, at 88 n.l (noting New Jersey statutory exception to common-law rule that tenant’s right to occupancy ends with lapse of tenancy term). The Act provided in N.J.SA 2AA8-61.3 that residential tenants no longer could be evicted on termination of their tenancies unless the landlord established good cause for evictiоn. Good cause included various breaches of tenant responsibilities, such as failure to pay rent and disorderly behavior, see N.J.SA 2A:18-61.1.a to —61.1.f, -61.1.n to -61.1.p, as well as grounds based on owner circumstances, such as removal of property from residential use and conversion of the property from the rental market to cooperative or condominium ownership, see N.J.SA 2A:18-61.1.g to -61.1. Z. Section 4 of the Act stated: “No landlord may evict or fail to renew any lease of any premises * * * except for good cause as defined in [N.J.SA. 2A:18-61.1].” That section was codified as N.J.SA 2A:18-61.3.
In 1981, this Court considered whether a foreclosing mortgagee could obtain an order for possession against tenants holding leasehold interests in the mortgaged property created subsequent to the mortgage without complying with the requirements of the Anti-Eviction Act. Guttenberg, supra, 85 N.J. 617,
The Court also declined to view the Act’s references to “owners” as evidence that the Legislature intended to subject foreclosing mortgagees to the requirements of the Act. We observed that foreclosing mortgagees were not considered “owners” of property under the common law until they purchased the property at a foreclosure sale. Id. at 630,
Because the Act’s plain language did not include reference to foreclosing mortgagees, the Court declined to construe the statutory language to encompass mortgagees. Although the Act had abridged long-standing property rights of landlords and property owners in respect of their tenants and lessees, we were persuaded that that result did not compel a finding that the Act had similarly affected mortgagees’ rights. In that connection, we noted that the value of residential property to the landlord or owner was princi-
We also noted that application of the Act to foreclosing mortgagees would have presented practical inequities that also weighed against that interpretation. When Guttenberg was decided, federal mortgage-insurance programs required mortgagees to convey foreclosed property to the Federal Housing Authority (“FHA”) in vacant condition. Id. at 631,
D
In 1986 the Legislature amended the Anti-Eviction Act, L.1986, c. 138, by adding sections N.J.S.A 2A:18-61.1a to -61.1f and amending N.J.S.A. 2A:18-61.3 and N.J.S.A 2A:18-61.6. The stated purpose of the amendment was to enhance the Act’s protections against the use of pretextual evictions to facilitate renovations that would justify higher rentals or achieve conversion of the building
Most relevant to the issues before us are the 1986 amendments to N.J.SA 2A:18-61.3. As originally enacted in L.1974, c. 49, that provision in its entirety stated:
No landlord may evict or fail to renew any lease of any premises covered by CN.J.SA 2A:18-61.1] except for good cause as defined in [N.J.SA 2A:18-61.1],
L.1986, c. 138, § 7 amended N.J.S.A 2A:18-61.3 by adding subsection b, which expanded the Act’s coverage to include not only landlords but also “the owner’s or landlord’s successor in ownership or possession.” As a result of that amendment, N.J.SA. 2A:18-61.3 provided:
a. No landlord may evict or fail to renew any lease of any premises covered by [N.J.SA 2A:18-61.1] except for good cause as defined in [N.J.SA 2A:18-61.1].
b. A person who was a tenant of a landlord in premises-covered by [N.J.SA 2A:18-61.1] may not be removed by any order or judgment for possession from the premises by the owner’s or landlord’s successor in ownership or possession except:
(1) For good cause in accordance with the requirements which apply to premises coverеd pursuant to [the Anti-Eviction Act]; or
(2) For proceedings in premises where federal law supersedes applicable State law governing removal of occupants; or
(3) For proceedings where removal of occupants is sought by an authorized State or local agency pursuant to eminent domain or code enforcement laws and which comply with applicable relocation laws pursuant to the “Relocation Assistance Law of 1967,” * * * and the “Relocation Assistance Act[ ]”***.
Where the owner’s or landlord’s successor in ownership or possession is not bound by the lease entered into with the former tenant and may offer a different lease to the former tenant, nothing in this 1986 amendatory and supplementary act shall limit that right.
