delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this land-use case, involving an application under
N.J.S.A.
40:55D-70(c)(l) for bulk and dimensional variances to develop an isolated undersized lot, we are called upon to address the separate but related issues of merger and self-created hardship. More particularly, we have been asked to determine the scope of the merger doctrine enunciated almost forty years ago in
Loechner v. Campoli
49
N.J.
504,
We likewise conclude that the notion of self-created hardship requires an affirmative act that transforms a conforming property into one that is non-conforming. Although an applicant’s failure to take steps to bring non-conforming property into compliance is one consideration for determining the existence of hardship, it is not a disqualifying self-created hardship.
I
The established facts are as follows: In 1939, at a time when Wall Township had no zoning ordinance, members of the Mauger family divided an 85 acre tract of land fronting on Bass Point Road and abutting the Manasquan River into individual lots. Among them were Lots designated 25, 26, 27 and 28, all of which are implicated, to some extent, in this case. Residences were built on Lots 25, 26 and 28 prior to the enactment of a zoning ordinance. (All of those lots are undersized and non-conforming.) Lot 27 is vacant and wooded. Lots 26 and 27 are the primary focus of this case.
Lot 26 was created when it was conveyed from Ida B. and Charles B. Mauger to Kenneth L. and Jeanette Barre Thomson by a deed recorded on May 19, 1939. In turn, the Thomsons conveyed the property, by recorded deed, to Harry H. and Elizabeth L. Halsted in 1945, and the Halsteds conveyed it by recorded deed to Thomas W. and Hope D. Mason in 1946. Lot 27 also was created in 1939 when it was conveyed by recorded deed from Ida B. Mauger, individually, to Wilfred F. and Laura Lee Sherman, who also owned Lot 25.
The lots became non-conforming in 1955 upon the adoption of a zoning ordinance requiring a minimum lot area of one acre, a minimum width of 200 feet, a fifty-foot front yard setback and twenty-foot side and rear yard setbacks. The 1955 zoning ordinance made specific exception for preexisting non-conforming lots “provided the owner owns no adjacent land which may, without undue hardship to him, be included as part of the plot in question.”
In 1957, the Masons conveyed Lot 26 to J. Clarence and Ethel M. Allen by recorded deed. Wilfred and Laura Lee Sherman still owned Lots 25 and 27 when the Allens purchased Lot 26. Shortly thereafter, the Shermans conveyed Lot 27, along with Lot 25, to their son, Donald Lee Sherman by deed recorded on November 15, 1957. Wilfred and Laura Lee Sherman retained the right to live on Lot 25 for the remainder of their lives.
A year or two after moving into the house located on Lot 26, Clarence Allen approached Wilfred Sherman about acquiring a twenty-foot strip of property from Lot 25 to add to Lot 26 to make it conform to the twenty-foot side yard requirements in the 1955 Ordinance. Wilfred Sherman set a price of $2,000 for the twenty-foot strip. During the course of those negotiations, Allen also agreed to purchase Lot 27, at a total cost of $8,000 for both properties.
Thereafter, the Shermans applied to the planning board for approval to subdivide Lot 25 to provide the twenty-foot strip to the Allens to add to Lot 26. The planning board approved the subdivision in 1959.
At closing, the Allens directed that Lot 27 be placed in their son Robert’s name. On January 27, 1960, the property was recorded as sold to Robert M. Allen. At his deposition, Clarence testified that the lot was a gift to his son, and that at the same time, he had set up a bank account for his other son, Raymond, that contained an amount equal to the value of the lot. Clarence intended to increase the bank account in proportion to escalating real estate prices. However, prices eventually skyrocketed and he was unable to match the value of Lot 27. When that occurred, Clarence asked Robert to give Raymond a half-interest in the vacant lot. Presumably the bank account was to be shared equally as well. Robert willingly agreed and on December 3, 1974, a half-interest in Lot 27 was recorded as having been conveyed to Raymond.
Over the years and with the knowledge and approval of his sons, Clarence used Lot 27 for various purposes. In 1960 he built a tool shed and ran electricity from his house to the shed. The shed held Clarence’s tools along with certain equipment purchased by all the neighbors for the neighborhood’s use. Clarence paid for the shed building materials, but in his deposition, Raymond testified that he and Robert actually built the shed with their father as a family project. Subsequently, Clarence enclosed both lots with a fence so that his dog would have a larger space in which to run. He also put a gate at the Lot 28 side of the property so that the residents of Lot 28 could use Lot 27 for walks if they wished. Clarence planted a vegetable garden on Lot 27 and paid to install a bulkhead along both lots. In addition, in 1987, he dug a well on Lot 27 and placed a pump in the tool house to provide water to both lots. He also paid the taxes on Lot 27.
