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Case Law - save on Lexis / WestLaw. Original WP 5.1 Version This case can also be found at 150 N.J. 209.
(This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for
the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please
note that, in the interests of brevity, portions of any opinion may not have been summarized).
Argued February 18, 1997 -- Decided July 17, 1997
STEIN, J., writing for a unanimous Court.
In this appeal, the Court addresses the applicability of the exception from the public bidding
requirement set forth in the Local Public Contracts Law (LPCL) to the curbside-collection component of a
county's integrated recycling contract.
In October l994, the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) approved a plan by the
Middlesex County Board of Chosen Freeholders to comply with the New Jersey Statewide Mandatory Source
Separation and Recycling Act (Recycling Act). The plan required that a private contractor be chosen to
implement the recycling program on behalf of all municipalities electing to participate and designated the
Middlesex County Improvement Authority (MCIA) as the local agency responsible for the program's
implementation.
Thereafter, MCIA publicly issued a Request for Qualifications (RFQ), which specified that the
successful respondent would be responsible both for the curbside collection of all recyclable materials and for
their ultimate sale or other disposition. National Waste Recycling, Inc. (National) and Waste Management
of North Jersey (WMNJ) both submitted proposals to service either a portion of the county and/or the
entire county. MCIA then entered into negotiations with both National and WMNJ, obtaining significant
price concessions.
In February l995, MCIA awarded a five-year contract to WMNJ, based on the fact that WMNJ's
final proposal for the entire County represented the lowest five-year cost. The negotiation process itself
resulted in a total savings to the County of approximately $5,500,000.
National filed suit against MCIA and WMNJ, seeking a temporary injunction and invalidation of the
contract. Although National's amended complaint asserted several challenges to the validity of the contract,
this appeal focuses on the claim that the contract had been awarded without public bidding of the curbside
collection portion of the contract, in violation of the LPCL.
MCIA and WMNJ both moved for summary judgment, arguing that the contract was exempt from
public-bidding requirements pursuant to N.J.S.A. 40A:11-5, which provided for the exemption from public
bidding for the marketing of recyclable materials recovered through a recycling program. The trial court
found a strong public policy favoring public bidding and concluded that the curbside collection obligation
under the contract did not fit within the exception of the statute, construing the exception, instead, to refer
only to the marketing of the material recovered or the post-collection phase of the recycling process. The
court found the contract void and ordered that it be set aside. MCIA and WMNJ successfully moved for a
stay pending appeal.
While the appeal was pending, the Attorney General, acting on behalf of the Division of Solid Waste
Management (DSWM) of the New Jersey DEP and the Division of Local Government Services (DLGS), the
agencies responsible for enforcing the solid waste laws, filed an amicus curiae brief concerning the
interpretation of the bidding-requirement exception contained in the statute.
The Appellate Division, construing the bidding exception statute on the basis of its plain meaning,
concluded that the contract was a marketing contract within the plain meaning of the statute. The panel
further concluded that the bidding exemption reflected a legislative assumption that the public entity charged
with the responsibility of effecting the recycling program has greater leverage to achieve more favorable
prices through negotiations than through bidding.
Finally, the Appellate Division held that a joint advisory opinion letter issued by the DSWM and the
DLGS that had concluded that the exception applied only to the sale of recyclable materials was not binding
on the Appellate Division because the letter contained only the conclusions of law of a state agency.
Thereafter, the Attorney General moved for leave to intervene for the purpose of seeking
certification. The Supreme Court granted the motion and the subsequent petition for certification.
HELD: The Legislature did not intend to exempt the curbside collection of solid waste for eventual
recycling from the public bidding requirement of the Local Public Contracts Law. However, to avoid
unfairness and prejudice to both WMNJ and County taxpayers, the contract may remain in effect until its
termination date.