[Emphasis added.]
Ill
A
As a preliminary matter, we note our agreement with the Josephsons’ contention that they were protected by the Act even under our pre-amendment interpretation in Guttenberg. Our holding in that case addressed the circumstance in which the tenancy postdated the mortgage. The Josephsons contend that the Guttenberg holding implied that the Act protected tenants in possession pursuant to a tenancy that antedated the mortgage from eviction by the foreclosing mortgagee. The Appellate Division rejected that argument because it found that our holding in Guttenberg would apply only to а tenant under a written lease, not to a month-to-month periodic tenancy such as the Josephsons’. 261 N.J.Super. at 434-35,
A significant component of the Court’s reasoning in Guttenberg was that the mortgage default extinguished tenancies created subsequent to the mortgage because the mortgagee’s possessory interest encompassed the possessory interest held by the mortgagor when the mortgage was executed. 85 N.J. at 626-27,
B
In deciding that the amendments to N.J.S.A. 2A:18-61.3 did not apply the Anti-Eviction Act to foreclosing mortgagees, the Appellate Division relied on both legislative history and the statutory language. First, the court determined that the stated purpose of the amendments, as revealed by the legislative history and the legislative findings in N.J.S.A.. 2A:18-61.1a, was to curtail the use of pretextual evictions by residential-property owners seeking to convert ¿ither to high-income rental use or to condominium or cooperative ownership. 261 N.J.Super. at 436-39,
To determine the proper application of the amended Anti-Eviction Act, we begin our analysis with the statutory language. Ordinarily, we derive a statute’s meaning by first looking to its plain language. State v. Sutton, 132 N.J. 471, 479,
However,- in determining whether contrary intent exists, courts may examine whether a provision’s plain meaning supports a result that is consistent with the overall statutory scheme. See State v. Brown, 22 N.J. 405, 415,
The plain language of N.J.S.A. 2A:18-61.3b encompasses both foreclosing mortgagees and purchasers at foreclosure sales. As noted earlier, supra at 217-18,
Moreover, “[t]he purchaser of the mortgaged lands at а foreclosure sale,” including the mortgagee, “‘succeeds * * * to the estate the mortgagor had at the time of the execution of the mortgage.’ ” Sears, Roebuck, supra, 124 N.J.Eq. at 410,
Furthermore, that reading of N.J.S.A 2A:18-61.3b is consistent with the Act’s overall purpose of protecting blameless tenants from eviction. See Statement to Assembly Bill A-1586, enacted by L.1974, c. 49 (“[Residential tenants frequently have been unfairly and arbitrarily ousted from housing quarters in which they have been comfortable and where they have not caused any problems.” (emphasis added)) (hereinafter Statement); 447 Assocs. v. Miranda, 115 N.J. 522, 527-28,
In Guttenberg, the Court expressly stated that a mortgagee had the right to possession on the mortgagors default. 85 N.J. at 626,
Furthermore, Guttenberg pointed out that a mortgagee would become the mortgagor’s successor in ownership only if and when the mortgagee purchased the property at a foreclosure sale. We there concluded that because the default had cut off the subsequent leasehold and had given the mortgagee the right to possession, the landlord-tenant relationship between the mortgagee and tenant had already been severed by the time the mortgagee had become an owner through the foreclosure-sale purchase. 85 N.J.