Raymond testified that he and his brother, who did not live in the area, had taken care of the upkeep on Lot 27. During visits home, he and Robert would clean up the brush, mow the lawn, and keep the honeysuckle from growing wild. He asserted that his father discussed all measures regarding the lot with him and that he and his brother were happy with the fact that their father was keeping himself busy with projects on their property. Robert and Raymond considered themselves the owners of Lot 27.
In 1989, the elder Allens (who were in their 80s) told their sons that they wished to move away and suggested the possibility of selling both properties. The sons apparently had no desire to build on Lot 27 and, after a family discussion, it “was mutually agreed that seEing was the best thing to do.” In July of 1989, the lots were listed separately for sale -with Barrie Riddle of the Folk Real Estate Agency. Although the elder Allens signed both agreements, Riddle testified unequivocaEy in depositions that she was always aware that Raymond and Robert were the owners of Lot 27. Riddle stated that, in addition to her communications with the elder AEens, who were accessible because they lived nearby, “anytime anything would come up on the properties, I would speak with Robert.” Moreover, she indicated that, from her dealings with the family, she believed that the elder Allens were discussing all matters with their sons and that the entire fandly needed to approve of any sale of the properties.
During the winter of 1990-1991, defendant Paul Amato became aware that Lots
(1) Lot 26 is currently owned by Ethel and Clarence Allen and Lot 27 is owned by Raymond and Robert Allen. Since the lots are under separate ownership, there was no merger of the two and a re-subdivision would not be necessary.
In October of that year, Amato obtained another opinion letter from Hoffman stating that the five foot side-yard setbacks on Lot 27, granted by the board in 1959 were still in effect. Amato subsequently made an offer to purchase Lot 26 for $400,000 and Lot 27 for $100,000 without any contingencies.
The Allens’ attorney prepared separate contracts for the sale of each lot. Clarence and Ethel were the sellers of Lot 26, and Robert and Raymond of Lot 27. Each contract listed Paul Amato as the buyer and contained a provision stating:
The buyer [Amato] has the right to assign this contract or take title in the name of some other entity in which he has a controlling interest upon the express agreement that he shall continue to remain responsible for the obligations set forth in this agreement and will personally execute the note and note mortgage referred to herein.
In accordance with that provision, Amato assigned his rights to Lot 27 to Shire Realty, Inc., a corporation in which he is a 50% shareholder. On January 6, 1992, Clarence and Ethel Allen transferred the title to Lot 26 to Amato for $400,000, and Robert and Raymond Allen transferrеd the title to Lot 27 to Shire Realty for $100,000. Robert and Raymond split the proceeds from the sale of Lot 27.
Amato immediately placed Lot 26 back on the market. Shire then applied to the zoning board for permission to construct a house on Lot 27. Amato was a member of the board at the time. In late January 1992, Sandra Barre and George Sollami, potential buyers, who had been made aware of the Hoffman letters and of Shire’s variance application to build on Lot 27, contracted to purchase Lot 26 for $412,500.
In April and May of 1992, the zoning board held hearings on Shire’s application. Amato made the presentation to the board. Sherry Oberg, who with Gunther Jock, is the owner of Lot 28, appeared at both hearings and testified in opposition to the application. At the May 20 hearing, the board approved the variance application. On June 15, 1992, Barre and Sollami closed title on Lot 26.
Jock and Oberg filed a complaint in lieu of prerogative writs in the Superior Court of Monmouth County seeking reversal of the variance approval. After some procedural maneuvering that need not be recоunted here, the lawsuit was pursued by Jock, Oberg, Barre and Sollami (collectively plaintiffs). Plaintiffs filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing that Amato had a conflict of interest because he was a member of the board, that Lots 26 and 27 had merged under the Allens’ ownership as a matter of law, and that any hardship was self-created by Amato, thus precluding the grant of a variance.
On July 21, 1997, Shire filed a new application with the board, requesting approval to construct a single-family house on Lot 27. The board conducted a series of hearings to determine whether merger had occurred. It concluded that, despite some use by the elder Allens of their sons’ property, with the sons’ approval, the two lots were in separate ownership and thus had never merged as of the time that Amato and Shire purchased them. Further, the board determined that the lots did not merge undеr Amato and Shire, who were separate entities.
Hearings to decide the merits of the variance application were then held. After twenty-seven days, the board determined that Shire’s hardship was not self-created. Furthermore, in terms of Shire’s attempts to bring the property into conformity, the board concluded there was no available land that Shire could have purchased to increase the size of Lot 27 because Lot 26 was also undersized and because of the proximity of the house on Lot 28 to the Lot 27 property line. Moreover, the board found that the neighboring property owners were not interested in purchasing lot 27 at fair market value. 2
The board concluded that the standards for a (c)(1) variance had been established. Specifically, the board found undue hardship due to the undersized nature of the lot (positive criteria) and that the grant of the variance would not be a substantial detriment to the public good or substantially impair the purpose of the zone plan and zoning ordinance (negative criteria). Accordingly, it went on to grant specific variances. 3
On April 26, 2001, plaintiffs filed a complaint in lieu of prerogative writs seeking vacation of the board’s decision and arguing that Lots 26 and 27 had merged as a matter of law. The trial judge disagreed, affirming the board’s factual finding that the lots had not merged under the Allens or under Amato and Shire and rejecting plaintiffs’ argument regarding “constructive merger,” finding “nothing in real estate or municipal law to support such a concept.”