l. The LPCL requires public bidding for all municipal and county contracts exceeding $7,500. (pp. 11-13)
2. The investigative reports received by the Legislature prior to the enactment of Solid Waste Utility Control
Act documented the continued necessity for competitive bidding and for strict judicial construction of the
LPCL as applied to solid waste collection. (pp. 13-15)
3. Although the Legislature has enacted numerous other exceptions to the bidding statute, courts have
construed the LPCL exceptions strictly. (pp. 16-17)
4. When a statute is ambiguous, the Court must construe it in a way that will best effectuate the
Legislature's intent. (pp. 17-22)
5. The application of contemporary legal commentary to the statute suggests that marketing of recyclable
materials recovered through a recycling program is not intended to refer to the collection component of a
recycling program. (pp. 22-23)
6. Where agency interpretation coincides with the original enactment of a regulatory statute that the agency
is charged with enforcing, the case for deference to the agency is strong. (pp. 23-26)
7. Since 1989, when enacting solid waste legislation, the Legislature reiterated its longstanding concern about
competition in the solid waste collection industry, emphasizing the continuing need for supervision of the
industry because of the impact of anti-competitive forces. (pp. 26-27)
8. Because in this unique instance ordering re-bidding of the collection phase would be unfair to WMNJ and
may be prejudicial to the County taxpayers, the contract may remain in effect until its termination date. Any
subsequent contracts for the collection of recyclables, however, must be procured in compliance with the
LPCL bidding requirement. (pp. 28-29)
Judgment of the Appellate Division is REVERSED and the matter is REMANDED to the Law
Division for entry of judgment consistent with this opinion.
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ and JUSTICES HANDLER, POLLOCK, O'HERN, GARIBALDI and
COLEMAN join in JUSTICE STEIN's opinion.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-
104 September Term 1996
NATIONAL WASTE RECYCLING,
Plaintiffs,
and
DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL
Intervenors-Appellants,
v.
THE MIDDLESEX COUNTY IMPROVEMENT
Defendants-Respondents.
Argued February 18, 1997 -- Decided July 17, 1997
On certification to the Superior Court,
Appellate Division, whose opinion is reported
at
291 N.J. Super. 283 (1996).
Regina H. Nugent, Deputy Attorney General,
argued the cause for intervenors-appellants
(Peter Verniero, Attorney General of New
Jersey, attorney; Andrea M. Silkowitz,
Assistant Attorney General, of counsel).
Jonathan L. Williams argued the cause for
respondent Middlesex County Improvement
Authority (DeCotiis, Fitzpatrick & Gluck,
attorneys; Benjamin Clarke, on the brief). Robert S. Moraff argued the cause for respondent Waste Management of North Jersey, Inc. (Schwartz, Tobia, Stanziale, Becker,
Rosensweig & Sedita and Ambrosio, Kyreakakis,
DiLorenzo, Moraff & McKenna, attorneys).
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
40A:11-5(1)(s). We granted the intervenors' petition for
certification,
146 N.J. 565 (1996).
I
of all municipalities electing to participate, and designated
MCIA as the local agency responsible for the program's
implementation.
(National) and Defendant WMNJ were among those found to be
qualified. On November 30, 1994, MCIA issued a Request for
Proposals (RFP) to the six qualified companies. Five of those
companies, including National and WMNJ, submitted proposals.
National submitted a proposal to service the southern portion of
the County; WMNJ submitted a proposal to provide services for the
entire County or any portion thereof.
lowest five-year cost to MCIA. WMNJ's contract price for the
entire County was lower by $259,520 than the aggregate cost the
County would incur if the MCIA awarded National the contract for
the southern section of the County and WMNJ had been selected to
provide services for the northern section of the County. Another
factor that tipped the balance in favor of WMNJ was that, despite
repeated requests by MCIA, National had failed to furnish an
audited financial statement, which was one of the conditions
under which MCIA had agreed to qualify National. The negotiation
process itself resulted in a total savings to the County of
approximately $5,500,000.
decision contrary to its interests was reached. Defendants
argued that this rule applied to both National and Grywalski,
because discovery had revealed that Grywalski was a personal
friend of one of the principals of National and that he was not
spending any personal funds to prosecute the lawsuit. Concerning
the merits of the bidding issue, defendants asserted that the
contract was exempt from public-bidding requirements pursuant to
N.J.S.A. 40A:11-5, which provided:
(1) The subject matter thereof consists of:
. . . .
(s) The marketing of recyclable materials
recovered through a recycling program or the
marketing of any product intentionally
produced or derived from solid waste received
at a resource recovery facility or recovered
through a resource recovery program,
including, but not limited to, refuse-derived
fuel, compost materials, methane gas, and
other similar products.
[emphasis added.]
The trial court held that National was barred from
contending that the contract required public bidding because it
had actively participated in the procurement process. However,
the trial court found that, although it was troubled by the facts
and circumstances surrounding Grywalski's participation in the
lawsuit, Grywalski had standing based on his status as a taxpayer
and "potential user of this county-wide recycling program."
