Plaintiff Iron Mountain is a long-term commercial tenant operating a document storage and retrieval business in a building on Edison Place in Newark, which is owned by an unaffiliated entity, the Berkowitz Company. In 2004, the Municipal Council of the City of Newark adopted a resolution authorizing the Planning Board to investigate whether a group of properties within a twenty-four acre zone, including the building in which plaintiff is a tenant, qualified as blighted pursuant to the Local Redevelopment and Housing Law (LRHL), N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-1 to -49.
Following publication of a notice of the hearing and proper and sufficient service of that notice by mail on the building’s owner, N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-6(b)(3), the Planning Board held a public hearing to address whether the target area was blighted, N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-6(a). After the hearing, the Planning Board concluded that the target area met the applicable criteria for a blight designation. To effectuate that conclusion, on June 28, 2004, the Planning Board adopted its resolution recommending that the City Council designate the target area, including the property leased to plaintiff, as blighted. Thereafter, the City Council adopted a resolution, on July 14, 2004, approving the Planning Board’s recommendation and designating the blighted area as the “Downtown Core Redevelopment Area.” That City Council resolution also directed that a redevelopment plan for the blighted area be drafted.
On August 16, 2004, the Planning Board held another public hearing to consider the proposed redevelopment plan, after which it recommended adoption of the plan by its August 25, 2004, resolution. On October 6, 2004, the City Council passed an ordinance approving the Redevelopment Plan and, on the same day, it separately adopted a resolution appointing the Housing Authority to serve as the redevelopment agency.
Plaintiff filed its complaint in lieu of prerogative writs on November 22, 2004, in which it sought to challenge both the initial July 14, 2004, blight designation and the subsequent October 6, *77 2004, approval of the Redevelopment Plan. The trial court granted the City’s motion to dismiss plaintiffs challenge to the blight designation, reasoning that it was untimely because it was filed more than forty-five days after the July 14, 2004 City Council resolution approving the Planning Board’s recommendations for the blight designation. See R. 4:69-6(a). Although as part of that ruling, the trial court preserved plaintiffs right to challenge the Redevelopment Plan itself, it eventually became apparent that the complaint was directed solely to the underlying blight designation, rather than to the proposed redevelopment plan. As a result, the trial court dismissed the complaint in its entirety.
Plaintiffs appeal primarily focused on the assertion that its status as a long-term commercial tenant amounted to a protected interest in the property that entitled it to the same notice that the LRHL affords to the property’s owner, see N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-6(b)(3), and that the failure of the Planning Board to provide it with actual notice barred dismissal of its complaint. In the alternative, plaintiff argued on appeal that the trial court had abused its discretion in refusing, under these circumstances, to expand the forty-five day time period for filing its complaint, see R. 4:69-6(c) (authorizing expansion of time “where it is manifest that the interest of justice so requires”).
The Appellate Division affirmed in a published opinion,
Iron Mountain Info. Mgmt., Inc. v. City of Newark,
405
N.J.Super.
599,
The panel’s opinion, however, also included a discussion about an earlier appellate decision,
see Harrison Redevel. Agency v.
*78
DeRose,
398
N.J.Super.
361,
We granted plaintiffs petition for certification, 199
N.J.
517,
On that limited question, we affirm the judgment of the Appellate Division for substantially the reasons expressed in Judge Baxter’s published opinion. That is, we concur in the panel’s reasoning that the Legislature intended, in the blight designation context, to limit the right to actual notice,
see N.J.S.A.
40A:12A-6(b)(3), “to owners of record and those whose [names] are listed on the tax assessor’s records,”
Iron Mountain, supra,
405
N.J.Super.
*79
at 619,
As modified, the judgment of the Appellate Division is affirmed.
For affirmance as modified—Chief Justice RABNER and Justices LONG, LaVECCHIA, ALBIN, WALLACE, RIVERA-SOTO and HOENS—7.
Opposed—None.