The trial judge went on to review the history of the case and concluded that Lot 27 is undersized and non-conforming as a result of a zoning change and not through any action by Shire or its predecessor in title. The judge also took into account Shire’s efforts to sell Lot 27 to the plaintiffs for fair market value. Finally, the judge affirmed the zoning board’s finding that Shire had satisfied the positive and negative criteria in N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70.
Plaintiffs appealed and the Appellate Division reversed.
Jock v. Zoning Bd. of Adjustment of Township of Wall,
371
More particularly, the court pointed to Clarence Allen’s previously detailed activities on Lot 27 as evidence of ownership, warranting a merger conclusion.
Id.
at 560,
The panel also determined that the efforts of the elder Allens and Shire to avoid merger “rendered the isolation of the nonconforming lot a self-created hardship.”
Id.
at 551,
II
Shire argues that Loechner does not apply to property legally in separate ownership; that any other interpretation will create chaos in the land-use field with no concomitant benefit; that Loechner is not applicable to Lot 26 because it was created pursuant tо the Planning Act; that the zoning board was estopped from adopting plaintiffs’ merger conclusion because of the contrary written advice of the zoning officer; and that Sollami and Barre were well aware of the status of the lots before purchasing Lot 26, and are thus estopped from asserting claims against Amato.
The zoning board supports Shire, arguing not only that the Appellate Division improperly expanded Loechner, but also that the decision has placed the title of all contiguous undersized lots in doubt. According to the board, under Loechner, when an application to develop an undersized lot is filed, it is able to determine if the lot had merged simply by viewing the chain of title to ensure that it was never jointly owned with an adjoining lot. The board argues that it now will be compelled to ascertain the identity of parties who owned any adjoining properties, determine their relationship to the adjoining lot owners and assess factually whether they ever exercised dominion and control over the nonconforming lot. The board also argues that the zoning officer’s representations to Shire should be honored; that Barre and Sollami should be barred from relief because they were well aware of Shire’s proposed use of Lot 27 when they purchased Lot 26; and that because Lots 26 and 27 were created under the Planning Act, they are exempt from merger.
Ill
Where a party comes into ownership of a single lot that does not meet the area and dimension requirements of the current zoning law, and that party does not own adjoining land, the lot is considered to be isolated and non-conforming.
Davis Enterprises v. Karpf,
105
N.J.
476, 481,
A
The term “merger” is used in zoning law to describe the combination of two or more contiguous lots of substandard size, that are held in common ownership, in order to meet the requirements of a particular zoning regulation. Robert M. Anderson, 2 American Law of Zoning § 9.67 (4th ed.2005). In effect, it requires subdivision approval for the development of individual substandard parcels if contiguous parcels have been, at any relevant time, in the same ownership and, at the time of such ownership, the parcel was not substandard.
Merger is said to be “theoretical” in the sense that it does not preclude the treatment of the lots as separate for other purposes. The official map is not affected; neither are taxes,
Young v. Bergen County Bd. of Taxation,
5
N.J. Tax
102, 108-09 (1982), or financing arrangements altered,
Family Savings Bank v. DeVincentis,
284
N.J.Super.
503, 509,
B
In
Loechner,
the plaintiff and her husband acquired title as tenants by the entirety to three adjoining lots on which their house was situated. 49
N.J.
at 507,
After exhausting her remedies, Mrs. Loechner filed an action in lieu of prerogative writs and prevailed in asserting that subdivision approval was not necessary because the five lots were delineated under the Old Map Act.
Id.
at 507-08,
[W]hether the sale of two contiguous lots out of a group of five lots, all in one ownership and delineated on a map filed under the Old Map Act, is a subdivision and whether Planning Board consent to the said conveyance of the two lots is required.
[Id. at 508,231 A.2d 553 (emphasis added).]
In answering that question, we accepted as a given the doctrine of merger. We said:
The acquisition of title by plaintiff to Lots 189 and 190 which were contiguous to Lots 186-188 created one parcel or tract of land consisting of five separate lots as shown on the Hitchcock map.
[Ibid, (emphasis added).]
We went on:
Plaintiffs contemplated conveyance of Lots 189 and 190 thereafter constitutes a prospective subdivision and requires the advance approval of the Planning Board unless she prevails on her argument that the delineation of these two lots on a filed map precludes the application of the subdivision statute and/or ordinance.
[Ibid.]