The Guttenberg decision also noted the practical problems that would result from application of the Anti-Eviction Act to foreclosing mortgagees. We observed in Guttenberg that homes with federally-insured mortgages were required by federal regulations to be conveyed to the federal agency in vacant condition after foreclosure. Application of the Act to foreclosing mortgagees would thus have created a conflict with the federal requirements. 85 N.J. at 631-32,
We also noted in Guttenberg the inequity of saddling mortgagees with unfavorable lease arrangements entered into by their mortgagors. 85 N.J. at 632,
Amicus New Jersey Bankers Association argues that the Act nevertheless prohibits mortgagees from evicting tenants who refuse the new terms. We note, however, that N.J.S.A 2A:18-61.1.f specifically permits eviction for refusal to pay lawful rent increases that are not unconscionable. See 447 Assocs., supra, 115 N.J. at 530,
We also expressed our concern in Guttenberg that application of the Act to mortgagees would cause them either to forego lending to rehabilitative projects or defer foreclosure in situations in which the mortgaged property required renovations but was occupied, deciding instead to allow the owner to hold the property until it had deteriorated sufficiently to cause constructive eviction of the tenants. 85 N.J. at 632,
Our conclusion that the Act, as amended, applies to mortgagees is significantly influenced by the difference in the Act’s provisions concerning the treble-damage liability imposed on owners or their successors for unlawful evictions, and the provisions in respect of the treble-damage liability imposed on owners or their successors pursuant to N.J.S.A 2A:18-61.6e for pretextua! evictions. N.J.S.A. 2A:18-61.3, in conjunction with N.J.S.A 2A:18-61.6d— .the anti-eviction provisions—and N.J.S.A 2A:18-61.6e—the pretextual-eviction liability provision—impose liability on “owners,” and their successors in interest. (Specifically, N.J.S.A 2A:18-61.3 prohibits unlawful evictions by the landlord or by “the owner’s or landlord’s successor in ownership or possession,” and N.J.S.A 2A:18-61.6d authorizes imposition of treble damages on those prohibited from engaging in unlawful evictions. N.J.S.A 2A:18-61.6d defines “owner” to include “lessee, successor owner and lessee, and other successors in interest,” and that definition applies to owners subject to liability for pretextual evictions under N.J.S.A 2A:18-61.6c.)
Pursuant to the 1986 amendments, N.J.S.A 2A:18-61.6e exempts purchasers at a foreclosure sale from the pretextual-eviction treble-damage provisions of N.J.S.A 2A:18-61.6c. Such purchasers are typically foreclosing mortgagees. See Carteret Sav. &
By specifically exempting foreclosing mortgagees from the treble-damage liability imposed by N.J.S.A 2A:18-61.6c, the Legislature demonstrated its understanding that foreclosing mortgagees otherwise would be subject to that liability because a foreclosing mortgagee was either “an owner,” N.J.S.A 2A:18-61.6c, a “successor owner,” N.J.S.A 2A:18-61.6d, or “other successor[ ] in interest.” Id. Because the Legislature understood those terms to encompass foreclosing mortgagees, the Legislature similarly must have understood that the phrase “an owner’s * * * successor in ownership or possession”—the phrase added to the amended language of N.J.S.A. 2A:18-61.3, the anti-eviction provision,—also encompassed foreclosing mortgagees. However, the Legislature did not exempt foreclosing mortgagees from liability under the anti-eviction section of the Act.
Similarly, recent additions to the Anti-Eviction Act demonstrate the Legislature’s understanding thаt the amended language in the anti-eviction provision encompasses foreclosing mortgagees. On December 27, 1993, the Legislature added to the Anti-Eviction Act sections N.J.SA 2A:18-61.1g and -61.1h. See L.1993, c. 342, §§ 3-4. N.J.SA 2A:18-61.1g authorizes municipalities to enact
Thus, when the Legislature sought to limit application of the Act in order specifically to protect foreclosing mortgagees, it did so by enacting a specific exemption from provisions of the Act not intended to affect them, demonstrating its recognition of the special concerns of foreclosing mortgagees. That it did not exempt foreclosing mortgagees from the Act’s anti-eviction provisions strongly suggests a legislative determination that those psovisions should apply to all successors in ownership or possession, including mortgagees.
C
Chase and amicus New Jersey Bankers Association have raised constitutional concerns about the modification of contract
We have long recognized that “[r]estrictions on the use of property, if in furtherance of a valid governmental purpose, serve the public interest and are considered a proper exercise of the police power even though they may result in some economic disadvantage.” New Jersey Ass’n of Health Care Facilities v. Finley (In re Review оf Admin. Promulgation of Health Care Admin. Bd.: N.J.AC. 8:30-14.1 through 8:30-11.8), 83 N.J. 67, 81,
That conclusion is consistent with the established constitutionality of the Act’s restrictions on the rights of property owners, see Puttrich v. Smith, 170 N.J.Super. 572, 575-76,
We draw the same conclusion with respect to claims alleging an unconstitutional impairment of contracts. In Edgewater Investment Associates v. Borough of Edgewater, 103 N.J. 227,
IV
We therefore hold that N.J.S.A 2A:18-61.3b applies thе Anti-Eviction Act to foreclosing mortgagees, and thus supersedes the Court’s decision in Guttenberg. As amended, the Act protects tenants from eviction by foreclosing mortgagees irrespective of whether their tenancy was established before or after the execution of the mortgage.