Concerning the merits of plaintiffs' claim, the trial court
stated that "in matters of discretion courts must give very
respectable deference to the decision and the judgments of
[public] authorities." However, it found that that principle was
outweighed by the strong public policy favoring public bidding
and the corollary requirement that "exceptions to the bidding
statute must be interpreted narrowly." The trial court concluded
that the curbside collection obligation under the contract did
not fit within the N.J.S.A. 40A:11-5(1)(s) bidding exception,
construing the exception to refer only to the marketing of
materials recovered from a recycling program, specifically, the
post-collection phase of the recycling process, stating:
responsible for enforcing the solid waste laws, see N.J.S.A.
13:1E-9(a), and administering the LPCL, see N.J.S.A. 40A:11-37,
40A:11-49, 52:27BB-6, 8, filed an amicus curiae brief concerning
the interpretation of the bidding-requirement exception contained
in N.J.S.A. 40A:11-5(1)(s).
subparagraph (s) and the definition of marketing that accompanied
it into the LPCL were but part of a larger piece of legislation,"
the Recycling Act. Id. at 292. The court explained that the
legislative history of the Recycling Act revealed that the Act's
focus "was to mandate source separation of goods that could be
recycled and `returned to the economic mainstream in the form of
raw materials or products[.]'" Id. at 293 (quoting N.J.S.A.
13:1E-99.11). The panel concluded that the exemption from
bidding enacted in N.J.S.A. 40A:11-5(1)(s) "reflects a
legislative assumption that in this new field the public entity
charged with the responsibility of effecting the recycling
program has greater leverage to achieve more favorable prices
through negotiations than through bidding." Ibid. The court
believed that MCIA's certification verified that assumption
because it stated that the negotiation process had resulted in
savings of approximately $5,500,000. Ibid. Additionally, the
court relied on a certification by the former Director of the
DSWM, which explained that with an integrated contract it was
less likely that the recyclables would be contaminated by other
solid waste, and that an integrated contract would assure the
greatest retention of value for source-separated recyclables.
Ibid.
implicated in the award of the contract to WMNJ. The court noted
that the MCIA had used a competitive, negotiated process, with no
evidence of favoritism, partiality or corruption. Id. at 294.
Additionally, the panel found that no evidence existed that a
bifurcated approach, which would require bidding for the
collection component of the contract and negotiation for the
marketing and sale components of the contract, would save the
County money or further the legislative intent underlying the
Recycling Act. Ibid.
II The LPCL requires public bidding for all municipal and county contracts exceeding $7500. See N.J.S.A. 40A:11-3, -4;
Meadowbrook Carting Co. v. Borough of Island Heights,
138 N.J. 307, 313 (1994). The purpose of the public bidding requirement
is to "secure for the public the benefits of unfettered
competition[,]" and to "guard against favoritism, improvidence,
extravagance, and corruption." Terminal Constr. Corp. v.
Atlantic County Sewerage Auth.,
67 N.J. 403, 410 (1975); see also
N.E.R.I. Corp. v. New Jersey Highway Auth.,
147 N.J. 223, 236
(1996) ("The practice of public bidding is universally recognized
and deeply embedded in the public policy of this State.");
Utilimatic, Inc. v. Brick Township,
267 N.J. Super. 139, 144 (Law
Div. 1993) ("The present statutory provisions are reflective of
long established principles of common law. The purpose of the
bidding laws is to protect the public by placing bidders on an
equal footing and to ensure that competition will eliminate the
possibility of fraud, extravagance or favoritism in the
expenditure of public funds."). See generally 10 McQuillin, The
Law of Municipal Corporations § 29.29, at 375 (Gail A. O'Gradney
& Charity R. Miller eds., 3rd ed. 1990) (discussing purpose of
public bidding).