In reaching our conclusion, we relied on the language of N.J.S.A. 40:55-1.2 that defines a subdivision as “the division of a lot, tract or parcel” and noted,
The word ‘lot’ as used in the Subdivision Act must be read in context with the words ‘tract or parcel of land’ in order to ascertain its meaning. Consistent with recognized principles of statutory construction ‘lot’ takes its meaning from the other two words with which it is associated. Martell v. Lane, 22 N.J. 110,123 A.2d 541 (1956); Salz v. State House Commission, 18 N.J. 106,112 A.2d 716 (1955); State v. Murzda, 116 N.J.L. 219, 183 A. 305 (E. & A.1936); 2 Sutherland, Statutory Construction § 4908 (3d ed. 1443).
[Loechner, supra, 49 N.J. at 510,231 A.2d 553 .]
Important to our analysis, as well, was the fact that the Old Map Act was merely a conveyancing aid whereas the Planning Act “was designed to afford municipalities desiring the advantages of its provisions to enact comprehensive regulatory standards which would facilitate sound and orderly future municipal growth along preconceived lines, in short a planned community growth.” Ibid.
Ultimately, we held that Mrs. Loeehner’s adjacent lots, although denominated on the Old Map, were, under the merger doctrine, part of a larger tract or parcel shе owned, and that:
[Reduction in the size of a parcel or tract of land by a division into two or more smaller parcels is in the language of the Subdivision Act a ‘subdivision’ and subject to the statutory terms. See Lake Intervale Homes, Inc., v. Parsippany-Troy Hills T[ownship], 47 N.J.Super. 334,136 A.2d 57 (Law Div.1957), aff'd. 28 N.J. 423,147 A.2d 28 (1958). The separation of Lots 189 and 190 from the balance of the lots owned by plaintiff constituted a subdivision.
[Loechner, supra, 49 N.J. at 511-12,231 A.2d 553 .]
We added that if the lots resulting from the proposed subdivision would meet all zoning requirements, except for area and dimensional standards, the subdivision should be approved subject to the grant of a variance.
5
Id.
at 512,
In sum, a
Loechner
merger takes place as a matter of law where adjacent substandard lots come into common legal title. Although
Loechner
never actually used the word “merger,” commentators and subsequent decisions have denominated the
Loechner
rule as a merger principle. Cox,
supra,
§ 12-2 (stating
Loechner
is a merger case); Frizzell,
supra,
§ 13.18 (stating “decisions in
Ardolino, Loechner
and
Ryan
[
6
] [gave] municipalities ... power to “merge” adjacent non-conforming properties”); 3 Rathkopf,
The Law of Zoning and Planning,
§ 49.13 (2005) (citing
Loechner
and stating “merger requirements” may operate
upon contiguous undeveloped lots pursuant to Loechner);
Scardigli v. Borough of Haddonfield Zoning Bd. of Adjustment,
300
N.J.Super.
314, 320,
C
There are a number of recognized exceptions to the merger doctrine. For example, it does not apply to adjoining lots, owned by the same person, “all of which are found and certified by the administrative officer to conform to the requirements of the municipal development regulations and are shown and designated as separate lots, tracts or parcels on the tax map or atlas of the municipality.”
N.J.S.A.
40:55D-7;
Scardigli, supra,
300
N.J.Super.
at 320-21,
There is an additional exception that is applicable in this case. In
Pribish v. Corbett,
105
N.J.Super.
407, 409,
Those cases dealt with lots mapped and platted pursuant to statutes antedating the Planning Act of 1953 — statutes devoid of the significant and salutary protections of the public interest contained in that act. The lots here involved having once been finally approved by the planning board, operating under the standards of the Planning Act of 1953, as appropriate for separate home sites, that decision is in nowise impaired or rendered devoid of effect, insofar as the Planning Act is concerned, by the fact that two of such lots, adjacent to each other, have subsequently come into a single ownership. This is at least true where, as we find to be the case here, the owner has done nothing to destroy the distinct identity of the two lots as suitable building sites.
[Ibid.]
That reasoning reflects the reality that, where property has already satisfied modern land planning rules, merger is unwarranted. Accordingly, once a lot has been created by a planning board pursuant to subdivision approval, it is exempt from the merger doctrine.
Plaintiffs argue that that exception does not apply here because the board’s action in 1959 was not “of the type” required to invoke Pribish. The statutory definition of subdivision and the existing ease law are instructive. Pursuant to N.J.S.A. 40:55D-7, a subdivision is:
the division of a lot, tract or parcel of land into two or more lots, tracts, parcels or other divisions of land for sale or development. The following shall not be considered subdivisions within the meaning of this act, if no new streets are created: (1) divisions of land found by the planning board or subdivision committee thereof appointed by the chairman to be for agricultural purposes where all resulting parcels are 5 acres or larger in size, (2) divisions of property by testamentary or intestate provisions, (3) divisions of proрerty upon court order, including but not limited to judgments of foreclosure, (4) consolidation of existing lots by deed or other recorded instrument and (5) the conveyance of one or more adjoining lots, tracts or parcels of land, owned by the same person or persons and all of which are found and certified by the administrative officer to conform to the requirements of the municipal development regulations and are shown and designated as separate lots, tracts or parcels on the tax map or atlas of the municipality.