Although retroactive application of judicial decisions is the general rule, Rutherford Educ. Ass’n v. Board of Educ., 99 N.J. 8, 21,
The judgment of the Appellate Division is reversed.
Notes
The Appellate Division decided this appeal together with the appeal in Maryland National Mortgage Corp. v. Littlejohn, 261 N.J.Super. 428, 619 A.2d 241 (1993). We granted certification in Littlejohn, 133 N.J. 439,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Today, the majority holds that the Anti-Eviction Act, as amended by L.1986, c. 38, applies to all foreclosing mortgagees holding a lien that was established prior to the leasehold of the tenant in possession. In so doing, the majority does precisely what this Court declined to do in Guttenberg Savings & Loan Ass’n v.
The Court achieves that surprising result by ignoring the legislative history of the 1986 amendments, by abandoning the relevant principles underlying Guttenberg, and, ultimately, by erroneously consigning to the Legislature an intent to overrule our unmistakably clear holding in Guttenberg. I believe that we should not accomplish by judicial fiat such sweeping changes of that well-established principle. Indeed, we should achieve such changes only in the face of a clear manifestation of the Legislature’s intent. Because little evidence supports the mаjority’s conclusion that the Legislature intended the amended Anti-Eviction Act to apply to foreclosing mortgagees, I respectfully dissent from the Court’s holding.
I
To understand the wide-sweeping ramifications of the Court’s ruling, I look no further than Maryland National Mortgage Corp. v. Littlejohn, 261 N.J.Super. 428,
The facts in Littlejohn are simple. On January 28, 1988, George and Gwendolyn Clapps purchased a single-family house in Irvington, and executed a purchase money mortgage for $58,200 on the same day. The mortgage was recorded on February 5, 1988. On February 1, 1991, the Clappses defaulted, and on November 12, 1991, the mortgagee, Maryland National Mortgage Corporation, filed a complaint seeking foreclosure and possession of the property. A lis pendens was filed on December 9, 1991. After Maryland National had filed both the complaint and the lis
Under the majority’s holding today, Littlejohn, who entered into a lease with a defaulting mortgagor not only subsequent to the recording of the mortgage but also subsequent to the filing of the foreclosure complaint and the lis pendens, is entitled to priority over the foreclosing mortgagee. As a result, the property could be sold at the Sheriffs sale only subject to Littlejohn’s leasehold.
Littlejohn illustrates the unfairness of including every mortgagee within the scope of the Anti-Eviction Act. The Clappses, like most purchasers of single-family dwellings, purchased the single-family dwelling as their residence. They resided in the home until they defaulted. Only after they defaulted did they lease the house. Single-family dwellings, unlike multiplе-dwelling apartments, are not typically purchased for investment income but rather are purchased as primary residences. Likewise, a mortgagee lending money to the purchaser of a single-family dwelling does not consider the income from the house as additional security for the mortgage. I doubt that Maryland National or any other mortgagee would have lent the Clappses $58,000 for their home had they realized that at foreclosure the property could be sold only subject to a lease. Who. is going to buy a single-family dwelling with a perpetual tenant? I suggest no one.
Littlejohn presents the exact situation we cautioned against in Guttenberg, supra, 85 N.J. at 632-33,
Take the case of the Josephsons. They were month-to-month tenants with no lease to renegotiate. Nevertheless, when faced with an Appellate Division order to pay “market rent,” they moved for a stay of that order. I believe that those forced “renegotiation” situations will seldom lend themselves to amicable negotiations but instead will cause foreclosing mortgagees unending headaches. For example, in the Josephsons’ case, we have a tenant without a lease holding the mortgagee (who has no desire to be a landlord at all) over a proverbial barrel, making the mortgagee fight tooth and nail for market rent. If mortgagees do not take solace in the majority’s assertion that they have no problems because they “may offer a different lease to the former tenant” pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:18-61.3b(3), I, for one, would not blame them.