Frederick B. Lacey, U.S. Attorney for the District of New Jersey,
Recommendations to the 1970 Session of the New Jersey Legislature
Concerning Legislation Which Might Be Enacted to Curb the Power
and Influence of Organized Crime in New Jersey 45-46 (Jan. 20,
1970); New Jersey, State Commission of Investigation, Report
Relating to the Garbage Industry of New Jersey 2-7 (October 7,
1969). To remedy the systematic corruption, "while at the same
time giving due attention to the public health and environmental
aspects of the industry, most of the recommendations to the
Legislature stressed the importance of encouraging competition
within a regulated framework." In re Application of Saddle
River, supra, 71 N.J. at 22. The legislative response reflected
the Legislature's intent to ensure and encourage competition in
the awarding of municipal solid waste contracts through the
regulation of the solid waste industry as a public utility by the
Board of Public Utilities (BPU), see N.J.S.A. 48:13A-1 to -13, in
addition to public bidding. In re Saddle River, supra, 71 N.J.
at 21-25.
created to "subsum[e] the resources and remaining authority of
the BPU and focus . . . its attention on monitoring and
stimulating competition among haulers." Ibid. Thereafter, the
Legislature accepted those recommendations and enacted the Solid
Waste Collection Regulatory Reform Act (Regulatory Reform Act),
L. 1991, c. 381 (codified at N.J.S.A. 48:13A-7.1 to .23), which
provided for the eventual elimination of the rate regulation
function of the BPU. The Regulatory Reform Act, however,
continued supervision by the DSWM of the solid waste collection
industry to ensure competition. See, e.g., N.J.S.A. 48:13A-7.19.
The investigative reports from both 1969-70 and 1989 document the
continued necessity for competitive bidding and for strict
judicial construction of the LPCL as applied to solid waste
collection.
Board of Chosen Freeholders,
931 F. Supp. 341, 346 (D.N.J. 1996),
rev'd on other grounds
112 F.3d 652 (1997).
[L. 1987, c. 102, § 30(13) (codified at
N.J.S.A. 40A:11-2(13)).]
The question the Court must resolve is whether the exception in
subparagraph (s) should be construed to apply to the curbside-collection component of a county's integrated recycling contract,
or be limited to the post-collection sale of collected and sorted
materials to an end-user.
Ltd. v. New Jersey Sports & Exposition Auth.,
85 N.J. 363, 370
(1981). Nevertheless, "the exceptions should [not] be read out
of the statute," thereby frustrating the intent of the
Legislature in its grant of power to the contracting authority.
See id. at 376 (Pashman, J., concurring).
at 422. N.J.S.A. 13:1E-99.11 states the Legislature's "findings
and declarations" concerning the Recycling Act and broadly
describes its goals:
The Legislature . . . declares that it is in
the public interest to mandate the source
separation of marketable waste materials on a
Statewide basis so that reusable materials
may be returned to the economic mainstream in
the form of raw materials or products rather
than be disposed of at the State's
overburdened landfills, and further declares
that the recycling of marketable materials by
every municipality in this State, and the
development of public and private sector
recycling activities on an orderly and
incremental basis, will further demonstrate
the State's long-term commitment to an
effective and coherent solid waste management
strategy.
interpret language beyond that expressly written in the statute.
See Szemple, supra, 135 N.J. at 422; Cedar Cove, supra, 122 N.J.
at 211. "Courts may . . . freely refer to legislative history
and contemporaneous construction for whatever aid they may
furnish in ascertaining the true intent of the legislation." New
Jersey Pharmaceutical Ass'n v. Furman,
33 N.J. 121, 130 (1960).
Shortly before the final passage of Senate Committee
Substitute Senate Bill No. 1478 in April 1987, the Senate
Revenue, Finance and Appropriations Committee removed the sale of
personal property amendment from the bill, substituting for it
the definition of marketing contained in N.J.S.A. 40A:11-2(13),
and adding the exception for marketing of recycled goods to
N.J.S.A. 40A:11-5(1)(s), which initially provided: "The marketing
of recyclable materials recovered through a recycling program."
L. 1987, c. 102, § 32. The Senate Committee Statement
accompanying the amendments stated that its purpose in amending
that section was to "[c]larify the definitions and provisions of
the local contracts law regarding contracts for recyclable
materials." Senate Revenue, Finance and Appropriations
Committee, Statement to Assembly Committee Substitute for Senate
No. 1478 and Assembly No. 1781, at 2 (Feb. 5, 1987).
(s) The marketing of recyclable materials
recovered through a recycling program, or the
marketing of any product intentionally
produced or derived from solid waste received
at a resource recovery facility or recovered
through a resource recovery program,
including, but not limited to, refuse-derived
fuel, compost materials, methane gas, and
other similar products.
[L. 1989, c. 92 (emphasis added).]