Recently, the Appellate Division reached a similar conclusion. In
Menlo Park Plaza v. Planning Bd.,
316
N.J.Super.
451, 459,
IV
The merger inquiry could end there. However, because of the implications of the Appellate Division’s holding that Loechner is a conduct-based analysis and does not require commonality of title, we choose to address plaintiffs’ argument that the senior Allens were the true owners of both lots and that therefore the fact of different legal title is of no consequence to a Loechner analysis, a premise with which we disagree.
Notably, the Court in Loechner did not deem the lots to have merged until all five were titled in Mrs. Loechner’s name. Related ownership was obviously not within our contemplation as a merger trigger, nor was the issue of dominion and control. Rather, we intended the rule to operate, as a matter of law, to prevent the development of individual substandard lots, without subdivision approval, if contiguous parcels are or have been held in common title. Over the past 38 years and until the decision of the Appellate Division in this case, the view that Loechner requires identity of legal title appears to have been well understood. Indeed, plaintiffs were unable to cite a single New Jersey case that has ever considered a merger analysis in the absence of common legal title. The reason is obvious: simple logic requires commonality of title before lots can be considered part of a larger tract or parcel for zoning purposes. We note, moreover, that that approach has created no particular difficulties. As Loechner obviously recognized, the rule is straightforward and simple, requires only a title search, and results in uniformity and predictability of outcome.
On the contrary, plaintiffs’ notion that we should import a conduct analysis into the merger doctrine would have major ramifications to land use authorities and would render the title of all contiguous undersized lots in doubt. It would further devolve upon the land use authorities the job of determining, not only the results of a title search, which, under
Loechner,
would be sufficient, but also the historical relationship between and conduct of adjoining property owners toward each other
Plaintiffs argue that we should be willing to pay that institutional price because their interpretation of Loechner could result in more zoning conformity by sweeping in more lots. Even if that is true, it would be at too steep a cost: the proliferation of merger litigation with complex proof problems and the loss of simplicity, uniformity and predictability. Further, it will merely assure that parents will never buy adjoining property for their children and that related legal entities will be assiduous in purchasing only non-contiguous lots for feаr that any informality in the way the lots are treated will cause them to merge. In other words, the undersized lots will still be sold and likely developed, but not by adjacent owners.
That convoluted methodology with its complicated proof problems and lack of societal benefit was not what we intended in Loechner. Rather, we intended the legal merger principle to be a narrow, bright-line rule applicable only to properties in common legal title.
Our holding dovetails with the approach taken by the vast majority of jurisdictions that have accepted a merger doctrine. To be sure, the states have not adopted a monolithic approach to the subject. Thus, some hold that merger of adjacent undersized lots in common title is “automatic.”
See, e.g., Farley v. Town of Lyman,
Y
Plaintiffs raise entirely different merger arguments in respect of Amato and Shire. Unlike the claims regarding the Allens that are solely conduct-based, plaintiffs urge, not that Amato and Shire “treated” the lots as one, but that they actually held Lots 26 and 27 in common legal title. We will address those arguments serially.
A
Plaintiffs first contend, and the Appellate Division agreed, that Lots 26 and 27 merged into common title when Amato contracted to purchase them because he became the equitable owner of both lots. We disagree. The doctrine of
The doctrine is also commonly applied to cases in which a party to a real estate contract dies before closing. Equitable conversion is invoked to require the decedent’s estate to carry through with the transaction, thus giving effect to the intent of the parties.
In the Estate of Yates,
368
N.J.Super.
226, 235,
A necessary corollary of the rule is that the doctrine will not be applied where it is apparent from the contract that the parties intended that it should not operate as an equitable conversion.
Williston, supra,
§ 50.42;
Gallicchio v. Jarzla,
18
N.J.Super.
206, 214,
There is simply nothing about the contracts for Lots 26 and 27 that would warrant application of the doctrine of equitable conversion. First, plaintiffs are third parties seeking to invoke the doctrine to their advantage and not to give expression to the wishes of the Allens and Amato. That is not a legitimate use of the doctrine. Second, there is nothing in the contracts to suggest that the parties expected, intended or even imagined that they would eliminate the separate legal titles in which the properties had been held up to that point. In fact, in light of the efforts Amato took to insure that the lots would not merge, including obtaining Hoffman’s representations to that effect, and his reservation of the right to take title in Shire’s name, plaintiffs’ proposed equitable conversion would appear to thwart and not carry out the intent of the parties. Thus, the Appellate Division’s conclusion that the contract of sale to Amato operated to transfer title to him on an equitable conversion basis is an unsupportable application of the doctrine. Accordingly, the lots did not mеrge when Amato contracted to buy them.