II
Before addressing the specifics of the 1986 amendments, I note at the outset my disagreement with the majority’s conclusion that the Josephsons could not be evicted even under our pre-amendment interpretation of the Anti-Eviction Act in Guttenberg. The Josephsons argue that Chase’s mortgage lien on the property must be subject to their tenancy, which they entered into prior to the mortgage. Although a valid leasehold entered into prior to the recordation of a mortgage takes priority over the mortgage, the Josephsons unmistakably were not leaseholders at the time Chase recorded its mortgage. The majority admits that the Josephsons were merely month-to-month tenants. See ante at 223,
The majority erroneously accepts the Josephsons’ contention that our holding in Guttenberg implied that tenants in possession pursuant to a tenancy that antedated the mortgage were protected from eviction by a foreclosing mortgagee. Guttenberg implied no such thing. Guttenberg was concerned with “tenants under leases subordinate to the mortgage,” and we held that the Anti-Eviction Act did not apply to a “mortgagee holding a lien prior to the leasehold of a tenant in possession.” 85 N.J. at 623,
Aside from the fact that Guttenberg was concerned with tenants under a lease (which all parties admit the Josephsons did not have at the time of the mortgage), the majority’s view that even under Guttenberg the Josephsons would have been protected from eviction rests on a misunderstanding of month-to-month tenancies. Although a month-to-month tenancy is a continuing relationship, see ante at 223,
Ill
Turning to the 1986 amendments to the Anti-Eviction Act, the ambiguous language relied on by thе majority to abrogate a foreclosing mortgagee’s rights is hardly sufficient evidence of the Legislature’s intent to support overruling our clear holding in Guttenberg. The Legislature is presumed to be “‘thoroughly conversant with its own legislation and the judicial construction placed thereon.’ ” Quaremba v. Allan, 67 N.J. 1, 14,
Neither the word “mortgagee” nor our decision in Guttenberg is mentioned in the 1986 amendments to the Anti-Eviction Act. I cannot conceive that a Legislature conversant with the Anti-Eviction Act and with Guttenberg would overturn this Court’s decision and so drastically alter the fundamental property rights of foreclosing mortgagees without at least mentioning either the Guttenberg decision or the word “mortgagee” in the amendments or in the legislative history. Plaintiff is forced to rely on ambiguous language in N.J.S.A 2A:18-61.3b referring to an “owner’s or landlord’s successor in ownership or possession.” That language is no more explicit than the language contained in the preamendment version of the Anti-Eviction Act and it certainly does not mirror our admonition in Guttenberg that the Legislature must take a “straight[-]forward” approach should it desire “to modify established fundamental property rights of mortgagees.” 85 N.J. at 627,
As the Appellate Division aptly pointed out, a court shall not impute to the Legislature an intention to change established law in the absence of a clear manifestation of legislativе intent. 261 N.J.Super. at 439,
The majority, nevertheless, contends that the “plain language” of subsection b of N.J.S.A 2A: 18-61.3 encompasses foreclosing mortgagees because foreclosing mortgagees must obtain an order of possession to gain possession of property after default. “Thus, the prohibition in N.J.S.A 2A:18-61.3 of the removal of a tenant from the premises ‘by any order or judgment for possession * * * by the owner’s or landlord’s successor in * * * possession’ would
Although one can make an argument that this subsection was intended to refer to foreclosing mortgagees, to suggest that “plain language” dictates that result is disingenuous. To me, “plain language” would dictate that result if subsection b read: “A person who was a tenant of a landlord in premises covered by the Act may not be removed by any order or judgment for possession from the premises by a foreclosing mortgagee.”
An equally plausible reading of subsection b is that the phrase “owner’s or landlord’s successor in ownership or possession” cannot refer to foreclosing mortgagees because foreclosing mortgagees do not become successors in possession until an order of possession has been rendered and they do not become successors in ownership unless they elect to purchase the foreclosed property. Subsection b prohibits those who аre already the “owner’s or landlord’s successor in ownership or possession” from obtaining an order to remove a tenant. Because a foreclosing mortgagee is not a successor in possession, at least until a judicial order grants that mortgagee possession, subsection b cannot apply to him or her.