The statements accompanying the assembly bill that was eventually
enacted in chapter 92 do not clarify the Legislature's intent
regarding the scope of the exception in subparagraph (s). See
Senate Energy and Environment Committee, Statement to Assembly
Committee Substitute for Assembly Bill No. 464, at 1 (Apr. 27,
1989); Assembly Solid Waste Management Committee, Statement to
Assembly Committee Substitute for Assembly Bill No. 464, at 1
(Sept. 16, 1988).
recyclable materials designated in a district recycling plan. L.
1995, c. 103. The amendment added to the LPCL's definitional
section a definition of "cooperative marketing," defined as the
"joint marketing . . . of the source separated recyclable
materials designated in a district recycling plan." N.J.S.A.
40A:11-2(18). Assembly and Senate committee statements
concerning the enacted bill stated that "`[c]ooperative
marketing' refers to the joint sale or competitive disposition of
the source separated recyclable materials . . . ." Senate
Natural Resources, Trade and Economic Development Committee,
Statement to Assembly Committee Substitute for Assembly No. 571,
at 1 (Dec. 1, 1994); Assembly Solid and Hazardous Waste
Committee, Statement to Assembly Committee Substitute for
Assembly No. 571, at 1 (June 9, 1994). As part of that amending
bill, the cooperative marketing of recyclables was added to
N.J.S.A. 40A:11-5(1) as an exception from the public-bidding
requirement. L. 1995, c. 103, § 4 (codified at N.J.S.A. 40A:11-5(1)(aa)). The legislative history thus reveals that although
the Legislature has considered the subparagraph (s) exception
several times, it has not undertaken to amend or clarify its
definition of the term marketing of recyclable materials beyond
the expansion of the exception in 1989, which delineated specific
end-products of recycling and resource recovery.
materials are removed from the solid waste stream. In contrast,
recycling is the actual process by which recovered materials are
incorporated into new products." Nicolas M. Kublicki, The Paper
Triangle: National Forest Timber, Solid Waste Disposal and
Recycling,
7 Tul. Envtl. L.J. 1, 28 (1993); see also James T.
O'Reilly, Recycling and Municipal Liability: Environmental
Benefits and U.C.C. Risks,
23 Urb. Law. 97, 99 (1991) ("Recycling
is a term of art in the solid waste industry. It refers to the
total process of diverting a collected solid waste, separating it
into usable materials, and processing those materials into a new
finished product. No recycling occurs from mere collection
alone."). The application of those concepts to the statute
suggests that "marketing of recyclable materials recovered
through a recycling program" is not intended to refer to the
recovery stage, which is the collection component of a recycling
program.
for the implementation, enforcement and regulation of the LPCL,
see N.J.S.A. 52:27BB-6, N.J.S.A. 52:18A-46; N.J.S.A. 40A:11-37,
and the Recycling Act, see N.J.S.A. 13:1E-1-9(a), has been that
public bidding is required for the collection phase of a
recycling contract. In April 1988, the DLGS, together with the
Division of Solid Waste Management (DSWM), issued a joint
advisory opinion letter that addressed the question whether
N.J.S.A. 40A:11-5(1)(s) applied to contracts combining the
collection of recyclables with the final sale of the recovered
recyclable goods. The letter stated:
. . . .
[Letter from Mary T. Shiel, Deputy Director,
Division of Solid Waste Management, and Barry
Skokowski, Sr., Director, Division of Local
Government Services, to Public Officials 1-2
(Apr. 1988) (emphasis added) (Joint Advisory
Opinion Letter).]