B
Plaintiffs also argue and the Appellate Division agreed that merger occurred when Amato and Shire took title to Lots 26 and 27. That conclusion is likewise wide of the mark. As indicated above, the lots had not merged under the Allens. Thus, they were sold separately — Lot 26 to Amato alone, and Lot 27 to Shire Realty, a corporation in which Amato and his wife were sole shareholders. Those are entirely distinct legal entities entitled
Even if Amato and his wife, as the sole owners of Shire Realty, were viewed as the actual owners of Lot 27, (as opposed to the corporate owners) that would not advance plaintiffs’ position because Amato alone owned Lot 26.
See, e.g., Carciofi v. Bd. of Appeal of Billerica,
22
Mass.App.Ct.
926,
Moreover, if the Amatos jointly owned Lot 27 and Amato individually owned Lot 26, the situation would be identical to that in
Loechner
before the properties were deemed to have merged. There, as in this ease, some of the property was titled solely in the husband while the husband and wife jointly held title to the rest.
See Loechner, supra,
49
N.J.
at 507,
VI
We turn next to plaintiffs’ claim that the hardship in this case was self-created by Shire or a predecessor in title thus barring Shire’s right to a (c)(1) hardship variance. N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70(c)(1), provides:
e. (1) Where: (a) by reason of exceptional narrowness, shallowness or shape of a specific piece of property, or (b) by reason of exceptional topographic conditions or physical features uniquely affecting a specific piece of property, or (c) by reason of an extraordinary and exceptional situation uniquely affecting a specific piece of property оr the structures lawfully existing thereon, the strict application of any regulation pursuant to article 8 of this act would result in peculiar and exceptional practical difficulties to, or exceptional and undue hardship upon, the developer of such property, [the zoning board shall have the power to] grant, upon an application or an appeal relating to such property, a variance from such strict application of such regulation so as to reheve such difficulties or hardship[.]
Undue hardship refers solely to the particular physical condition of the property, not personal hardship to its owner, financial or otherwise.
See Isko v. Planning Bd. of Livingston,
51
N.J.
162, 174,
The availability of a hardship variance depends on how the hardship was created. If an owner who was entitled to a hardship variance sells to a buyer who is aware of the nonconformity, the buyer does not lose the right to a variance because of that knowledge.
Harrington Glen Inc. v. Municipal Bd. of Adjustment of the Borough of Leonia,
52
N.J.
22, 28,
Where the hardship has been created by the applicant, or a predecessor in title, relief will normally be denied:
If the property owner or his predecessors in title created the nonconforming condition, then the hardship may be deemed to be self-imposed. To measure this type of impact it is necessary to know when the zoning ordinance limitations were adopted and the status of the property with respect to those limitations at that time. Thus, if the lot had contained a 75-foot frontage and despite the existence of that requirement, the owner sold a 40-foot strip of the land, he or his successors in title would have little cause to complain. Likewise no undue hardship is suffered by an owner of a lot with a 35-foot frontage who acquired an adjoining 40-foot strip so that the lot complied with the ordinance and then sold a part of the land. These examples serve to illustrate the nature of a self-inflicted hardship which would not satisfy the statutory criteria.
[Commons, supra, 81 N.J. at 606,410 A.2d 1138 .]
As those examples reveal, a self-created hardship requires an affirmative action by the landowner or a predecessor in title that brings an otherwise conforming property into non-conformity.
See, e.g., Barnes Land Corp. v. Bd. of Adjustment of Township of Wyckoff,
174
N.J.Super.
301,
Plaintiffs nevertheless advance two distinct arguments under the self-created hardship rubric.
A
The first is that by taking Lots 26 and 27 in separate title, the Allens and later Shire “created” the hardship. That contention misconceives the nature of self-creation and misreads the decisions in the hardship cases. In
Barnes, Ketcherick, Branagan
and
Herman, supra,
the applicant or a predecessor in title turned conforming
Nor do we subscribe to plaintiffs characterization of the way in which Lots 26 and 27 were titled by the parties as somehow nefarious. Property is often purchased and kept in diverse ownership in order to preserve a zoning advantage. That is an entirely legitimate practice to avoid the application of the merger doctrine. It is as acceptable in purpose as tax and estate planning to avoid or reduce the payment of taxes. Such planning does not “create” a non-conformity.
B
Plaintiffs also argue that, by their activities on Lot 27, the elder Allens essentially obliterated the division between the lots, creating a single parcel that could not be later developed as two lots without violating the self-created hardship rule. To be sure, parties can volitionally join their undersized properties into a single lot and thus lose the right to develop the parcels separately on a hardship theory. Those circumstances, however, are few and far between. For example, if the elder Allens, with the consent of their sons, had built an addition to their house on Lot 26 that encroached across the property line onto Lot 27, the board could have found that utilization of both lots in the service of a single structure, although insufficient to establish a
Loechner
merger, barred the parties from selling the lots separately based on hardship.