The meaning of “owner’s or landlord’s successor in possession or ownership” is far from “plain.” One may become a successor in ownership or possession in a myriad of ways. The language may merely evidence the Legislature’s attempt to prevent clever pretexts and stratagems devised by creative landlords and owners seeking to avoid the coverage of the Anti-Eviction Act. The inclusion of the “successor” language may apply to instances in which the parties circumvented the Act through fraudulent or illusory conveyances, such as those between affiliated entities or entities undergoing reorganization. Those possibilities are equally as plausible as, if not more plausible than, the majority’s conclusion that the Legislature intended the 1986 amendments to overturn Guttenberg and to subvert the well-defined property rights of mortgagees.
That argument begs the very question before us. Rather innocuously, the majority states that because purchasers at foreclosure sales are typically foreclosing mortgagees, the exemption from treble damages for an owner obtaining title by means of a foreclosure sale is really an exclusion for foreclosing mortgagees from the term “owners.” But the statute does not say that. It says merely that if you become an owner by means of a foreclosure sale, you cannot be subject to pretextual-eviction treble-damage liability. The statute does not read as аn exemption for foreclosing mortgagees because they are not within the scope of the term “owners” for this section. We settled in Guttenberg that foreclosing mortgagees were not within the scope of the term “owners.” 85 N.J. at 629-30,
Indeed, the omission of any reference to “mortgagees” indicates that the Legislature did not design the amendments to overturn Guttenberg and to subject mortgagees to the Anti-Eviction Act. Where statutory language is not plain on its face, the statute must be interpreted to effectuate legislative intent. See, e.g., Cedar Grove, Inc. v. Stanzione, 122 N.J. 202, 213,
The legislative findings describe the problem before the Legislature as the owners’ “removal of blameless tenants in order to directly or indirectly profit from conversion to higher income rental or ownership interest residential use.” N.J.S.A. 2A:18-61.1a.a. The Legislature’s concern was the use of “pretexts [and] strategems” to circumvent state eviction laws, N.J.SA 2A:18-61.1a.b, resulting in a plethora of hardships to displaced tenants,
When we probe beyond the Legislature’s words and findings, the legislative intent becomes even clearer. The 1986 amendment resulted from two separate bills, S-1912 and A-1840, which were consolidated before enactment. Nowhere in the legislative history does the word “mortgagees” appear. Nothing even hints that the Legislature was contemplating that the amendments would apply to foreclosing mortgagees.
The statement to A-1840 asserts that the “bill would prevent apartment house owners from using certain legal pretexts to eject tenants in order to make the building available for conversion to condominiums or cooperatives, or for subsequent rental at more lucrative rates.” Statement Accompanying Assembly No. 1840 (Introduced by Assemblyman Catrillo, et al.), at 3 (1986). It explains that “[ejxisting law” permitted “landlords” to terminate tenancies either on the pretext of retiring the premises from residential use or by simply boarding up a building. Ibid. The bill would now prevent removal of the tenants by such means. Ibid. The statement makes clear that the Act is aimed at landlords, not foreclosing mortgagees.
The phrase at issue here, “successor in ownership or possession,” first appeared in S-1912. Like the statement accompanying A-1840, the statement to S-1912 asserts that it would prevent “landlords” from using legal pretexts to eject tenants to convert property to higher-rental units. Statement Accompanying Senate No. 1912 (Introduced by Sen. Jackman), at 5 (1986). The statement repeatedly refers to the current rights of “landlords” and “tenants” when discussing how the bill would change their relationship. See id. at 5-6. Moreover, it states that a landlord must
The statement of the Senate Labor, Industry and Professions Committee regarding the combined bill of the Senate and the Assembly confirms that the phrase “prospective purchaser” does not include a foreclosing mortgagee. The first paragraph of the statement recites: “This bill addresses abuses that tenants suffer when a landlord evicts them because he seeks to permanently board up or demolish his building or seeks to retire permanently the building from residential use and then subsequently allows residential occupancy of the building.” Senate Labor, Industry and Professions Committee, Statement to Senate Committee Substitute for Senate No. 1912, and Assembly No. 1840, at 1 (1986). Notably absent is any reference to mortgagees.