Where agency interpretation coincides with the original enactment of a regulatory statute that the agency is charged with enforcing, the case for deference to the agency is strong. See, e.g., Newark Fireman's Mut. Benevolent Ass'n v. Newark, 90 N.J. 44, 55 (1982); New Jersey Guild of Hearing Aid Dispensers v. Long, 75 N.J. 544, 575 (1978); Waste Management of Central Jersey, Inc. v. DEPE, 278 N.J. Super. 56, 64 (App. Div. 1994); In re Freshwater Wetlands Protection Act Rules, 238 N.J. Super. 516, 527 (App. Div. 1989). The agencies issued the joint letter within a year of the bidding exemption's enactment, responding to a "great deal of confusion [which] exist[ed] regarding contracting for various recycling services," Joint Advisory Opinion Letter, supra, at 1, and that statutory interpretation was not challenged until the present litigation was initiated, six years following the letter's issuance. Additionally, the DEP administrator who signed the 1988 joint advisory opinion letter played an active role in the legislative process itself. Mary T. Shiel, then Deputy Director of the DSWM, attended the four public hearings held by the Senate Energy and Environment Committee in 1985 and 1986. Shiel testified before the committee and was described by the committee chairman as a source to whom questions concerning the legislation could be addressed. See Establishment of Mandatory Statewide Recycling Program: Hearings on S-1478 Before the Senate Energy and Environment Committee (Apr. 15, 1986) 1-3, 8-14 and (February 13, 1986) 6-15. Federal precedent suggests that where an agency has been actively involved in the
legislative process, the case for agency deference increases in
weight. See, e.g., Frank Diehl Farms v. Secretary of Labor,
696 F.2d 1325, 1329-30 (11th Cir. 1983); see also Norwegian Nitrogen
Prods. Co. v. United States,
288 U.S. 295, 315,
53 S. Ct. 350,
358,
77 L. Ed. 796, 807 (1933) ("The practice has particular
weight when it involves a contemporary construction of a statute
by the men charged with setting its machinery in motion, of
making its parts work efficiently and smoothly while they are yet
untried and new."). Finally, we note that the interpretation
provided by the agencies effectuates both the public policy of
the LPCL and the Recycling Act by supporting a competitive
process for the collection of recyclables, and allowing
negotiated contracts for the disposition of recycled products.
An agency's interpretation will prevail unless it is "plainly
unreasonable," see Merin, supra, 126 N.J. at 436, or fails to
further the legislative purpose of the statute that it is
interpreting, see GE Solid State, Inc. v. Director, Div. of
Taxation,
132 N.J. 298, 306-07 (1993).
III We conclude that had the Legislature intended to exempt the curbside collection of solid waste for eventual recycling from the public-bidding requirement of the LPCL, it would have explicitly done so. To interpret consistently the related definitional sections of the LPCL and the Recycling Act is
appropriate because they were enacted as part of the same
legislation. The definition of "marketing" in the LPCL is
virtually identical to that included in the Recycling Act, the
only difference being that the Recycling Act refers to
disposition and the LPCL refers to marketing. Both definitions
appear to apply only to the post-collection aspect of a recycling
contract, suggesting that the public-bidding exemption contained
in the LPCL should be construed as referring only to those
aspects of a recycling contract necessarily relating to the sale
of recovered recyclable materials.
of the statute effectuates the Legislature's intent in exempting
from public bidding the marketing of recycled recovered
materials, which implicated an unknown market that might benefit
from a more flexible negotiating process, in contrast to the
traditional collection phase, which required continued
supervision to ensure a healthy competitive process. Given the
overwhelming public policy favoring competitive bidding in the
garbage collection industry, we conclude that the subparagraph
(s) exception from the LPCL does not apply to the curbside
collection of recyclable materials. If we have misread the
legislative intent, the Legislature may amend the statute to
explicitly provide such an exemption.
for all recyclable material, and the fluctuation in the market
value of recyclables. Because the MCIA engaged in extended
negotiations for the County, we find the inference unavoidable
that the price negotiated for the collection phase was influenced
by the guaranteed price to be paid to the County as well as the
uncertainty of the compensation to be realized by WMNJ from the
recycling phase, and the five-year contract term that afforded
WMNJ some protection against short-term market volatility.
Although ordinarily we would order the collection phase of the
contract to be re-bid, see Meadowbrook Carting, supra, 138 N.J.
at 325-26; Terminal Constr. Corp., supra, 67 N.J. at 410, we
recognize that in this unique instance that remedy would be
unfair to WMNJ who relied in good faith on MCIA's determination
that bidding was not required, and may be prejudicial to County
taxpayers who probably would be required to bear an increased
cost because of the prospect that the re-bidding process would
divide the responsibility for collection and disposal of
recyclables between two contractors.
IV
We reverse the judgment of the Appellate Division that
exempted from public bidding the collection phase of the
contract. We remand the matter to the Law Division for entry of
a judgment consistent with this opinion. CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ and JUSTICES HANDLER, POLLOCK, O'HERN, GARIBALDI and COLEMAN join in JUSTICE STEIN's opinion. NO. A-104 SEPTEMBER TERM 1996
ON APPEAL FROM ON CERTIFICATION TO Appellate Division, Superior Court
NATIONAL WASTE RECYCLING,
DECIDED July 17, 1997
Chief Justice Poritz PRESIDING
OPINION BY Justice Stein
CONCURRING OPINION BY DISSENTING OPINION BY
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