See Chicalese v. Monroe Township Planning Bd.,
334
N.J.Super.
413,
As the board and trial judge properly found, the facts in this case fall far short of what would be necessary to invoke the above rule, which was not intended to open the floodgates of dominion and control litigation. The fact that the Allen sons allowed their father to use, and even improve their property, was not an indication that they agreed to the obliteration of the individual identity of the lots. Therefore, the separate sale of the lots was not a self-created hardship. As the trial court stated, in reaching that conclusion:
Without doubt, Clarence Allen did use Lot 27 for various purposes while he was living on the adjoining Lot 26. His use of the sons’ land was not adverse to their interests. As Kobert Allen testified, both sons knew about the workshop and vegetable garden and fencing and the well and the bulkhead because Clarence told them about them and they saw them on visits home. In short, his uses were with permission of the owners because it kept their father busy and rendered no detriment to them.
In sum, the evidence was inadequate to establish that the parties obliterated the division between the lots such that sale of the individual lots was a disqualifying self-created hardship.
VII
Concluding that the hardship was not created by Shire or a predecessor in interest,
Related to a determination of undue hardship are the efforts which the property owner has made to bring the property into compliance with the ordinance’s specifications. Attempts to acquire additional land would be significant if it is feasible tо purchase property from the adjoining property owners. Endeavors to sell the property to the adjoining landowners, the negotiations between and among the parties, and the reasonableness of the prices demanded and offered are also relevant considerations. See Gougeon v. Stone Harbor Bd. of Adjustment, 52 N.J. 212, 224,245 A.2d 7 (1968), where it was held that if an owner of land refused to sell at a “fair and reasonable” price he would not be considered to be suffering an “undue hardship.” If on the other hand the owner is willing to sell at a “fair and reasonable” price and the adjoining property owners refuse to make a reasonable offer, then “undue hardship” would exist.
[81 N.J. at 606,410 A.2d 1138 .]
A similar alternative would be for the applicant to purchase adjacent land to achieve conformity.
Thus, the attempt made by a party to bring the property into conformity by purchase from or sale to adjoining owners is a factor for consideration, even where the non-conforming status of the property was originally created through no fault of the then owner or his predecessor.
Dallmeyer v. Lacey,
219
N.J.Super.
134, 146,
Alternatively, as Judge Havey observed in
Kogene Bldg. & Development Corp. v. Edison Township Bd. of Adjustment,
249
N.J.Super.
445, 457,
Instead of establishing fair market value for the purpose of granting a conditional variance, the board, in deciding the threshold question of whether undue hardship exists (the positive criterion), considers whether the owner has offered the lot for sale to the adjoining property owners based on the fail- market value of the property assuming that all necessary variances have been granted. See Dallmeyer v. Lacey T[ownship] Bd. of Adjustment, 219 N.J.Super. 134, 139,529 A.2d 1063 (Law Div.1987): W. Cox, New Jersey Zoning and Land Use Administration § 12-1.3, at 176-78 (1990). If the offer is rejected, “undue hardship” generally exists. See Dallmeyer, 291 [219] N.J.Super. 134, 139,529 A.2d 1063 (Law Div.1987).
That is what occurred here. In the proceeding below, Shire offered Lot 27 to both adjoining property owners, the objectors in this case. After the establishment of fair market value, the adjoining owners declined the purchase. In light of that fact and because the hardship was not self-created, the board determined that Shire qualified for consideration for a hardship variance.
According to plaintiffs, that was not enough. They argue that under
Commons, supra,
Shire, which in 1992, was seeking a variance to build on Lot 27, was required to offer to sell thе lot to Amato or to buy Amato’s lot at fair market value just as if Amato were a stranger. Because
As a practical matter, the 1992 variance is not under review here. As we have noted, it was invalidated in a prior Appellate Division decision. An entirely new variance application was filed in 1997. At that point, Lot 26 had been owned by Barre and Sollami for five years. Thus, to live up to the Commons, supra, requirement in this proceeding, Shire only had to offer the property to the current adjacent owners of Lot 26, (Barre and Sollami), and Lot 28 (Jock and Oberg), which it did.