One piece of legislative history mentions foreclosures. An amendment proposed by Senator Lesniak, part of which affected N.J.S.A 2A:18-61.6e, provided an exemption from the Act for a “purchaser (or his successor) of premises at a foreclosure sale, execution sale or bankruptcy sale ... when the former owner of the premises sought to retire permanently the premises from residential use or to permanently board up or demolish the premises and evict[ ] the tenants____” Statement Accompanying Proposed Amendments to Senate Committee Substitute for Senate Bill No. 1912, and Assembly Bill No. 1840, at 2 (1986). As the statement reflects, the amendment affects owners or their successors in interest who permanently board up property or retire it from residential use. In that limited context, the Lesniak amendment exempts purchasers at foreclosure sales, including foreclosing mortgagees. The 1986 amendment did not exempt foreclosing mortgagees from any other section of the Act because the Act did not apply to them.
Consistent with the legislative statements, Governor Kean, when signing the bill, proclaimed that the 1986 amendment would protect “tenants from the threat of eviction in real estate conversion projects.” Governor’s News Release for S-1912/A-1840, Oct.
Contrary to the majority’s view, ante at 231,
The purpose of this bill is to reaffirm the intent of the Legislature in enacting the 1986 amendments to the Anti-Eviсtion law by including foreclosing mortgagees and other lienholders, along with landlords and owners, as parties who must comply with the procedures set forth in the anti-eviction act, P.L.1974, c. 49, when evicting tenants from certain rental property. The New Jersey Supreme Court held in Guttenberg S. & L. Ass’n v. Rivera, 85 N.J. 617 [428 A.2d 1289 ] (1981), that a mortgagee that foreclosed on property was not covered by that act, and did not have to comply with the statutory procedures when evicting tenants whose leaseholds were subsequent to the mortgage. It is the Legislature’s intent that mortgagees that foreclose on rental property covered by the act must comply with the provisions of the act, and may evict tenants only on the basis of “good cause” as provided by the act.
[Assembly Housing Committee, Statement to Assembly No. 2102, at 1 (1993).]
The Assembly passed the bill, but the Senate never posted it for a vote. Consequently, it died at the end of the session. A similar bill, A-178, has been introduced in the current legislative session. Assembly No. 178, 206th Leg. (1994). The Legislature’s refusal to adopt A-2402 echoes the Legislature’s consistent message that the 1986 amendments to the Anti-Eviction Act were not intended to overrule our clear holding in Guttenberg.
The majority erroneously finds support for its interpretation of the 1986 amendments in recent additions to the Anti-Eviction Act.
The majority concludes, as it did with reference to the treble-damage-liability provision, that the Legislature’s exclusion of mortgagees who gain possession through foreclosure from the potential liability authorized by this section implies that the Legislature intended to cover foreclosing mortgagees in the anti-eviction section of the Act. Just as was the case with the treble-damage provision, those recent additions merely reflect a legislative recognition that mortgagees obtaining possession or title at a foreclosure sale should be held blameless to tenants who have already been served with a notice of eviction by a former owner pursuant to N.J.SA 2A:18-61.2g.
Had the Legislature intended that foreclosing mortgagees be covered under the anti-eviction section of the Act, it would have passed A-2402 last year or it will pass A-178 this year. Until the Legislature provides the Court with a clear indication that it has overruled Guttenberg, we should not infer its intent to do so from the recent amendments providing relocation assistance to evicted tenants. That mortgagees who obtain possession through foreclosure are not liable for such relocation assistance in no way suggests that they are subject to the “good cause” requirements of the Act.
IV
Furthermore, I disagree with the majority that the public-policy reasons for excluding foreclosing mortgagees from the Act no
First, the majority’s decision today conflicts with the underlying policy of N.J.S.A. 46:21-1, a section of the New Jersey Recording Act, which provides:
Except as otherwise provided herein or in chapter 9 of Title 12A of the New Jersey Statutes, whenever any deed or instrument of the nature or description set forth in section 46:16-1 of this Title, which shall have been or shall be duly acknowledged or proved and certified, shall have been or shall be duly recorded or lodged for record with the county recording officer of the county in which the real estate or other property affected thereby is situated or located such record shall, from that time, be notice to all subsequent judgment creditors, purchasers and mortgagees of the execution of the deed or instrument so recorded and of the contents thereof.