Even assuming for the sake of argument however, that Shire’s failure to offer the property to Amato in 1992 was relevant to the 1997 application, that would not preclude Shire from receiving a variance. Just as conduct in respect of a fair market value offer is not outcome determinative, neither would failure to offer property for sale necessarily be a disqualifier, although it would certainly be a factor for consideration. As we have said:
[A] fair market value offer to purchase the property by an adjoining owner is a relevant, but not dispositive, consideration in determining whether hardship exists. See Gougeon v. Board of Adjustment of Stone Harbor, 54 N.J. 138, 148-49,253 A.2d 806 (1969) (Gougeon II) (an adjoining property owner’s fair market value offer by itself does not warrant a denial of grant of variance); cf. Chirichello v. Zoning Bd. of Adjustment of Monmouth Beach, supra, 78 N.J. at 555,397 A.2d 646 (saleability of land is only another yardstick by which undue hardship is to be measured); 3 R. Anderson, American Law of Zoning § 18.54, at 292 (2d ed.1977) (“[a] land owner has the right to develop his land; he is not required to sell” his non-conforming property just because he received an offer to purchase). Courts in other jurisdictions have also approved hardship variances notwithstanding that the property owner received an offer to purchase from a neighbor. See, e.g., Marchi v. Town of Scarborough,511 A.2d 1071 , 1073 (Me.1986) (“[t]he fact that the property has a potential for sale to an abutting owner” does not preclude granting a hardship variance); Macchia v. Board of Appeals, 7 Misc. 2d 763, 764, 164 N.Y.S.2d 463, 465 (Sup.Ct.1957) (refusal of reasonable offer from adjoining property owner was improper ground for denying application for budding permit and variance because an administrative board cannot constitutionally compel a property owner to sell his property); cf. Kent County Land Co. v. Zoning Bd. of Review, 10 [100] R.I. 418, 421,216 A.2d 511 , 513 (1966) (an offer to purchase by an objector does not preclude granting of hardship variance).
The import of our decisions is that an offer to purchase by an adjacent owner authorizes, but does not require, the denial of a hardship variance. See, e.g., Commons v. Westwood Zoning Bd. of Adjustment, supra, 81 N.J. at 606-08,410 A.2d 1138 (“[e]ndeavors to sell the property to the adjoining landowners, the negotiations between and among the parties, and the reasonableness of the prices demanded and offered are also relevant considerations”); Harrington Glen, Inc. v. Leonia Bd. of Adjustment, 52 N.J. 22, 30-31,243 A.2d 233 (1968) (willingness of neighbor or interested person to buy at fair price may be considered in determining hardship); see also Chirichello v. Zoning Bd. of Adjustment of Monmouth Beach, supra, 78N.J. at 561, 397 A.2d 646 (in its discretion, board may consider propriety of variance conditioned on selling property to adjoining property owner). Notwithstanding the offer, a board may still grant the requested relief. Gougeon II, supra, 54 N.J. at 148-49,253 A.2d 806 .
[Davis, supra, 105 N.J. at 482-84,523 A.2d 137 .]
It follows that even if the failure of Shire to offer to sell to or buy frоm Amato was an error, it was not, as plaintiffs argue, a per se disqualifier for a hardship variance. It may be that the board was satisfied in 1992 that Amato’s refusal of the offer was implicit in the entire transaction. It may also be that it concluded, in light of the zoning officer’s representations, that to require a sale between Shire and Amato would contravene the purpose of the entire transaction. Certainly the board was satisfied, in respect of the 1997 application, that the refusal of Jock-Oberg and BarreSollami to purchase Lot 27 was sufficient evidence of efforts to bring the property into conformity.
In any event, whatever Shire did, or did not do, to bring the lot into conformity was only one consideration in the hardship calculus. In the final analysis, as we stated in
Kramer v. Bd. of Adjustment, Sea Girt,
45
N.J.
268, 296,
We are convinced from our study of the record that the action of the board in determining that Shire qualified for consideration for a hardship variance was not arbitrary, capricious, or in manifest abuse of its discretionary authority and that the trial court properly entered judgment to that effect.
VIII
The merger doctrine enunciated in Loechner applies only to adjacent undersized lots held in common legal title. The lots in this case, having never been held in common legal title, did not merge under the Allens or under Amato and Shire. Further, neither the Allens, Shire, nor Amato “created” the hardship on Lot 27. The judgment of the Appellate Division to the contrary is therefore reversed. The matter is remanded to that court for consideration of the specific variance issues raised by plaintiffs that were not addressed below as a result of the court’s merger and self-created hardship analyses. This ruling renders Shire’s estoppel claims moot.
For reversal and remandment — Chief Justice PORITZ, Justices LONG, LaVECCHIA, ZAZZALI, ALBIN, WALLACE and RIVERA-SOTO — 7.
Opposed — None.
Notes
26A is now Lot 27.
At the board's second hearing, plaintiffs indicated that they would be willing to buy Lot 27. In accordance with our decision in
Nash v. Bd. of Adjustment of Morris,
96
N.J.
97, 107,
Variances were granted in connection with lot size and width, side and front yard setbacks, and height.
Those rulings rendered plaintiffs’ challenges to specific variances moot and therefore those issues were not addressed.
The fairly convoluted procedure limned in Loechner, involving applications to the planning board and the zoning board, was streamlined in the Municipal Land Use Law which allows the planning board to consider a variance application in a subdivision case. Cox, § 5-1.1; N.J.S.A. 40:55D-60.
Ardolino v. Bd. of Adjustment of the Borough of Florham Park,
24
N.J.
94, 103,
Cf Dalton v. Ocean Township Zoning Bd. of Adjustment,
245
N.J.Super.
453, 461,