The Recording Act unmistakably provides that a duly-recorded interest in real property serves as notice to and takes priority over the interests of all persons obtaining subsequent intеrests in the property. The majority’s interpretation of the Anti-Eviction Act gives tenants a superior right to possess the leasehold despite the recordation and priority of the mortgagee’s security interest.
Thus, the Court has elevated tenancies subsequent to a mortgage above the priorities scheme of the Recording Act. “This construction is in complete derogation of the recording act policy that a first-in-time interest in realty has priority.” Harold N. Hensel, Note, New Jersey’s Anti-Eviction Act Prohibits Removal of Residential Tenants by Foreclosing Mortgagees Upon Default of Landlord Mortgagor Absent Good Cause, 11 Seton Hall L.Rev. 311, 324 (1980). “The resolution of the conflict between the Anti-Eviction Act policy and the first-in-time, first-in-right policy underlying the recording acts and mortgage law should be left to the legislature, which is in the best position to resolve it.” Id. at 326.
Similarly, the Legislature is better suited than the courts to analyze the other effects of applying the Anti-Eviction Act to foreclosing mortgagees. In Guttenberg, we noted a substantial difference between the concerns of mortgagees and those of landlords regarding mortgaged property. 85 N.J. at 626-27,
In Guttenberg we also cited evidence that undermining mortgagees’ security interests could, in turn, “accelerate the dеcrease in the supply of mortgagee funds” and could discourage lending for the rehabilitation of urban housing. Id. at 681,
The mortgagee banks’ reluctance to become involved in running apartment buildings creates additional problems. Furthermore, the costs of renegotiating leases with a defaulting mortgagor’s former tenants, or bringing legal action against tenants refusing to negotiate, may either diminish the property’s foreclosure value or create an impenetrable cloud on the property, thus rendering it unsalable. In this scenario, if subjected to the Anti-Eviction Act’s eviction-for-cause restraints, mortgagees presently conducting business in New Jersey may choose to follow the bank that refused to do business in Washington, D.C. Thus, while the amended Act indicates that tenants are to be accorded the broadest possible protections, the practical effect of including foreclosing mortgagees within the Act’s good cause restraints may significantly hinder mortgage funding in New Jersey.
[James E. Tonrey, Note, Protecting Tenants from Foreclosing Mortgagees: New Jersey Anti-Eviction Act In the Postr-Guttenberg Era, 23 Seton Hall L.Rev., 1006, 1064 (1993) (footnotes omitted) (hereinafter Tonrey).]
Take for example, the District of Columbia, which construed its anti-eviction legislation to cover foreclosing mortgagees. See Administrator of Veterans Affairs v. Valentine,
Defendants, on the other hand, allude to the impact of the present foreclosure climate on tenants. They assert that without the proteсtion of the Anti-Eviction Act, tenants will experience a devastating impact from the present wave of foreclosures. They focus on the more immediate concerns of individual tenants facing eviction as a result of foreclosure.
I admit that one can muster good arguments on both sides of the issue. I do not profess to know which is better. However, I do know that the issue is more properly addressed by the Legislature than by this Court. The balance between the immediate concerns of the tenants and the long-term supply of mortgage funds is one more properly struck by the Legislature. Foreclosing mortgagees should be subject to the Anti-Eviction Act only by informed legislative judgment.
One final note: that the Legislature, as well as the banking and lending institutions, would have failed to address these important and complex public-policy issues had the Legislature intended the 1986 amendments to the Anti-Eviction Act to apply to foreclosing mortgagees is inconceivable. That no hearings were held and no banking or lending institutions voiced concerns again suggests that no one, including the Legislature, believed that the 1986
CLIFFORD and POLLOCK, JJ., join in this opinion.
For reversal—Chief Justice WILENTZ and Justices HANDLER, O’HERN and STEIN—4.
For affirmance—Justices CLIFFORD, POLLOCK and GARIBALDI—3.
